posted on 2018-09-26, 15:33authored byRoss Macmillan, Naila Shofia, Wendy Sigle
There is considerable speculation that female political empowerment
could improve population health. Yet, evidence to date is limited, and explanations
for why political empowerment would matter and the conditions under which this
might be enhanced or muted are not well understood. In this article, we draw on
theoretical work on the politics of representation to frame an investigation of
whether increases in the percentage of females in a country’s parliament influence
mortality rates. We further examine whether the relationship is conditioned by
extent of democracy and economic and social development. Through multivariate
longitudinal regression, we analyze four indicators of mortality in 155 countries
spanning 1990 to 2014 with controls for initial country conditions, time-stable
structural predispositions to higher mortality, and a number of time-varying
potential confounders. Results indicate that a high level of female representation—
30 % or greater in our models—has large negative associations with mortality,
that these are particularly strong in lesser developed and weak democratic
contexts, that high female political representation effectively offsets liabilities
associated with low development, and that the relationships are robust to various
operationalizations of social development. In the end, our research provides a
particularly thorough accounting of the relationship between female political
representation and population health, particularly by specifying the conditions
under which female representation is most salient. In doing so, the research
suggests important links between issues of female empowerment, political context,
and developmental trajectories of countries more generally.