For the start of Women’s History Month 2023, Sharon Thompson reflects on writing about the Married Women’s Association’s influence on law reform in the mid-20th century in her new book and podcast, Quiet Revolutionaries, and how The Women’s Library archives at LSE informed this research
As part of the ongoing reevaluation of the prehistory of the women\u27s movement, Carolyn Lawes anal...
Copyright © 2022 The Aurthor. In their ground-breaking book Women and the Law, first published in 19...
A comparative historical approach provides insight into ways in which six women educator activists p...
For the start of Women’s History Month 2023, Sharon Thompson reflects on writing about the Married W...
A review of Sharon Thompson's book; Quiet Revolutionaries: The Married Women's Association and Famil...
Conventional histories of family law focus on legal actors, while neglecting the little-known yet in...
Review of Sharon Thompson, Quiet Revolutionaries: The Married Women's Association and Family Law (Bl...
In our Meet the Book Author Series, the Journal of Law and Society and the Centre of Law and Society...
The podcast, “Sex, Suffrage, and Scandalous Women,” tells stories of activists about whom the averag...
This work is a survey of the efforts through which women have changed their place in American societ...
Social movements are an important and visible part of the American government process. However, thei...
women won the right to vote in 1920, broader economic and social change has been a longer time comi...
In spite of recent literature that examines late nineteenth and early twentieth century transnationa...
This article highlights the long history of activism associated with the Mothers' Union since its in...
The radical feminist movement has undergone significant transformation over the past four decades—fr...
As part of the ongoing reevaluation of the prehistory of the women\u27s movement, Carolyn Lawes anal...
Copyright © 2022 The Aurthor. In their ground-breaking book Women and the Law, first published in 19...
A comparative historical approach provides insight into ways in which six women educator activists p...
For the start of Women’s History Month 2023, Sharon Thompson reflects on writing about the Married W...
A review of Sharon Thompson's book; Quiet Revolutionaries: The Married Women's Association and Famil...
Conventional histories of family law focus on legal actors, while neglecting the little-known yet in...
Review of Sharon Thompson, Quiet Revolutionaries: The Married Women's Association and Family Law (Bl...
In our Meet the Book Author Series, the Journal of Law and Society and the Centre of Law and Society...
The podcast, “Sex, Suffrage, and Scandalous Women,” tells stories of activists about whom the averag...
This work is a survey of the efforts through which women have changed their place in American societ...
Social movements are an important and visible part of the American government process. However, thei...
women won the right to vote in 1920, broader economic and social change has been a longer time comi...
In spite of recent literature that examines late nineteenth and early twentieth century transnationa...
This article highlights the long history of activism associated with the Mothers' Union since its in...
The radical feminist movement has undergone significant transformation over the past four decades—fr...
As part of the ongoing reevaluation of the prehistory of the women\u27s movement, Carolyn Lawes anal...
Copyright © 2022 The Aurthor. In their ground-breaking book Women and the Law, first published in 19...
A comparative historical approach provides insight into ways in which six women educator activists p...