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Shattering the Political Glass Ceiling: Exploring the Rise of Women Political Leaders

Authored by: Mayra Buvinic, Kehinde Ajayi and Astha Mainali

Categories: Statebuilding
Sub-Categories: Democratization and Political Participation
Region: Latin America and the Caribbean
Year: 2024
Citation: Buvinic, Mayra, Kehinde Ajayi and Astha Mainali. 2024. "Shattering the Political Glass Ceiling: Exploring the Rise of Women Political Leaders." Center for Global Development, 2024. https://www.cgdev.org/blog/shattering-political-glass-ceiling-exploring-rise-women-political-leaders

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Executive Summary

With voters heading to the polls in countries around the world, 2024 has been dubbed the year of elections. While a recent change in the United States election will put a woman at the top of a major party ticket, a June presidential election just over the border in Mexico stood out. Earlier this summer, Claudia Sheinbaum Pardo was elected president of Mexico, shattering the political glass ceiling in North America. In second place came Xóchitl Gálvez Ruiz, another woman. Sheinbaum–in addition to perhaps being born a leader (and having a Nobel-prize winning brain)–and Gálvez are the product of an enabling environment–otherwise, how to explain the rise in women’s political leadership only in the second half of the 20th century? The first woman ever to be elected to the highest office (in this case, the office of prime minister) occurred in Ceylon (present-day Sri Lanka) in 1960.

This blog, part of CGD’s work on women’s leadership, focuses on political leaders and explores which conditions enable women’s leadership by contrasting Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC), a region that is ahead of most in women’s presence in politics, with Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA) that is currently some steps behind. The 42 countries in LAC have had a total of 26 women heads of state, presidents, or prime ministers (PMs), with seven incumbent women heads of government (including Sheinbaum who will assume office on October 1, 2024). The 48 countries in SSA have had a total of 16 women heads of state, presidents, or PMs, with four incumbent ones.[1] Women currently hold 36 percent of parliamentary seats in LAC and 27 percent in SSA. Countries in LAC also have a higher share of women cabinet ministers (Figure 1). We look at historical and structural factors as well as proximate facilitating conditions to characterize the enabling environment for the emergence of women political leaders.