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Women and Social Movements, International
Edited by Kathryn Kish Sklar and Thomas Dublin, State University of
New York, BinghamtonPREPUBLICATION ANNOUNCEMENT
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“Women created and still create forms of transnational citizenship
different from the diplomatic or commercial activities that most men
have pursued internationally. With this collection we can study that
citizenship in depth. Access to this history will be transformative for
scholars and students. It allows us to see that much of the global
interactions that shape our world today were first forged by women.”—Kathryn
Kish Sklar, from the Introduction
Backed by a global editorial board of more than 40 leading scholars from
around the world, this landmark collection of primary sources
illuminates a vast area of modern history. Through the writings of women
activists, their personal letters and diaries, and the conference
proceedings at which pivotal decisions were made and social movements
were born, this online collection traces the global history of women’s
international agendas and illuminates their enormous influence on the
course of events and shifts in attitudes that have defined modern life.
At the heart of this indispensable tool for research and teaching in
history, political science, sociology, women’s studies, law, and across
the humanities curriculum, are approximately 150,000 pages of
in-copyright or previously unpublished primary source content—together
with links to an additional 150,000 regularly updated pages of primary
and secondary resources freely available on the Web—for a total
collection of 300,000 pages, all of it Semantically Indexed for
search and browse capabilities powerful enough to drive scholarly
research.
Central to the collection are more than 10,000 pages of proceedings of
international meetings for 25 women’s organizations, beginning with the
1840 World’s Anti-Slavery Convention in London and ending with the
Beijing Conference for Women in 1995 together with the “Beijing + 15,”
which will take place in 2010 and will review implementation of the
original Beijing Platform. The proceedings themselves are dwarfed by
more than 140,000 pages of reports, journals, manuscripts, letters,
photographs, diaries, and ephemera. Reports from different national
committees at the same meeting allow the user to compare multiple
perspectives. Reports are presented in their original language, and an
English-language version is published alongside the original wherever
these are available.
Proceedings are often overlooked as sources for study, but in this
collection they come to life as snapshots in time and place documenting
not just the history of women’s issues, but concerns affecting all
communities around the world. With broad topical coverage ranging from
slavery to peace, this collection extends well beyond women’s history,
making possible a new kind of international history.
Women and Social Movements, International provides an
unparalleled survey of the legal impediments to women over time and
across cultures, but it does much more than that. In nineteenth-century
western culture, women prided themselves on being different from men.
Faced with resistance from national political parties and organizations,
they sought to further their agendas by enlisting women from around the
world, and became well organized on an international scale. Major
policies such as Wilson’s Fourteen Points were pioneered by women. This
gendered tradition of global activism extended into the latter half of
the twentieth century as women remained identified with issues of peace,
child labor, poverty, literacy, disease prevention, and more. Through
this tradition we gain a new perspective on modern history as a whole.
The collection also makes possible the study of people whose names are
not well known but who are increasingly the focus of contemporary
scholarship because of their pivotal roles in the organizations and
global movements that have had such an enormous impact on modern social
history. Barred from the 1840 World’s Anti-Slavery Convention, Sarah
Pugh, best friend of Lucretia Mott, emerges as a key figure in the
international antislavery movement. Madeline Z. Doty emerges as a
correspondent for The Ladies Home Journal in Moscow during the
Russian Revolution. Dorothy Kenyon emerges as a major figure in the
transition from the League of Nations to the United Nations. The
personal correspondence of these and other international leaders gives
us a fresh understanding of the world we inherited from them.
More than 75% of this collection is comprised of in-copyright works,
with materials licensed from the organizations themselves and from
leading publishers. Some 60,000 pages of materials are previously
unpublished, including “hidden archives” of letters and diaries from
some of the most prominent protagonists. Approximately 10% of the
collection is in languages other than English, including German, French,
and Spanish.
Other important features include the most complete bibliography of this
field yet created together with original essays by leading scholars that
complement these primary sources and provide new frameworks for
understanding women’s international agendas and actions. Women and
Social Movements, International also includes an enhanced Dictionary
of Social Movements, as well as newly commissioned biographical and
reference material detailing the historical impact of the 25
organizations and their leaders.
Partner Archives
- The Sophia Smith Collection at Smith
College
- Library of Congress
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- Aletta, Institute
for Women’s History, Amsterdam
- Others to be announced
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Conferences, Meetings, and Organizations
Covered
- World’s Anti-Slavery Convention, London,
1840
- International Abolitionist Federation,
1875-
- International Council of Women,
1888-1930s
- International Cooperative Women’s Guild,
1898-
- International Council of Social
Democratic Women, 1907-
- International Federation of University
Women, 1919-
- League of Nations, 1919-1945
- International Federation of Working
Women, 1919-1923
- Inter-American Commission on Women/Comisión
Interamericana de Mujeres, 1922-
- Open Door International, 1929-
- International Federation of Business and
Professional Women, 1930-
- Non-governmental Organizations (NGOs):
- Amnesty International
- Equality NOW
- International Women's Rights Action
Watch
- Women’s International Democratic
Federation, 1950-1985
- International Planned Parenthood
Federation, 1952-
- Network of East-West Women
- World Union of Catholic Women's
Organizations
- International Council of Jewish Women,
1943-
- Ecumenical Decade, 1988-1998
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- Women Missionaries, 1870s-
- World's Woman's Christian Temperance
Union, 1883-
- World Young Women’s Christian
Association, 1890-
- International Woman Suffrage
Alliance/International Alliance of Women, 1899-
- International Congress of Women at The
Hague, 1915
- Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom, 1919-
- International Labor Organization, 1919-
- League of Women Voters, 1920-
- Pan Pacific and Southeast Asia Women’s
Association, 1928-
- National Woman’s Party/World Woman’s
Party, 1929-
- Associated Country Women of the World,
1933-
- United Nations
- UN Commission on the Status of Women,
1945-
- UNICEF, 1946-
- UN Decade for Women and Succeeding
Conferences, 1975-1985
- Vienna, 1993
- Beijing, 1995
- Liaison Committee of Women’s
International Organizations, 1943-
- African American Institute, Women’s
Africa Committee, 1959-
- Arab Women’s Solidarity Organization
- Women’s International Zionist
Organization, 1890-
- Global Alliance Against Traffic in Women,
1994-
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Publication Details
Women and Social Movements, International is an online
collection available to academic, public, and school libraries worldwide
via subscription or outright purchase of perpetual rights. No special
setup or software is required—all you need is an Internet browser. For
more information, to request a free trial or price quote, please email
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