Organized Crime and Women in Politics

Data evento: 
Da  12/12/201912/12/2019

Il Dipartimento di Scienze Economiche Aziendali Matematiche e Statistiche (DEAMS) e il Comitato Unico di Garanzia (CUG) dell’Università degli Studi di Trieste

Organizzano il seminario

Organized Crime and Women in Politics: Evidence from a Quasi-Experiment in Southern Italy

Con
Anna Laura Baraldi, Dipartimento di Economia, Università della Campania L. Vanvitelli
Carla Ronza, Dipartimento di Economia e Statistica, Università di Napoli Federico II

Introduce
Elena Podrecca

 

L’incontro si terrà giovedì 12 dicembre alle 15.15 presso l’aula Ziller (II piano, via Tigor) a Trieste.
 

Abstract

This paper provides new and unexplored evidence of a negative link between an increasing female participation in politics and the infiltration of organized crime in government. We perform an empirical analysis over about 1700 Southern Italian municipalities between 1985 and 2013 exploiting two Italian laws: law no. 164/1991 that allows to measure mafia infiltration in the Italian municipalities and law no. 81/1993 that creates an exogenous source of variation in the share of women in the council that allows to correct for endogeneity bias. Increasing the female proportion in city council of 10 p.p. reduces the probability of dissolution for mafia infiltration of about 1.8 percentage points; the result is confirmed when considering an increase in female Mayors. This negative effect remains across several robustness checks.

This research adds a further reason in favour of the reduction of the gender gap in politics. In fact, policies aimed at legitimizing democracy, such as gender quotas in the electoral law, also have the indirect effect of strengthening institutions in the fight against organized crime, which is always a key government agenda.