國立臺灣大學政治學系暨研究所黃長玲2006-07-252018-06-282006-07-252018-06-282004-08-31http://ntur.lib.ntu.edu.tw//handle/246246/13831Most of the works on women’s political participation focused on women’s representation in national legislatures. Cross-country comparisons often examine three set of factors that might affect women’s representation: the political/institutional factors, the socioeconomic factors, and the cultural factors (Matland 1993; Kenworthy and Malami 1999; Reynolds 1999). Chief among the political/institutional factors, electoral systems have most often been cited as the key determining factor in the number of women elected to legislative office. However, recent evidence showed that electoral systems alone cannot do the magic. Countries that have the fastest growth rates of women legislators are those that adopted gender quota (Studlar and McAllister 2002). In other words, along with the increasing number of women in politics, gender quota has become a widely accepted practice to promote gender parity.application/pdf75596 bytesapplication/pdfzh-TW國立臺灣大學政治學系暨研究所[SDGs]SDG5選舉制度與婦女參政﹕東亞三國經驗的比較(I)reporthttp://ntur.lib.ntu.edu.tw/bitstream/246246/13831/1/922414H002014.pdf