The ‘Gender Gap’ in Chile

Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover,...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of Latin American studies Vol. 36; no. 4; pp. 719 - 742
Main Author LEWIS, PAUL H.
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Cambridge, UK Cambridge University Press 01.11.2004
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
Abstract Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional elections held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 52 communes (barrios) whose residents differ in their economic and educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class and gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, and that this is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian and peasant communes – but less among women than among men. The ‘gender gap’ is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent.
AbstractList Men & women in Chile register & vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women & men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional elections held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 52 communes (barrios) whose residents differ in their economic & educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class & gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, & that this is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian & peasant communes -- but less among women than among men. The "gender gap" is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent. Adapted from the source document.
Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional elections held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 52 communes (barrios) whose residents differ in their economic and educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class and gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, and that this is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian and peasant communes - but less among women than among men. The "gender gap" is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent. (Original abstract)
Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional districts held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 52 communes (barrios) whose residents differ in their economic and educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class and gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, and that is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian and peasant communes - but less among women than among men. The 'gender gap' is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent. [PUBLICATION ABSTRACT]
Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional elections held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 52 communes (barrios) whose residents differ in their economic and educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class and gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, and that this is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian and peasant communes – but less among women than among men. The ‘gender gap’ is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent.
Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional elections held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 52 communes ( barrios ) whose residents differ in their economic and educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class and gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, and that this is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian and peasant communes – but less among women than among men. The ‘gender gap’ is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent.
Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional elections held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 5 2 communes (barrios) whose residents differ in their economic and educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class and gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, and that this is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian and peasant communes - but less among women than among men. The 'gender gap' is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent.
Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down to commune level. A survey of national elections from 1952 to 1970 shows that women and men have different voting preferences. Moreover, results from the four congressional elections held since democracy was restored in 1989 demonstrate that those preferences persist to the present. By focusing on elections in the capital city of Santiago, which is divided into 52 communes (barrios) whose residents differ in their economic and educational levels, it is possible to see to what extent class and gender affect voting preferences. On the basis of an analysis of this data, this article concludes that women are consistently more likely than men to vote for conservative parties, and that this is true in every social class. Support for the left does rise among both sexes in the lower middle class, proletarian and peasant communes - but less among women than among men. The "gender gap" is not usually very large (although it increases at both ends of the political spectrum), but it is persistent. Reprinted by permission of Cambridge University Press. An electronic version of this article can be accessed via the internet at http://journals.cambridge.org
Author LEWIS, PAUL H.
Author_xml – sequence: 1
  givenname: PAUL H.
  surname: LEWIS
  fullname: LEWIS, PAUL H.
  organization: Tulane University
BookMark eNqNkctKA0EQRRtRMEY_QFAILsTNaPVUP5cSNL5AfEF2TWemoxOTmdidgO78DP09v8QeIyKKj03V4p57uVQtkfmyKh0hqxS2KVC5cwGQpikVXWAAijI2RxqUCZ1IIbvzpFHLSa0vkqUQBgCgOYMGWb-8ca2Xx6eOK3PnWx07fnl8bhVlq31TDN0yWejbYXAr77tJrvb3LtsHyclp57C9e5JkHOgk6SlQIqWZltymMrWMZtapvM8dZj2MQ1jkSHUPlc51lgvpdKZVpFH0QShsks1Z7thXd1MXJmZUhMwNh7Z01TQYARJiMPsHyAEVxz9BVAACtYzg1q8gBeSScarqlhtf0EE19WU8jKGaa8r0G0RnUOarELzrm7EvRtY_xCRTv8p8e1X0rM08gzCp_IcB44U41hWTmVyEibv_kK2_NUKi5EZ0zky7e3x8BBrNeeTxvYId9XyRX7tPRX8s8QouW6y6
CODEN JLTAAZ
CitedBy_id crossref_primary_10_7440_res53_2015_10
crossref_primary_10_1177_1866802X1801000103
crossref_primary_10_1080_13510347_2014_986720
crossref_primary_10_1080_13569775_2021_2007613
crossref_primary_10_1007_s12232_023_00417_8
ContentType Journal Article
Copyright 2004 Cambridge University Press
Copyright 2004 Cambridge University Press
Copyright Cambridge University Press, Publishing Division Nov 2004
Copyright_xml – notice: 2004 Cambridge University Press
– notice: Copyright 2004 Cambridge University Press
– notice: Copyright Cambridge University Press, Publishing Division Nov 2004
DBID BSCLL
AAYXX
CITATION
0-V
3V.
7U4
7UB
7WY
7WZ
7XB
87Z
88J
89V
8BJ
8BY
8FK
8FL
8G5
ABUWG
AFKRA
AIMQZ
ALSLI
AVQMV
AZQEC
BENPR
BEZIV
BHHNA
C18
CCPQU
DPSOV
DWI
DWQXO
FQK
FRNLG
F~G
GB0
GNUQQ
GUQSH
HEHIP
JBE
K50
K60
K6~
KC-
L.-
LIQON
M0C
M1D
M2L
M2O
M2R
M2S
MBDVC
PQBIZ
PQBZA
PQEST
PQHSC
PQQKQ
PQUKI
PRINS
Q9U
S0X
WZK
DOI 10.1017/S0022216X04008144
DatabaseName Istex
CrossRef
ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection【Remote access available】
ProQuest Central (Corporate)
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
ABI/INFORM Collection
ABI/INFORM Global (PDF only)
ProQuest Central (purchase pre-March 2016)
ABI/INFORM Collection
Social Science Database (Alumni Edition)
PRISMA Database
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
PRISMA Database with HAPI Index
ProQuest Central (Alumni) (purchase pre-March 2016)
ABI/INFORM Collection (Alumni Edition)
Research Library (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
ProQuest Central
ProQuest One Literature
Social Science Premium Collection (Proquest) (PQ_SDU_P3)
Arts Premium Collection
ProQuest Central Essentials
AUTh Library subscriptions: ProQuest Central
Business Premium Collection
Sociological Abstracts
Humanities Index
ProQuest One Community College
Politics Collection
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest Central
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
Business Premium Collection (Alumni)
ABI/INFORM Global (Corporate)
DELNET Social Sciences & Humanities Collection
ProQuest Central Student
Research Library Prep
Sociology Collection
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences
Art, Design & Architecture Collection (Proquest) (PQ_SDU_P3)
ProQuest Business Collection (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Business Collection
ProQuest Politics Collection
ABI/INFORM Professional Advanced
One Literature (ProQuest)
ABI/INFORM Global (ProQuest)
ProQuest Arts & Humanities Database
Political Science Database
ProQuest research library
Social Science Database
Sociology Database (ProQuest)
Research Library (Corporate)
One Business
ProQuest One Business (Alumni)
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition (DO NOT USE)
History Study Center
ProQuest One Academic
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
ProQuest Central China
ProQuest Central Basic
SIRS Editorial
Sociological Abstracts (Ovid)
DatabaseTitle CrossRef
ProQuest Business Collection (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest DELNET Social Sciences and Humanities Collection
Research Library Prep
ProQuest Central Student
ProQuest Central Essentials
PRISMA (without HAPI)
ProQuest Central China
ABI/INFORM Complete
Arts Premium Collection
British Humanities Index (BHI)
ProQuest Sociology
Business Premium Collection
Social Science Premium Collection
ABI/INFORM Global
ProQuest Political Science
ProQuest One Literature
ProQuest One Academic Eastern Edition
Sociology Collection
ProQuest Business Collection
ProQuest Social Science Journals
ProQuest Social Sciences Premium Collection
ProQuest One Academic UKI Edition
PRISMA (with HAPI)
ProQuest Politics Collection
Arts & Humanities Full Text
ProQuest One Academic
ABI/INFORM Global (Corporate)
ProQuest One Business
SIRS Editorial
ProQuest Social Science Journals (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest One Community College
Research Library (Alumni Edition)
Politics Collection
ProQuest Central
ABI/INFORM Professional Advanced
International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
ProQuest Central Korea
ProQuest Research Library
ProQuest Sociology Collection
Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
ProQuest Art, Design and Architecture Collection
ABI/INFORM Complete (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest One Literature - U.S. Customers Only
ABI/INFORM Global (Alumni Edition)
ProQuest Central Basic
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)
Sociological Abstracts
ProQuest One Business (Alumni)
ProQuest Central (Alumni)
Business Premium Collection (Alumni)
DatabaseTitleList Worldwide Political Science Abstracts
British Humanities Index (BHI)
ProQuest Business Collection (Alumni Edition)
Sociological Abstracts (pre-2017)

CrossRef

International Bibliography of the Social Sciences (IBSS)
Database_xml – sequence: 1
  dbid: BENPR
  name: AUTh Library subscriptions: ProQuest Central
  url: https://www.proquest.com/central
  sourceTypes: Aggregation Database
DeliveryMethod fulltext_linktorsrc
Discipline History & Archaeology
Political Science
EISSN 1469-767X
EndPage 742
ExternalDocumentID 772293811
10_1017_S0022216X04008144
3875537
ark_67375_6GQ_CXKKJ093_R
GeographicLocations Chile
GeographicLocations_xml – name: Chile
GroupedDBID -1C
-1D
-1E
-2P
-2R
-DZ
-E.
-ET
-~6
-~X
.FH
0-V
09C
09D
0E1
0R~
1OL
1Z7
29K
2FS
3R3
3V.
4.4
41~
5GY
5VS
63O
6~7
6~8
74X
74Z
7WY
7~U
7~V
85S
89V
8BY
8FL
8G5
8I0
8R4
8R5
9M5
AABES
AABWE
AACJB
AACJH
AADNG
AAEED
AAGFV
AAKTX
AALKF
AAOIO
AAPYI
AARAB
AASVR
AAUKB
ABBHK
ABBXD
ABGAQ
ABGDZ
ABITZ
ABJWI
ABLJU
ABMYL
ABPPZ
ABQWD
ABROB
ABTCQ
ABTME
ABTND
ABUWG
ABVFV
ABXAU
ABXSQ
ABYPY
ABZCX
ABZUI
ACABY
ACCHT
ACFCP
ACGFO
ACGFS
ACHQT
ACIMK
ACMRT
ACNCT
ACQFJ
ACREK
ACUIJ
ACUYZ
ACWGA
ACYZP
ACZBM
ACZBN
ADACV
ADBZK
ADFEC
ADFRT
ADGEJ
ADKIL
ADLEJ
ADOCW
ADOVH
ADTCA
ADULT
ADVJH
AEBAK
AEBPU
AEFOJ
AEHGV
AEUPB
AEYYC
AFDAS
AFDVO
AFFNX
AFFTP
AFFUJ
AFKQG
AFKRA
AFKRZ
AFKSM
AFLVW
AFUTZ
AGABE
AGHGI
AGJUD
AGLWM
AGOOT
AGTJU
AHQXX
AHRGI
AIBGX
AIDRF
AIGNW
AIHIV
AIMQZ
AISIE
AJ7
AJAHB
AJPFC
AJQAS
AKZCZ
ALMA_UNASSIGNED_HOLDINGS
ALSLI
ALVPG
ANFVQ
ANPLD
AOWSX
APXXL
ARABE
ARALO
ARZZG
ASOEW
ATUCA
AUXHV
AVDNQ
AVQMV
AWRMI
AWSUU
AYIQA
AZQEC
BBLKV
BBQHK
BCU
BENPR
BEZIV
BGHMG
BJBOZ
BKOMP
BMAJL
BPHCQ
BQFHP
C0O
CAG
CCPQU
CCQAD
CCUQV
CDIZJ
CFAFE
CFBFF
CFLAC
CGMFO
CHEAL
CJCSC
COF
CS3
D-I
DC4
DOHLZ
DPSOV
DWQXO
EBS
ED0
EGQIC
EJD
F20
F5P
FAC
FAS
FJW
FRNLG
FXEWX
GB0
GDOGT
GNUQQ
GROUPED_ABI_INFORM_COMPLETE
GUQSH
HEHIP
HG-
HGD
HOVLH
HSS
HST
HVGLF
HZ~
H~9
I.5
I.7
I.8
IH6
IOEEP
IOO
IS6
I~P
J36
J38
J3B
JAAYA
JAC
JBMMH
JBZCM
JENOY
JHFFW
JHPGK
JKQEH
JLEZI
JLXEF
JOSPZ
JPL
JPPIE
JQKCU
JRMXA
JSODD
JST
K50
K60
K6~
KAFGG
KC-
KC5
L98
LIQON
LW7
M-V
M0C
M1D
M2L
M2O
M2R
M2S
M7~
M8.
MVM
NHB
NIKVX
NNXVD
O9-
OYBOY
P2P
PQBIZ
PQHSC
PQQKQ
PROAC
Q2X
RCA
RIG
ROL
RR0
RWL
S0X
S6-
S6U
SA0
T9M
TAE
TN5
UBC
UT1
VQA
WFFJZ
WH7
WHG
WQ3
WXS
WXY
WYP
XFK
XOL
XSW
YCJ
YQT
YZZ
ZCA
ZCG
ZJOSE
ZMEZD
ZYDXJ
~45
~A4
ABPTK
AFSKE
BSCLL
AAYXX
CITATION
IPSME
PQBZA
7U4
7UB
7XB
8BJ
8FK
BHHNA
C18
DWI
FQK
JBE
L.-
MBDVC
PQEST
PQUKI
PRINS
Q9U
WZK
ID FETCH-LOGICAL-c501t-b808621c975a272a41cae8df5e3cb3e3c6a35319b389d9cd67e9c9875a36f0683
IEDL.DBID M1D
ISSN 0022-216X
IngestDate Sat Aug 17 03:48:48 EDT 2024
Sat Aug 17 00:59:00 EDT 2024
Fri Aug 16 22:47:09 EDT 2024
Fri Aug 16 08:04:17 EDT 2024
Tue Sep 24 23:01:20 EDT 2024
Thu Sep 12 17:40:55 EDT 2024
Fri Feb 02 07:07:55 EST 2024
Wed Jan 17 04:51:23 EST 2024
Wed Mar 13 05:53:14 EDT 2024
IsPeerReviewed true
IsScholarly true
Issue 4
Language English
LinkModel DirectLink
MergedId FETCHMERGED-LOGICAL-c501t-b808621c975a272a41cae8df5e3cb3e3c6a35319b389d9cd67e9c9875a36f0683
Notes istex:5FFC20BF3AFAF3F5890A81ECEC8725158B34C8AD
PII:S0022216X04008144
ark:/67375/6GQ-CXKKJ093-R
ObjectType-Article-2
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-1
content type line 23
ObjectType-Article-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
PQID 195914988
PQPubID 48667
PageCount 24
ParticipantIDs proquest_miscellaneous_60702724
proquest_miscellaneous_60503853
proquest_miscellaneous_38006397
proquest_miscellaneous_1035745188
proquest_journals_195914988
crossref_primary_10_1017_S0022216X04008144
jstor_primary_3875537
istex_primary_ark_67375_6GQ_CXKKJ093_R
cambridge_journals_10_1017_S0022216X04008144
PublicationCentury 2000
PublicationDate 20041100
2004-11
20041101
2004-11-00
PublicationDateYYYYMMDD 2004-11-01
PublicationDate_xml – month: 11
  year: 2004
  text: 20041100
PublicationDecade 2000
PublicationPlace Cambridge, UK
PublicationPlace_xml – name: Cambridge, UK
– name: Cambridge
PublicationTitle Journal of Latin American studies
PublicationTitleAlternate J. Lat. Am. Stud
PublicationYear 2004
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Publisher_xml – name: Cambridge University Press
SSID ssj0009540
Score 1.706835
Snippet Men and women in Chile register and vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior,...
Men & women in Chile register & vote at separate polling booths. Election results are also tabulated separately for each sex by the Ministry of Interior, down...
SourceID proquest
crossref
jstor
istex
cambridge
SourceType Aggregation Database
Publisher
StartPage 719
SubjectTerms Ballots
Chile
Class Differences
Communes
Communism
Congressional elections
Democracy
Educational attainment
Elections
Electoral behaviour
Electoral districts
Gender
Latin American history
Left wing politics
Legislative districts
Men
Middle class
Parliamentary elections
Political Affiliation
Political candidates
Political history
Political science
Politics
Polls & surveys
Presidential elections
Residents
Sex Differences
Sexes
Social classes
Studies
Voter behavior
Voter registration
Voting
Voting Behavior
Voting behaviour
Women
Women and politics
Women's participation
Title The ‘Gender Gap’ in Chile
URI https://www.cambridge.org/core/product/identifier/S0022216X04008144/type/journal_article
https://api.istex.fr/ark:/67375/6GQ-CXKKJ093-R/fulltext.pdf
https://www.jstor.org/stable/3875537
https://www.proquest.com/docview/195914988/abstract/
https://search.proquest.com/docview/1035745188
https://search.proquest.com/docview/38006397
https://search.proquest.com/docview/60503853
https://search.proquest.com/docview/60702724
Volume 36
hasFullText 1
inHoldings 1
isFullTextHit
isPrint
link http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwrV3dS9xAEB-s99KX-tET42cEUZBGk-xHkidRqydKpUqFewv7dShC7mpzoP3ru7PJHteK99SXPCQT2M1vZnZnZ_IbgF2aSs2USCNTJCKiXBaRIKmOlHWMmru8r2P7vOGX9_Sqz_pz0PP_wmBZpfeJzlHrocIz8iMkQbG7eRuvCYmHAKo-Oh79jLB9FKZZ214aH6CT2CUZVf1b8nWKfZfGnjY8TXjfpzcddzSGPPYeanNuw4tpkoW_FqsOfvcXX7f4xne7BeliAR78VJo6lKfDcS0P1e9_WB7_w1wX4VO7aQ1PGi1bgjlTLUO3YRh5DfdCpK8VrkXw6zIstiV19oXWcXyGwGpjuN-0rQt7YrQfPlYhsiqbLtxfnP84u4zapgyRYnFSRzLHIChRRcZEmqWCJkqYXA-YIUoSe-GCoF1LuxPShdI8M4UqbFQkCB_EPCcrMF8NK7MKoY0UqYx1ojgVlJBYxANKC6NNmgvM-AXwZYJE2ZrWr7IpS8vKN8AFcODBKkcNVccs4T0H50RSPD9hjVvGSt67Lc_619dXcUHKuwC6Du-JILFzYSQLYN1jNzU2D1wAO5On1l4xCSMqMxzj8AnLKNLgBbD9jgzJm4Tr-xLc0fgwMksiiy0-dG3mONfhY8NciWdKGzBfP4_Npt1l1XILOqfnN9_vtpwl_QGfuCFN
link.rule.ids 315,786,790,11726,21416,27957,27958,33779,33780,36185,36186,43840,44415,74659,75269
linkProvider ProQuest
linkToHtml http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwfV3dS8MwED90e9AX8WNi_awgCmKxbT7aPomKOp0OFYW9lTTJQIRu6gT9782l6ZiIe-lDe4H0crncL3f8DmCPxoViUsSBziIRUF5kgSCxCqRxjIrbvK9l--zy9jO96bGeq835cGWVtU-0jloNJN6RHyMJionm0_Rk-BZg0yhMrroOGrPQpMQglQY0zy66948TrLs0rOnC44j36rSm5YxGqGPeoRWnBlZMkiv8OqSaqO-vul7xj8-2B9HlIiy4CNI_rZZ8CWZ0uQytiu7j29_3kUtW2H6938uw6OrbzAC3i1fAM6bhH1Q95PwrMTzwX0ofKY51C54vL57O24HrkBBIFkajoEgRkUQyS5iIk1jQSAqdqj7TRBbEPLgguMkKE5aoTCqe6ExmBqIIwvshT8kqNMpBqdfAN7CNFqGKJKeCEhKKsE9pppWOU4HpNw-OxurJnZ1_5FWNWJL_0aYHh7UG82HFmzFNeN_qeCwp3l-x4CxhOb96yM97nc5NmJH80YOWXYSxIDH_wkjiwUa9KBNzqy3Gg93xV7N5MCMiSj34xOkTllDkpPNg5x8ZklbZz_8luOXUYWSaRGLgf0zXp85zB-baT3e3-e11t7MB8xWlJF72bEJj9P6pt0z4Myq2nZH_AJ_Y-cU
linkToPdf http://utb.summon.serialssolutions.com/2.0.0/link/0/eLvHCXMwrV3dS9xAEB-qgvjSWnvSaNUIoiDmTLJfyVMp2vPjiqgo3FvY7O5BK-ROvYPav96dzeY4K96TL3lIJrCb-cjMzo_fAOzQtNRMyTQyeSIjyss8kiTVkbKBUXPX93Vsnxf89Jae91jPUwo9elhlExNdoNYDhWfkh0iCYrN5W6_1PSri8rjzfXgf4QApbLT6aRpzsCBwajai-JLjKf5dGjfE4WnCe02D07FHY9Fj76E9Z7bAmKZZePG7WsAv_7dBLr6K3u6X1PkEf5rN1EiUu_Z4VLbVv_94Ht9lt8vw0Seu4Y_a0j7DB1OtQKtmGXkKd0OksJVuTPDTCix7WJ19wQePLxBYiwz36tF14Ykc7oW_qxCZlU0Lbjs_b45OIz-YIVIsTkZRmWEhlKhcMJmKVNJESZPpPjNElcReuCTo26XNhnSuNBcmV7mtjCTh_ZhnZBXmq0FlvkJoq0VaxjpRnEpKSCzjPqW50SbNJHb9AjiY6KLw7vVY1NA0UbxSXQD7jbqKYU3XMUt41yl0Iikf7hDnJljBT66Ko163ex7npLgOoOU0PhEkdi-MiADWG-1Nra1RXQDbk6fWZ7ERIyszGOPyCRMUqfAC2HpDhmR10_VtCe6ofBiZJSFiqx-6NnOdW7Bojav4dXbRXYelmsgSj5i-wfzoYWw2bNI1KjedOz0DGUgj7w
openUrl ctx_ver=Z39.88-2004&ctx_enc=info%3Aofi%2Fenc%3AUTF-8&rfr_id=info%3Asid%2Fsummon.serialssolutions.com&rft_val_fmt=info%3Aofi%2Ffmt%3Akev%3Amtx%3Ajournal&rft.genre=article&rft.atitle=The+%27Gender+Gap%27+in+Chile&rft.jtitle=Journal+of+Latin+American+studies&rft.au=Lewis%2C+Paul+H&rft.date=2004-11-01&rft.issn=0022-216X&rft.volume=36&rft.issue=4&rft.spage=717&rft.epage=742&rft_id=info:doi/10.1017%2FS0022216X04008144&rft.externalDBID=NO_FULL_TEXT
thumbnail_l http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/lc.gif&issn=0022-216X&client=summon
thumbnail_m http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/mc.gif&issn=0022-216X&client=summon
thumbnail_s http://covers-cdn.summon.serialssolutions.com/index.aspx?isbn=/sc.gif&issn=0022-216X&client=summon