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The Queen's death is a stark reminder of how few women leaders there are

The Queen's death is a stark reminder of how few women leaders there are

CBC
Sunday, September 18, 2022 05:27:19 PM UTC

This column is an opinion by Jessica Barrett, a freelance journalist based in Calgary. For more information about CBC's Opinion section, please see the FAQ.

Within minutes of the Queen's death hitting the news cycle, the group chat I keep with a handful of close women friends blew up. 

At first, most of us didn't seem to have strong feelings about the Queen or her passing, but when the conversation turned to what comes next, things got more passionate. 

For a generation of women raised on the ideals of third-wave feminism, the idea of reverting to a king as our head of state — and not just King Charles but any king — feels uncomfortably regressive. It's like submitting to the patriarchy in its most literal form.

In fact, it does signal a return to a distressing status quo.

When Elizabeth II took the throne 70 years ago, women world leaders were an anomaly. Most had claimed power through flukes of history or gaps in male succession, such as the string of unlikely events that saw Elizabeth become Queen. She ruled for eight years before the world saw its first democratically-elected woman leader, Sri Lanka's Sirimavo Bandaranaike, in 1960. 

One would have hoped the decades since would have seen substantial progress towards gender equality in democratic spheres, so that losing the example of female leadership set by a hereditary monarch wouldn't be notable to someone like me. That hasn't happened. 

Only 22 out of 193 countries had female heads of state or government as of May 2022, according to the Council on Foreign Relations. Only 13 had gender parity in the national cabinet and just three in a national legislature. At this rate it will take 130 years for the world to reach gender parity in the highest positions of power, the United Nations forecasts. 

This has implications beyond basic fairness for roughly half the world's population. According to the CFR, women legislators are more likely to promote stability and bipartisanship. And women lawmakers are more likely to work with political opponents to pass legislation, one U.S. study found. 

While certainly not universal, the tendencies of women leaders are sorely needed in our increasingly polarized, and often legislatively paralyzed, age. 

Then there's the issue of representation.

According to researchers at Harvard Business School, women exposed to female leaders in their chosen field are more likely to associate women with leadership and rate themselves more highly in qualities like intelligence and competence. Role models matter.

It's not that there hasn't been progress, much of it in my own lifetime. 

I lived for years in B.C. with Christy Clark as premier and watched Alison Redford and then Rachel Notley come to power next door in Alberta. Since moving to Calgary, the city elected its first woman mayor in Jyoti Gondek, and Alberta seems to be poised for a political showdown between two women — the NDP's Rachel Notley and UCP leadership front-runner Danielle Smith — in its provincial election next year. 

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