CAWP in the News

  • Reshaping the Agenda: Women in State Legislatures

    by Debra L. Dodson and Susan J. Carroll
    Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 1991, 122 pages

    This report examines gender differences among state legislators in their policy views, actions, and perspectives on the legislative process. 

    Report
    Research
    CAWP Scholar
    Impact of Women Public Officials
    State Legislature
  • Findings at a Glance: Impact of Women in Public Office

    Center for American Women and Politics, Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey, 1991, 8 pages
     

    A summary report on the information from the Impact of Women in Public Office series. 

    Report
    Research
    CAWP Scholar
    Impact of Women Public Officials
    State Legislature
  • Women, Black, and Hispanic State Elected Leaders: The 1990 Symposium on the State of the States

    Eagleton Institute of Politics, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey 
    Center for Public Service, University of Virginia
    1991, 106 pages

    In December 1990, more than sixty statewide officials, state legislators, other practitioners and scholars gathered for the fourth annual State of the States symposium. The symposium focused on the problems and possibilities that exist for women, Black and Hispanic elected officials. Issues discussed included campaigning and elections, changing political institutions, shaping state policy, and achieving leadership positions. Workshop summaries and participating scholars' papers are included in the report. 

    Report
    Research
    CAWP Scholar
    Candidates and Campaigns
    Gender and Race/Ethnicity
    Impact of Women Public Officials
    State Legislature
    Statewide Executive
  • Female Suffrage in New Jersey, 1790-1807

    Book chapter by Irwin N. Gertzog, Allegheny College
    Women, Politics, and the Constitution, Naomi B. Lynn, ed.
    The Haworth Press, September 1990

    Conventional descriptions of how New Jersey women secured the right to vote in the late eighteenth century, and of the extent to which they took advantage of that right, tend to be incomplete. Moreover, the subsequent disenfranchisement of women was not principally a product of corruption in an 1807 Essec County referendum, as some maintain, as much as it was the result of a shift in the balance of power within the state.

    Book Chapter
    New Jersey
    Research
  • Gender Politics and the Socializing Impact of the Women's Movement

    by Susan J. Carroll
    Book chapter in Political Learning in Adulthood: A Sourcebook of Theory and Research, edited by Roberta S. Sigel (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1989)

    Book Chapter
    Research
    CAWP Scholar
    Civic and Political Activism