We have conducted election studies in our fou case study countries (UK, the Netherlands, Spain, Türkiye) comprised of campaign ethnographies, candidate surveys, voter and media studies and have begun to write-up our analysis. In the analysis, the TWICEASGOOD research team has integrated different methods and modes of analysis including qualitative ethnographic participant observation, surveys of electors and candidates, automated text analysis and survey experiments to examine women’s pathways to political office. We have innovated using comparative ethnographic research in election campaigns and applying computational models to understand sexism across structured and unstructured data. For the campaign ethnographies, we have recruited 50 women candidates from 4 countries and from political parties across the ideological spectrum. We have conducted 200 researcher days of participant observation in four national and two local/provincial elections. In our participant observation with candidates on the campaign trail, we undertook a number of observational activities: attending public meetings and hustings, shadowing candidates as they canvassed and delivered campaign materials to residents; observing candidates’ interactions with members of the public in the street and on the doorstep, as well as their interactions with colleagues, volunteers and staff from their respective political parties. We combined these activities with semi-structured interviews with the candidates (often more than one per candidate), as well as more informal, ethnographic interviews with their team members, local MPs, and journalists covering events.
These unique data are complemented by data from 860 candidates who responded to our online survey (this will increase once we have the data from the UK survey). We have also collected data from 8500 respondents in 4 post-election survey capturing gender attitudes among the public. We also draw on the Gender Attitudes module of the newly released European Social Survey Round 11 to measure the relationship between sexism and candidate preferences. Our rich data allow us to capture the complexities of individuals’ experiences, the unspoken ways candidates navigate their experiences with the public, their party, and the media and the often deeply felt emotion and feelings entwined with experiencing sexism. Our candidate surveys allow us to compare experiences between men and women on a larger scale and examine the hypotheses generated from our fieldwork. Our post-election surveys and media analysis allow us to explore their responses to women candidates showing that similar campaign efforts do not translate into the same electoral returns for women as for men.