Paloma
Caravantes González

Tenured Scientist
Dept. of Science and Innovation
Metrics and Innovation in Science and Technology (MIST)
Office
3E11
Phone
916022631 / Extensión interna: 441311

Redes sociales

Biografía

Paloma Caravantes González is a tenured research scientist at the IPP-CSIC.

She holds a PhD in Women’s and Gender Studies from Rutgers University (New Jersey, USA). She has been a César Nombela postdoctoral researcher at the IPP-CSIC, as well as a Marie Skłodowska-Curie researcher (LODGE, Ref. 101067130) and a Juan de la Cierva–Formación researcher (FJC2020-042827-I) in the Department of Political Science and Public Administration at the Complutense University of Madrid (Spain).

She is currently a member of the research team for the Horizon Europe project “Co-Creating Inclusive Intersectional Democratic Spaces Across Europe” (CCINDLE; Ref: 101061256). Previously, she took part in the projects “The Gender Division in the Agenda of the Parliament of Catalonia” (DEMOC; Ref. EXI077 /21/000001) and “Towards the Implementation of the ‘Human Rights, Gender, and Intersectionality’ Approach in Madrid’s Municipal Policies” (IMPLEMAD; Ref. 2018-548-042), funded by the Government of Catalonia and the Madrid City Council, respectively. 

From 2021 to 2025, she was a member of the Steering Committee of the ECPR Standing Group on Gender and Politics. She has published in journals such as European Journal of Political Research, Policy & Politics, Politics & Gender, International Political Science Review, and South European Society and Politics, as well as a monograph on the implementation of intersectionality in public policies of the Madrid City Council.

Her research interests focus on processes of feminist democratization at the local level, the implementation of intersectionality and gender equity approaches in public policy, and the analysis of the anti-gender movement and institutional and parliamentary responses to it.
 

Specialization field
Gender and politics, design and implementation of public policies on equality and intersectionality, anti-gender politics and institutional and parliamentary responses, populism, and local politics.
Publications

2025. Anti-gender campaigns and European democracies' long-term legacies of exclusion and violence (Conny Roggeband, Marta Rawłuszko, Petra Meier, Silvia Díaz Fernández y Emanuela Lombardo). Women's Studies International Forum. Q2 JCR women’s studies (27/66), 1.5 impact; Q2 Scopus gender studies & sociology and political sciences, 0.557 impact.

2025. “Stop torpedoing women's rights!”: feminist institutional responses to anti-gender actors in Spain and Catalonia parliaments (con Emanuela Lombardo y Silvia Díaz Fernández). European Journal of Political Research. Q1 JCR political science (35/318), 3.6 impact; Q1 Scopus sociology & pol. science, 3.334 impact.

2025. Gendering democracy: Feminist parliamentary responses to opposition against gender equality (con Arantxa Elizondo y Emanuela Lombardo). Journal of Gender Studies. Open Access. Q1 JCR women’s studies (14/66), Q2 JCR social issues (18/67), 2.2 impact; Q1 Scopus social sciences & gender studies, 0.613 impact.

2025. When Is Gender on Party Agendas? Manifestos and (De-)Democratization in Greece, Portugal, and Spain (con Ana Catalano Weeks, Ana Espírito-Santo, Emanuela Lombardo, Maria Stratigaki y Sami Gul). South European Society and Politics. Open Access. Q1 JCR political science (15/325), 4.6 impact; Q1 Scopus sociology & political science, 0.712 impact.

2025. Two gender–equal nations? Anti-gender re-configurations of national belonging in Sweden and Spain (con Hansalbin Sältenberg y Silvia Díaz Fernández). Open Access. NORA -Nordic Journal of Feminist and Gender Research. 33(1): 101-116. Open Access. Q3 JCR women’s studies (38/70), 1.3 impact; Q2 Scopus gender studies, 0.493 impact.

2024. Feminist democratic innovations in policy and politics (con Emanuela Lombardo). Policy & Politics, 52(2): 177-199. Open Access. Q1 JCR political science (16/197), public admin (7/49). 4.7 impact; Q1 Scopus sociology & political science, 1.295 impact.     

2024. The discursive construction of intersectionality under the frames of gender and diversity: challenges and opportunities for public policy implementation (con María Caterina La Barbera y Laura Cassain). Critical Discourse Studies. 21(5): 555–572. Open Access. Q2 JCR communication (66/227). 2.1 impact; Q1 Scopus social sci, 0.777 impact. 

2023. The Symbolic Representation of the ‘People’ and the ‘Homeland’ in Spanish Left Populism: an Opportunity for Feminist Politics? (con Emanuela Lombardo). Journal of Contemporary European Studies. 31(3): 902-915. Q3 JCR political science (129/187). 1.355 impact; Q1 Scopus sociology & political science, 0.327 impact.

2023. Implementing Intersectionality in Public Policies: Key Factors in Madrid City Council, Spain (con María Caterina La Barbera y Julia Espinosa-Fajardo). Politics & Gender, 19(3), 675-702. Open Access. Q1 JCR political science (35/187), 3.4 impact; Q1 Scopus sociology & political science, 1.359 impact. * ‘Mención honorable’ al premio anual de la Gender and Sexuality Research Network (Council for European Studies). 

2021. Tensions between populist and feminist politics: The case of the Spanish left populist party Podemos. International Political Science Review. 42(5): 596-612. Q2 JCR political science (80/188). 2.232 impact; Q1 Scopus sociology & political science, 0.755 impact.

Research projects

No existen proyectos asociados a esta persona