While making this map, I discovered that a law stating that all lists of candidates for legislators must be male-female-male or female-male-female is not common.
gazingbobo on
From this I’ll say Brazilians make the best wives. They’re hot and not into politics
Inaksa on
In Argentina the law says that there must be a similar amount of men and women in the ballot, this had caused several „headaches“ when candidates drop from races, because it may skew the numbers. In our system parties run for say 6 positions so they have 6 candidates, the firsts are usually guaranteed to enter and subsequent candidates have a diminishing chance to get in.
But the rule applies to ballots, what happens after they get elected is not covered so you could have a congress with a ratio of 90% men and 10% women. it is convoluted af… But the positions are filled with those that didn’t get elected, so such a 90-10 composition is almost impossible to achieve.
Lord_Puding on
Sir, two things to avoid when making a map.
1. You have so many fuckin colors available yet you use different shades of single one.
2. Black color for sea/rest of the map rarely works. And if you’re not able to complete step 1 you’re not even remotely good with colors to know how to use black background and make it look good.
somafiend1987 on
Better wording, thanks.
Il_vino_buono on
US should be 0%. We don’t have a parliamentary system.
cantonlautaro on
These maps would be more helpful if they indicated where there were quotas for elected female politicians and what that quota is. It would also help if this map wasnt just 50 shades of red.
AnonymousTimewaster on
Weird to have higher as darker red which implies bad
Standard-Motor-7270 on
Based Mexico
Remontada_r7 on
The lower the better
VerdantChief on
I can understand this map just fine, I don’t understand the critiques other than that the word „parliament“ shouldn’t be used.
stephan_grzw on
Instead we measure merit we do gender.
Leave A Reply
Du musst angemeldet sein, um einen Kommentar abzugeben.
12 Kommentare
While making this map, I discovered that a law stating that all lists of candidates for legislators must be male-female-male or female-male-female is not common.
From this I’ll say Brazilians make the best wives. They’re hot and not into politics
In Argentina the law says that there must be a similar amount of men and women in the ballot, this had caused several „headaches“ when candidates drop from races, because it may skew the numbers. In our system parties run for say 6 positions so they have 6 candidates, the firsts are usually guaranteed to enter and subsequent candidates have a diminishing chance to get in.
But the rule applies to ballots, what happens after they get elected is not covered so you could have a congress with a ratio of 90% men and 10% women. it is convoluted af… But the positions are filled with those that didn’t get elected, so such a 90-10 composition is almost impossible to achieve.
Sir, two things to avoid when making a map.
1. You have so many fuckin colors available yet you use different shades of single one.
2. Black color for sea/rest of the map rarely works. And if you’re not able to complete step 1 you’re not even remotely good with colors to know how to use black background and make it look good.
Better wording, thanks.
US should be 0%. We don’t have a parliamentary system.
These maps would be more helpful if they indicated where there were quotas for elected female politicians and what that quota is. It would also help if this map wasnt just 50 shades of red.
Weird to have higher as darker red which implies bad
Based Mexico
The lower the better
I can understand this map just fine, I don’t understand the critiques other than that the word „parliament“ shouldn’t be used.
Instead we measure merit we do gender.