In the latest Global Gender Gap Index published by the World Economic Forum, Israel was ranked 104th out of 148 countries in the category of political empowerment. This category examines the extent of women’s representation within government and parliament, and the low ranking reflects a troubling reality: Only 16% of government ministers are women, and only 24% of Knesset members are women.
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Violence against politicians is a part of politics, but experimental studies find that its effect on citizens is muted. Rozemarijn van Dijk and Joep van Lit argue those null results are nevertheless meaningful: they should push scholars to study the conditions under which political violence results in (de)mobilisation
Violence against politicians is, regrettably, a part of political life. Politicians are harassed and intimidated on social media, campaign materials are vandalised, and many politicians work under constant security protection. Sometimes this climate of hostility escalates into direct physical attacks on politicians. At its extreme, political violence is fatal. Substantial evidence shows that such experiences change how politicians behave. Experiences of violence influence the ways politicians interact with constituents, what issues they are willing to speak about publicly, and whether they choose to remain in political life.
As such, political violence (which we define as violent acts by individuals, not international violence or terrorism) is directly threatening democracy. The perpetrators intend it not only to silence its immediate targets but also to send a signal to bystanders (‘normal citizens’): stay in line, stay quiet, stay out of politics. This is the demobilising effect of political violence, inducing fear and self-censorship. Conversely, if political violence provokes outrage rather than fear, we might expect it to have a mobilising effect.
"Woman is the builder and moulder of the nation's destiny. Though delicate and soft as a lily, she has a heart far stronger and bolder than that of a man. She is the supreme inspiration for man's onwards march; no doubt, it is her commanding personality that is, nevertheless, grimly solemn,” wrote the great Indian poet Rabindranath Tagore.
Of the 8.06 billion people living on the Earth in 2024, 4.09 billion are men and 4.05 billion are women, constituting nearly half of the world’s population. Yet, the world of politics remains overwhelmingly male-dominated; hence, women at national, regional, and international levels have experienced social discrimination and persistent scepticism regarding their leadership capabilities.
Data compiled by UN Women reveal that only 27.2 per cent of parliamentarians in single or lower houses worldwide are women. It has been a global tendency that in various forms of political systems, women’s representation is substantially low. As of September 2025, across 29 countries, there were only 32 women who have served as heads of state and/or government. This tenacious gap is largely rooted in structural barriers, gender stereotypes, and limited access to the political institutions.
Brussels – Women occupy the top positions in three of the seven main EU institutions for the first time, but the base of female political representation is losing ground. This is the contradiction facing the European Union in 2026, according to the latest report from the European Parliament’s Think Tank.
Ursula von der Leyen heads the Commission, Roberta Metsola the Parliament, Christine Lagarde the ECB, while the role of EU High Representative for Foreign Policy (and the diplomatic service of the European External Action Service EEAS) is entrusted to Kaja Kallas. Yet, the overall number of women in the institutions is declining. In the European Parliament, after uninterrupted growth from 1979 to 2019 (when it stood at 41 per cent), the proportion of female MEPs fell to 38.5 per cent after the 2024 elections, marking a worrying halt to a trend that seemed well established. As the research shows, progress towards equality has not only slowed but, in some cases, has literally come to a halt.
The data analysis reveals a two-track continent: on the one hand, countries such as Sweden, where women account for over 60% of European parliamentary representation, and Finland, which boasts a national government with 57.9% of ministers female. On the other hand, pockets of extreme resistance remain: Hungary has no women in its Council of Ministers, while Cyprus did not elect a single woman to the European Parliament in the last election.
Not included in this already low ranking is women’s representation in senior public service positions. Currently, not a single woman serves as director general of a government ministry, and only 14% of deputy directors general in government ministries are women.
The sexualization of women in the political sphere has taken on a new and dangerous form that threatens democracy itself, a CSU professor argues.
For 25 years, Karrin Vasby Anderson, Colorado State University professor of communication studies, has researched gender and politics, focusing on how women politicians are framed in news coverage, political ads, internet memes and pop culture.
“I kept running into this very strange sexualization of political candidates, a very extreme sexualization,” Vasby Anderson said. “Then I noticed that it wasn’t just candidates who are being framed in overtly sexualized ways. It was also women voters as a group.”
This phenomenon, which Vasby Anderson calls the “pornification frame,” represents a backlash against women’s political progress in the United States by linking female candidates, politicians and voters to pornographic imagery and themes. It undermines their capacity for leadership and diminishes their credibility as a voting bloc, ultimately eroding the quality of democracy itself, she said.
Women from minority ethnic and religious groups in Sri Lanka continue to be systematically discriminated against and marginalized in mainstream politics, new research shows.
Quotas for women’s representation have not enabled enough minority women to enter politics; just 3 minority women sit in Parliament among 22 women – less than 2 per cent of all MPs, despite majority women’s representation having improved. Only 11 minority women have ever been elected.
‘Minority women in politics are not just underrepresented — they are systematically excluded. Though determined to represent their communities, they are shut out by cultural, religious, language and patriarchal barriers from their own communities and all political parties’, said lead author Dr Farah Mihlar of the Centre for Development and Emergency Practice, Oxford Brookes University.
The report finds that the quotas have not circumvented the specific obstacles faced by minority women, such as tokenistic nominations, exclusion from leadership and limited access to financial resources and networks. A crucial finding is that minority women unanimously identified their own community as presenting the greatest obstruction to their political careers.