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Session Submission Type: Created Panel
This paper brings together a series of papers about gender in politics, including gender-based violence in Mexico and gender-based quotas in Kenya. A third paper examines whether identities, such as gender, affect how vulnerable an individual is to misinformation. A fourth paper examine how opportunities to gain political experience influence the representation of women in politics, while a final paper examine the prevalence of bribery, sextortion, and vote buying.
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy and Gender-Based Violence in Mexico - Sarah F. Thompson, Cornell University; Beatriz Magaloni, Stanford University; Madison Dalton, Stanford University; Kim Alexander Byrial Juárez Jensen, Stanford University
Family Norms, Gender and Vulnerability to Misinformation: An Experiment in India - Simon Chauchard, University Carlos 3 of Madrid; Sumitra Badrinathan, American University
Sex, Money, and Votes: Varieties of Corrupt Exchanges and Their Determinants - Tatiana Kostadinova, Florida International University
Where Is the Backlash? Quotas and Legitimacy in Age-Biased, Patriarchal Settings - Kamran Lamin Hakiman, University of Pittsburgh; Ryan M. Sheely, Mercy Corps
Changes in Attitudes towards LGBTQ+ People in Latin America - Eli Gavin Rau, Tecnológico de Monterrey; Mariela Szwarcberg Daby, Reed College