Women in Politics

Canada can achieve gender parity in politics: here’s how

How to advance equal representation for women in Parliament

Canada is a leader in supporting women’s equality around the world, but at home we are falling behind when it comes to electing women.

Why gender parity matters

Pipeline theory for gender parity debunked

The pipeline theory that gender parity in politics would occur once women caught up to men in education and experience in politics-adjacent fields like law and business is simply not true:

Systemic approaches have proven more effective

The number of women in legislative bodies only meaningfully increases when gender parity rules are adopted that apply to all political parties.

Most countries electing more than 40 per cent women use a statutory gender quota that applies to the number of women candidates parties run.

An analysis of the five democracies with national electoral systems most comparable to Canada’s (single-member districts with first-past-the-post rules) demonstrated that the criteria and enforcement mechanisms employed make a measurable difference to their impact. 

The research finds that approaches taken in Nepal, South Korea and Uzbekistan rely on weak requirements and have been largely ineffective; France has achieved mixed results. However, Mexico, where women now make up 50.2% of federal representatives, has a very effective statutory candidate gender quota with features that Canada could effectively adapt as outlined below.

Read Jennifer Piscopo’s full report here

Informed Perspectives is a registered charity working to bridge the gender gap in Canadian public discourse. Conversations happening in the news media and political spheres have the power to influence everything else, and the chronic under-representation of women’s voices hampers our ability to advance in every arena.

  • Monitor media representation and drive accountability through our Gender Gap Tracker
  • Elevate women’s voices through workshops that transform knowledge into influence
  • Connect 1,500 journalists with diverse qualified sources through our expert database
  • Commission research into equality measures that can inform systemic change solutions.