Awards - Wilma Rule Award: ºÚÁÏÍøAward for the Best Research on Gender and Politics

Wilma RuleThe Wilma Rule Award on Gender and Politics was instituted by the Executive Committee on the recommendation of the Committee on Participation and the Committee on Awards. It was designed to encourage research in gender and politics and was launched at the 2000 ºÚÁÏÍøWorld Congress. It is given to the best paper on gender and politics. The ºÚÁÏÍøAwards Committee has recommended naming the award in tribute to the work of Wilma Rule.

The subject matter of the paper should include issues relating to women’s participation and representation in politics and society, especially the identification of entry barriers to decision-making arenas. Any scholar, male or female, who has prepared a written, original paper for the Congress, with the intention of presenting it personally, may be recommended for the award by the convenor or chair of his or her panel.

Wilma Rule (1925-2004)

Wilma Rule received a B.A. in Political Science and in Journalism in 1949 and an M.A. in political science in 1950 from the University of California at Berkeley. Her Ph.D. was granted by the University of Hawaii in 1968. She was awarded a postdoctoral fellowship for the Inter-University Consortium for Political and Social Research at the University of Michigan and did additional postdoctoral work in organizational behavior at Northwestern University. She was an assistant professor at Northern Illinois University from 1969 to 1975. She served as long-time Secretary Treasurer of the Representation and Electoral Systems Section of the American Political Science Association.

Her study of gender and politics led to a lifetime of research on electoral systems and how they facilitated or hindered the election of women and underrepresented minorities to public office. Wilma Rule was a leading writer and political science researcher whose work resulted in a number of articles and books that challenge conventional notions about the reasons for the lack of political representation by women in the US.

Prize: $1,000 USD (1 recipient)
The prize is of $1,000 USD awarded to one recipient at the closing ceremony of the ºÚÁÏÍøWorld Congress.


Nomination Procedures

All RCs, in particular RC07 and RC19, as well as panel chairs and convenors at the ºÚÁÏÍøWorld Congress are invited to submit nominations of the best paper on gender and politics submitted for the Congress. Each nomination should be accompanied by (1) a copy of the Congress paper (submitted online by July 1), and (2) a letter of recommendation from the nominating RC, chair or convenor. Each research nominated will be assessed by a panel drawn from ºÚÁÏÍøCommittee on Organization, Procedures and Awards (COPA) on the basis of nominations by convenors and chairs at the ºÚÁÏÍøWorld Congress.

The following are the criteria for the award:

The subject matter of the paper should include issues relating to women’s participation and representation in politics and society, especially the identification of entry barriers to decision-making arenas. Any scholar, male or female, who has prepared a written, original paper for the Congress, with the intention of presenting it personally, may be recommended for the award by the convenor or chair of his or her panel.

Submitting Nominations

Research Committees (RCs), panel convenors and chairs are invited to submit their nominations by 20 June 2025. In order to be nominated, the accepted full paper needs to be uploaded on the Congress website prior to 20 June 2025.

The nomination period is open from 1 April to 20 June 2025.

2025 Nomination Form - Wilma Rule Award


Nomination Deadline: 20 June 2025


Wilma Rule Award Recipients

2023 Mariana Gené and Carolina Glasserman Apicella
Paper: Informal Rules and Gendered Political Hierarchies: On the Experience of Women Deputies in the Argentine Congress

2021 Nayia Kamenou
PaperFeminism Hijacked: Women, Gender and Political Agency in the Golden Dawn and the National Popular Front 

2018 Ki-Young Shin, Jackie F. Steele and Mari Miura
PaperDoes "Constituency Facetime" Reproduce Male Dominance? Insights From Japan's Mixed-Member Majoritarian Electoral System

2016 Mona Lena Krook
Paper: Violence against Women in Politics: A Rising Threat to Democracy Worldwide

2014 Jennifer Marie Piscopo
Paper: Inclusive Institutions versus Feminist Advocacy: Women’s Legislative Committees and Caucuses in Latin America

2012 Amanda Gouws
Paper: Multiculturalism in South Africa: Dislodging the Binary between Universal Human Rights and Culture/Tradition

2009 Anne Marie Holli and Milja Saari
Paper: The Representation of Women in the Parliamentary Standing Committee Hearings in Finland 

2006 Manon Tremblay
Paper: Democracy, Representation, and Women: A Worldwide Comparative Analysis

2000 (Co-Recipients)

Karen Bird
Paper: Gender Parity and the Political Representation of Women in France
&
Marian Sawer
Paper: Representation of Women: Questions of Accountability