Journal article
Role Congruence Meets Feminist Identity:Disaggregating Causes of the Double Bind on Women Political Candidates
European Journal of Politics and Gender
03/23/2026
DOI: 10.1332/25151088Y2026D000000136
Abstract
Studies in social psychology and political science have noted the negative impact of the "double bind" facing women leaders and candidates, which suggest that women must demonstrate both masculine and feminine attributes in order to achieve the same success men can achieve by demonstrating only masculine attributes. Less attention has focused on how feminist identity conditions these evaluations. We focus on whether individuals’ evaluations of men and women are affected by: 1) the gendered attributes associated with a candidate; and 2) feminist identity. Using data from an original survey experiment in the US, we investigate the relationship between respondent feminist self-identification and their evaluation of a candidate’s electability. We find that respondents who identify as feminists evaluate women, feminine, and role incongruent men candidates more positively than non-feminists. Our results suggest that feminism can neutralize some aspects of role incongruity and provide a potential boost to non-traditional leadership candidates.
Details
- Title: Subtitle
- Role Congruence Meets Feminist Identity:Disaggregating Causes of the Double Bind on Women Political Candidates
- Creators
- Sarah Yi-Yun Shair-Rosenfield - University of YorkMelody Valdini - Portland State UniversityTracy Osborn - University of IowaJeanette Mendez - Oklahoma State University Oklahoma City
- Resource Type
- Journal article
- Publication Details
- European Journal of Politics and Gender
- DOI
- 10.1332/25151088Y2026D000000136
- ISSN
- 2515-1088
- eISSN
- 2515-1096
- Publisher
- Bristol University Press
- Grant note
- Departments of Political Science at Arizona State UniversityPortland State University
Funding for this study was provided by the Departments of Political Science at Arizona State University and Portland State University.
- Language
- English
- Electronic publication date
- 03/23/2026
- Academic Unit
- Political Science
- Record Identifier
- 9985147188502771
Metrics
1 Record Views