<p>In a first in Europe, women hold more than half of the seats in Iceland's new parliament, final election results showed Sunday.</p>.<p>Of the 63 seats in the Althing, 33 were won by women, or 52 percent, according to projections based on the final results.</p>.<p>No other European country has had more than 50 percent women lawmakers, with Sweden coming closest at 47 percent, according to data compiled by the World Bank.</p>.<p>Five other countries in the world currently have parliaments where women hold at least half the seats, according to the Inter-Parliamentary Union: Rwanda (61 percent), Cuba (53 percent), Nicaragua (51 percent) and Mexico and the United Arab Emirates (50 percent).</p>.<p>Unlike some other countries, Iceland does not have legal quotas on female representation in parliament, though some parties do require a minimum number of candidates to be women.</p>.<p>Iceland has long been a pioneer in gender equality and women's rights, and has topped the World Economic Forum's ranking of most egalitarian countries for the past 12 years.</p>.<p>It offers the same parental leave to both men and women, and its first law on equal pay for men and women dates back to 1961.</p>.<p>Iceland was the first country to elect a woman as president in 1980, and since 2018 it has had a pioneering gender-equal pay law that puts the onus on employers to prove they are paying the same wages to men and women.</p>.<p>Saturday's election saw the left-right coalition government widen its majority.</p>.<p>However, Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir's Left Green Movement emerged weakened while her right-wing partners posted strong scores, casting doubt over her future as prime minister.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>
<p>In a first in Europe, women hold more than half of the seats in Iceland's new parliament, final election results showed Sunday.</p>.<p>Of the 63 seats in the Althing, 33 were won by women, or 52 percent, according to projections based on the final results.</p>.<p>No other European country has had more than 50 percent women lawmakers, with Sweden coming closest at 47 percent, according to data compiled by the World Bank.</p>.<p>Five other countries in the world currently have parliaments where women hold at least half the seats, according to the Inter-Parliamentary Union: Rwanda (61 percent), Cuba (53 percent), Nicaragua (51 percent) and Mexico and the United Arab Emirates (50 percent).</p>.<p>Unlike some other countries, Iceland does not have legal quotas on female representation in parliament, though some parties do require a minimum number of candidates to be women.</p>.<p>Iceland has long been a pioneer in gender equality and women's rights, and has topped the World Economic Forum's ranking of most egalitarian countries for the past 12 years.</p>.<p>It offers the same parental leave to both men and women, and its first law on equal pay for men and women dates back to 1961.</p>.<p>Iceland was the first country to elect a woman as president in 1980, and since 2018 it has had a pioneering gender-equal pay law that puts the onus on employers to prove they are paying the same wages to men and women.</p>.<p>Saturday's election saw the left-right coalition government widen its majority.</p>.<p>However, Prime Minister Katrin Jakobsdottir's Left Green Movement emerged weakened while her right-wing partners posted strong scores, casting doubt over her future as prime minister.</p>.<p><strong>Check out latest DH videos here</strong></p>