Girl Trouble The Dutch Political Reformed Party and passive female suffrage 1922-present.

Keywords
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Authors
Issue Date
2014-06-19
Language
en
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Abstract
This thesis analyzes the apparent contradition between the SGP's acceptance of representative parliamentary democracy and its longstanding rejection of passive female suffrage. The thesis concludes that the answer lies in the SGP's conception of democracy, specifically its theocratic ideology. Theocracy, as the SGP sees it, is a moral guideline for a democratic society. In the SGP's theocratic ideology, democracy is perfectly acceptable. Governments should follow Biblical norms, but this does not preclude the right of the people to vote. The role of women in society is merely part of those Biblical norms, hence women ought not to participate in political affairs. Also, the party is not as undivided on passive female suffrage as it seems - a large part of its membership accepts it, and the success of the first female candidate indicates the SGP electorate does too.
Description
Citation
Faculty
Faculteit der Letteren
Specialisation