CAWP’s 50-year history as the leading institution for data and scholarship on women’s participation in American politics was chronicled in two recent magazine articles. First, Rutgers Magazine explored the impact of the Center over the past half-century. In an interview, political strategist and author Donna Brazile said, “CAWP taught us how to measure success and to dare to take our seats at the table…For 50 years, the Center has built a community of women public leaders, encouraging women to stop running from politics and start running for office.”
Ms. magazine, meanwhile, published a conversation between Bonnie Stabile, of George Mason University, and CAWP Director Debbie Walsh that touched on CAWP’s founding, evolution, and continuing mission of illuminating the breadth of women’s representation in American government through deep data resources, as well as our educational programming for women, students, and young children. “A big part of the narrative about women’s participation is the diversity among the women who are running and who are serving,” Walsh tells Stabile, “[I want to] make sure we’re not just talking about getting more women elected…but all the richness of the diversity that they bring. The diversity among the women who serve has grown, and so, change has happened.”
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