Understanding the Resume: The Impact of Occupation on Policy Entrepreneurship in the North Carolina State Legislature

dc.contributor.author

Demashkieh, Sarra

dc.date.accessioned

2011-01-14T21:05:06Z

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2011-01-14T21:05:06Z

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2010-12

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Public Policy Studies

dc.description.abstract

This thesis examines the impact occupation has on policy entrepreneurship in the North Carolina State Legislature. This study examines the frequency at which legislators with different occupational backgrounds sponsor bills in their corresponding occupational policy fields. Policy categories are broken down into four female, four male, and one gender neutral category to ascertain whether the “gender effect” often seen in legislatures is in fact an “occupation effect.” This study finds that the difference in bill sponsorship was statistically significant only for the four female policy groups but not the male and control groups. Workers coming from female policy categories tended to sponsor more bills than non-workers. Legislators from the “female” occupations also tended to sponsor more bills in the other three female policy categories. This pattern was not true of legislators from the “male” occupations. The study concludes that the gender effect is in fact an occupation effect in female policy categories and that legislators coming from female professions behave like “women” regardless of gender.

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https://hdl.handle.net/10161/3161

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en_US

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Gender effect

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State Legislatures

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Occupation

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Understanding the Resume: The Impact of Occupation on Policy Entrepreneurship in the North Carolina State Legislature

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Honors thesis

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