List of women's rights activists

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article is a list of notable women's rights activists, arranged alphabetically by modern country names and by the names of the persons listed.

Afghanistan[]

  • Amina Azimi – disabled women's rights advocate
  • Hasina Jalal – women's empowerment activist
  • Quhramaana Kakar – Senior Strategic Advisor for Conciliation Resources
  • Masuada Karokhi (born 1962) – Member of Parliament and women’s rights campaigner

Albania[]

  • Parashqevi Qiriazi
  • Sevasti Qiriazi
  • Urani Rumbo

Algeria[]

  • Aïcha Lemsine (born 1942) – French-language writer and women's rights activist
  • Ahlam Mosteghanemi (born 1953) – writer and sociologist

Arabia[]

  • Muhammad ibn Abdullah (570–632) – Founder of Sunni Islam and established women's rights of equality before God. This allowed women the ability to provide religious council and scholarship in Islam including the education and advisement of men. Other established rights in society include but are not limited to the right of protection from harm/abuse, to be educated, of inheritance, of property ownership, to conduct business, sign contracts, have an independent economic position, employment, and in marriage (choose/deny husband, a dowry paid to her, including rights over the household/children/husband) all of which has been set since the 7th century CE

Argentina[]

  • Virginia Bolten (1870–1960) – Argentine journalist as well as an anarchist and feminist activist of German descent
  • Raymunda Torres y Quiroga – 19th-century Argentine writer and women's rights activist
  • Azucena Villaflor

Australia[]

  • Thelma Bate (1904–1984) – community leader, advocate for inclusion of Aboriginals in Country Women's Association
  • Rosie Batty (born 1962) – 2015 Australian of the Year and family violence campaigner
  • Sandra Bloodworth – labour historian, socialist activist, co-founder of Trotskyist Socialist Alternative, editor of Marxist Left Review
  • Eva Cox (born 1938) – sociologist and feminist active in politics and social services, member of Women's Electoral Lobby, social commentator on women in power and at work, and social justice
  • Zelda D'Aprano (born 1928) – trade unionist, feminist, in 1969 chained herself to doors of Commonwealth Building over equal pay
  • Louisa Margaret Dunkley (1866–1927) – telegraphist and labour organizer
  • Elizabeth Evatt (born 1933) – legal reformist, jurist, critic of Australia's Sex Discrimination Act, first Australian in United Nations Commission on Human Rights
  • Miles Franklin (1879–1954) – writer and feminist
  • Vida Goldstein (1869–1949) – early Australian feminist campaigning for women's suffrage and social reform, first woman in British Empire to stand for national election
  • Germaine Greer (born 1939) – author of The Female Eunuch, academic and social commentator
  • Bella Guerin (1858–1923) – first woman to graduate from an Australian university, Guerin was a prominent socialist feminist (although with periods of public dispute) within the Australian Labor Party
  • Louisa Lawson (1848–1920) – feminist, suffragist, author, founder of The Dawn, pro-republican federalist
  • Fiona Patten (born 1964) – leader of Australian Sex Party, lobbyist for personal freedoms and progressive lifestyles
  • Michelle Payne (born 1985) – first female winner of Melbourne Cup and an advocate of increased presence of women in sport
  • Eileen Powell (1913–1997) – trade unionist, women's activist and contributor to the Equal Pay for Equal Work decision
  • Millicent Preston-Stanley (1883–1955) – first female member of New South Wales Legislative Assembly, campaigner for custodial rights of mothers in divorce and for women's health care
  • Elizabeth Anne Reid (born 1942) – world's first women's affairs adviser to head of government (Gough Whitlam), active in the United Nations and on HIV
  • Bessie Rischbieth (1874–1967) – earliest female appointee to any court (honorary, Perth Children's Court, 1915), active against the Australian government practice of taking Aboriginal children from their mothers (Stolen Generation)
  • Jessie Street (1889–1970) – Australian suffragette, feminist and human rights campaigner influential in labour rights and early days of the UN
  • Anne Summers (born 1945) – women's rights activist in politics and media, women's advisor to Labor premier Paul Keating, editor of Ms. magazine (NY)
  • Mary Hynes Swanton (22 June 1861 – 25 November 1940) – Australian women's rights and trade unionist

Austria[]

  • Auguste Fickert (1855–1910) – feminist and social reformer
  • Marianne Hainisch (1839–1936) – activist, exponent of women's right to work and education
  • Bertha Pappenheim (1859–1936) – Austrian-Jewish feminist, founder of the German Jewish Women's Association

Belgium[]

  • Marguerite Coppin (1867–1931) – female Poet Laureate of Belgium and advocate of women's rights
  • Christine Loudes (1972–2016) – proponent of gender equality and women's rights
  • Frédérique Petrides (1903–1983) – Belgian-American pioneer female orchestral conductor, activist and editor of Women in Music
  • Marie Popelin (1846–1913) – lawyer, feminist campaigner, leader of the Belgian League for Women's Rights

Bosnia & Herzegovina[]

  • Indira Bajramović – Roma activist, director of the Association of Roma Women from Tuzla

Botswana[]

  • Unity Dow (born 1959) – judge and writer, plaintiff in case allowing children of mixed parentage to be deemed nationals

Brazil[]

  • Clara Ant
  • Albertina de Oliveira Costa
  • Jaqueline Jesus
  • Lily Marinho
  • Míriam Martinho
  • Laudelina de Campos Melo (1904–1991) – created the first trade association for domestic workers in Brazil
  • Lucia Nader
  • Matilde Ribeiro
  • Alzira Rufino
  • Heleieth Saffioti
  • Miêtta Santiago
  • Viviane Senna
  • Yara Yavelberg

Bulgaria[]

  • Dimitrana Ivanova (1881–1960) – educational reformer and suffragist
  • Ekaterina Karavelova (1860–1947) – suffragist and women's rights activist
  • Anna Karima (1871–1949) – suffragist and women's rights activist
  • Eugenia Kisimova (1831–1885) – feminist, philanthropist, women's rights activist
  • Kina Konova (1872–1952) – publicist and suffragist
  • Julia Malinova (1869–1953) – suffragist and founder of the Bulgarian Women's Union

Canada[]

  • Edith Archibald (1854–1936) – suffragist, writer, promoter of Maritime Women's Christian Temperance Union, National Council of Women of Canada and Local Council of Women of Halifax
  • Laura Borden (1861–1940) – president of the Local Council of Women of Halifax
  • Thérèse Casgrain (1896–1981) – suffragette, reformer, feminist, politician and senator, mainly active in Quebec
  • Françoise David (born 1948) – politician, feminist activist
  • Emily Howard Stowe (1831–1903) – physician, advocate of women's inclusion in medical profession, founder of Canadian Women's Suffrage Association
  • Marie Lacoste-Gérin-Lajoie (1867–1945) – suffragette, self-taught jurist
  • Nellie McClung (1873–1951) – feminist and suffragist, part of The Famous Five (Canada)
  • Jamie McIntosh (21st century) – lawyer and women's rights activist
  • Micheal John O'Brien (21st century) – CEO of The RINJ Foundation
  • Eliza Ritchie (1856–1933) – prominent suffragist, executive member of Local Council of Women of Halifax
  • Léa Roback (1903–2000) – feminist and workers' union activist tied with communist party
  • Idola Saint-Jean (1880–1945) – suffragette, journalist
  • Mary Two-Axe Earley (1911–1996) – indigenous women's rights activist

Cape Verde[]

Chad[]

Chile[]

China[]

  • Cai Chang
  • Chen Xiefen
  • Fok Hing-tong
  • He Xiangning
  • Huixing (educator)
  • Jiang Shufang
  • Li Maizi
  • Lin Zongsu
  • Liu-Wang Liming
  • Lü Jinghua
  • Mao Hengfeng
  • Miao Boying
  • Nurungul Tohti
  • Qiu Yufang
  • Wan Shaofen
  • Wang Huiwu
  • Wei Tingting
  • Xiang Jingyu
  • Xie Xuehong
  • Ye Haiyan
  • Zheng Churan

Colombia[]

Croatia[]

Democratic Republic of Congo[]

Julienne Lusenge – Women's activist recognized for advocating for survivors of wartime sexual violence.

Denmark[]

  • Sophie Alberti (1846–1947) – pioneering women's rights activist and a leading member of Kvindelig Læseforening (Women Readers' Association)
  • Widad Akrawi (born 1969) – writer and doctor, advocate for gender equality, women's empowerment and participation in peace-building and post-conflict governance
  • Johanne Andersen (1862–1925), active in Funen and in the Danish Women's Society
  • Ragnhild Nikoline Andersen (1907–1990) – trade unionist, Communist party politician and Stutthof prisoner
  • Matilde Bajer (1840–1934) – women's rights activist and pacifist
  • Annestine Beyer (1795–1884) – pioneer of women's education
  • Anne Bruun (1853–1934) – schoolteacher and women's rights activist
  • Esther Carstensen (1873–1955) – women right's activist, journal editor, active in the Danish Women's Society
  • Severine Casse (1805–1898) – women's rights activist, successful in fighting for a wife's right to dispose of her earnings
  • Ulla Dahlerup (born 1942) – writer, women's rights activist, member of the Danish Red Stocking Movement
  • Thora Daugaard (1874–1951) – women's rights activist, pacifist, editor
  • Henni Forchhammer (1863–1955) – educator, feminist, peace activist
  • Inger Gamburg (1892–1979) – trades unionist, Communist politician
  • Suzanne Giese (1946–2012) – writer, women's rights activist, prominent member of the Red Stocking Movement
  • Bente Hansen (born 1940) – writer, supporter of the Red Stocking Movement
  • Eline Hansen (1859–1919) – feminist and peace activist
  • Estrid Hein (1873–1956) – ophthalmologist, women's rights activist, pacifist
  • Dagmar Hjort (1860–1902) – schoolteacher, writer, women's rights activist
  • Thora Ingemann Drøhse (1867–1948) – temperance campaigner and women's rights activist in Randers
  • Katja Iversen (born 1969) – author, advisor, women's rights advocate, President of Women Deliver 2014-2020
  • Thyra Jensen (1865–1949) – writer and women's rights activist in southern Schleswig
  • Erna Juel-Hansen (1845–1922) – novelist, early women's rights activist
  • Anna Laursen (1845–1911) – educator, head of the Aarhus branch of the Danish Women's Society
  • Anna Lohse (1866–1942), Odense schoolteacher and women's rights activist
  • Line Luplau (1823–1891) – feminist, suffragist, founder of the Danish Women's Suffrage Society
  • Elisabeth Møller Jensen (born 1946) – historian, feminist, director of Kvinfo from 1990 to 2014
  • Thora Knudsen (1861–1950), nurse, women's rights activist and philanthropist
  • Elna Munch (1871–1845) – feminist, politician, co-founder of the Danish Association for Women's Suffrage
  • Louise Nørlund (1854–1919) – feminist, pacifist, founder of the Danish Women's Suffrage Society
  • Birgitte Berg Nielsen (1861–1951) – equal rights activist, educator
  • Charlotte Norrie (1855–1940) – nurse, women's rights activist, voting rights campaigner
  • Thora Pedersen (1875–1954) – educator, school inspector, women's rights activist who fought for equal pay for men and women
  • Johanne Rambusch (1865–1944) – feminist, politician, co-founder of the radical suffrage association Landsforbundet for Kvinders Valgret
  • Caja Rude (1884–1949), novelist, journalist and women's rights activist
  • Vibeke Salicath (1861–1921) – philanthropist, feminist, editor, politician
  • Astrid Stampe Feddersen (1852–1930) – chaired first Scandinavian meeting on women's rights
  • Karen Syberg (born 1945) – writer, feminist, co-founder of the Red Stocking Movement
  • Caroline Testman (1839–1919) – feminist, co-founder of Dansk Kvindesamfund
  • Ingeborg Tolderlund (1848–1935) – women's rights activist and suffragist
  • Clara Tybjerg (1864–1941) – women's rights activist, pacifist
  • Anna Westergaard (1882–1964) – railway official, trade unionist, women's rights activist, politician
  • Louise Wright (1861–1935) – philanthropist, feminist, peace activist
  • Natalie Zahle (1827–1913) – pioneer of women's education

East Timor[]

Egypt[]

  • Qasim Amin (1863–1908) – jurist, early advocate of women's rights in society
  • Soraya Bahgat (born 1983) – Egyptian-Finnish women's rights advocate, social entrepreneur and founder of Tahrir Bodyguard
  • Ihsan El-Kousy (born 1900) – headmistress, writer and rights activist
  • Nawal el-Saadawi (born 1931) – writer and doctor, advocate of women's health and equality
  • Entisar Elsaeed (fl. 2000s) – activist fighting female genital mutilation and domestic abuse
  • Engy Ghozlan (born 1985) – coordinator of campaigns against sexual harassment
  • Hoda Shaarawi (1879–1947) – feminist organizer of Mubarrat Muhammad Ali (women's social service organization), Union of Educated Egyptian Women, and Wafdist Women's Central Committee, founder president of Egyptian Feminist Union

Estonia[]

  • Elisabeth Howen (1834–1923) – women's educational pioneer

Finland[]

  • Hanna Andersin (1861–1914) – educator, feminist
  • Soraya Bahgat (born 1983) – see Egypt
  • Elisabeth Blomqvist (1827–1901) – pioneering female educator
  • Minna Canth (1844–1897) – writer, women's rights proponent
  • Adelaïde Ehrnrooth (1826–1905) – feminist, writer, early fighter for voting rights
  • Alexandra Gripenberg (1857–1913) – writer, women's rights activist, treasurer of the International Council of Women
  • Lucina Hagman (1853–1946) – feminist, politician, pacifist, president of the League of Finnish Feminists
  • Rosina Heikel (1842–1929) – feminist, first medical doctor in Finland
  • Alma Hjelt (1853–1907) – gymnast, women's rights activist, chair of the Finnish women's association Suomen Naisyhdistyksen
  • Hilda Käkikoski (1864–1912) – suffragist, writer, schoolteacher, early politician

France[]

  • Isnelle Amelin (1907–1994) – feminist and trade unionist from La Réunion
  • Hubertine Auclert (1848–1914) – feminist activist, suffragette
  • Simone de Beauvoir (1908–1986) – philosopher, writer
  • Marie-Thérèse Lucidor Corbin (1749–1834) – French Creole activist and abolitionist in the French colonies
  • Charles Fourier (1772–1837) – philosopher
  • Françoise Giroud (1916–2003) – journalist, writer, politician
  • Olympe de Gouges (1748–1793) – playwright and political activist who wrote the 1791 Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the Female Citizen
  • Blanche Moria (1858–1927) – sculptor, educator, feminist
  • Ndella Paye (born c. 1974) - Senegal-born militant Afro-feminist and Muslim theologian
  • Maria Pognon (1844–1925) – writer, feminist, suffragist, pacifist
  • Alphonse Rebière (1842–1900) – author of Les Femmes dans la science and advocate for women's scientific abilities
  • Léonie Rouzade (1839–1916) – journalist, novelist, feminist
  • Anne-Josèphe Théroigne de Méricourt (1762–1817) – politician
  • Flora Tristan (1803-1844) French-Peruvian activist, early advocate of socialism and feminism
  • Louise Weiss (1893–1983) – journalist, writer, politician

Germany[]

  • Jenny Apolant (1874–1925) – Jewish feminist, suffragist
  • Ruth Bré (c. 1862/67–1911) – writer, advocate of matrilineality and women's rights, founder of Bund für Mutterschutz (League for Maternity Leave)[1]
  • Johanna Elberskirchen (1864–1943) - feminist and activist for women's rights, gays and lesbians
  • Johanna von Evreinov (1844–1919) – Russian-born German feminist writer, pioneering female lawyer and editor
  • Lida Gustava Heymann (1868–1943) – feminist, pacifist and women's rights activist
  • Luise Koch (1860–1934) – educator, women's rights activist, suffragist, politician
  • Helene Lange (1848–1930) – educator, pioneering women's rights activist, suffragist
  • Louise Otto-Peters (1819–1895) – suffragist, women's rights activist, writer
  • Alice Salomon (1872–1948) – social reformer, women's rights activist, educator, writer
  • Käthe Schirmacher (1865–1930) – early women's rights activist, writer
  • Auguste Schmidt (1833–1902) – pioneering women's rights activist, educator, journalist
  • Alice Schwarzer (born 1942) – journalist and publisher of the magazine Emma
  • Marie Stritt (1855–1928) – women's rights activist, suffragist, co-founder of the International Alliance of Women
  • Johanna Vogt (1862–1944) – suffragist, first woman on the city council of Kassel starting in 1919.
  • Marianne Weber (1870–1954) – sociologist, women's rights activist, writer
  • Clara Zetkin (1857–1933) – Marxist theorist, women's rights activist, suffragist, politician

Ghana[]

  • Annie Jiagge (1918–1996) – lawyer, judge, women's rights activist, drafted Declaration on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women, co-founded Women's World Banking[2]

Greece[]

  • Kalliroi Parren (1861–1940) – founder of the Greek women's movement
  • Avra Theodoropoulou (1880–1963) – music critic, pianist, suffragist, women's rights activist, nurse

Greenland[]

  • Aviâja Egede Lynge (born 1974), educator, activist for indigenous peoples and women's rights
  • Henriette Rasmussen (1950–2017), educator, journalist, women's rights activist and politician

Hungary[]

  • Clotilde Apponyi (1867–1942) – suffragist
  • Enikő Bollobás (born 1952) – academic specializing in women's studies
  • Vilma Glücklich (1872–1927) – educational reformer and women's rights activist
  • Teréz Karacs (1808–1892) – writer and women's rights activist
  • Rosika Schwimmer (1877–1948) – feminist, suffragist, World Peace Prize (1937)
  • Éva Takács (1780–1845) – writer and feminist
  • Blanka Teleki (1806–1862) – feminist and advocate of female education
  • Pálné Veres (1815–1895) – founder of Hungarian National Association for Women's Education

Iceland[]

India[]

  • B. R. Ambedkar (1891–1956) – Indian polymath, father of Indian Constitution, champion of dalit right and women's rights
  • Angellica Aribam (born 1992) – political activist, founder of Femme First Foundation
  • Annie Basil (1911–1995) – Iranian-Indian activist for Armenian women
  • Yogita Bhayana – Indian anti-sexual violence activist and head of People Against Rape in India
  • Margaret "Gretta" Cousins (1878–1954) – Irish-Indian suffragist, established All India Women's Conference, co-founded Irish Women's Franchise League
  • Madhusree Dutta (born 1959) – co-founder of Majlis, Mumbai, author, cultural activist, filmmaker, curator
  • Rehana Fathima (born 1986) – women's rights activist
  • Ruchira Gupta (born 1964) – journalist and activist. She is the founder of Apne Aap, a non-governmental organization that works for women's rights and the eradication of sex trafficking
  • Nazli Gegum (1874–1968) – Indian girl education activist
  • Kirthi Jayakumar (born 1987) – founder of The Red Elephant Foundation, rights activist, campaigner against violence against women
  • Shruti Kapoor – women's rights activist, economist, social entrepreneur
  • Sunitha Krishnan (born 1972) – Indian social activist, co-founder of Prajwala which assists trafficked women, girls and transgender people in finding shelter, education and employment
  • Subodh Markandeya – senior advocate
  • Periyar E. V. Ramasamy – Indian social reforms leader, predominantly fought for women rights
  • Jyotirao Phule (1827–1890) – social reformer, critic of caste system, founded school for girls, widow-remarriage initiative, home for upper-caste widows, and home for infant girls to curb female infanticide
  • Manasi Pradhan (born 1962) – founder of nationwide Honour for Women National Campaign against violence to women
  • Mamatha Raghuveer Achanta – women's and child rights activist, chair of Child Welfare Committee, Warangal District, active in A.P. State Commission for Protection of Child Rights, founder director of Tharuni, focusing on girl-child and women empowerment

Indonesia[]

  • Electronita Duan – founder of Politeknik Pembangunan Halmahera
  • Raden Adjeng Kartini (1879–1904) – Javanese advocate for native Indonesian women, critic of polygamy and lack of women's education
  • Valentina Sagala (born 1977) – women's rights activist

Iran[]

  • Mahboubeh Abbasgholizadeh (born 1958) – women's rights activist, founder of ZananTV and NGO Training Center
  • Parvin Ardalan (born 1967) – women's rights activist
  • Bibi Khanoom Astarabadi (1859–1921) – writer
  • Annie Basil (1911–1995) – Iranian-Indian activist for Armenian women
  • Sediqeh Dowlatabadi (1882–1962) – journalist and women's rights activist
  • Shirin Ebadi (born 1947) – activist, Nobel Peace Prize winner for efforts for rights of women and children
  • Mohtaram Eskandari (1895–1924) – woman's rights activist, founder of "Jam'iat e nesvan e vatan-khah" (Society of Patriotic Women)
  • Sheema Kalbasi (born 1972) – writer, advocate for human rights and gender equality
  • Noushin Ahmadi Khorasani (born 1970) – women's rights activist
  • Shadi Sadr (born 1975) – women's rights activist
  • Shahla Sherkat (born 1956) – journalist
  • Táhirih (died 1852) – Bábí poet, theologian, exponent of women's rights in 19th century
  • Roya Toloui (born 1966) – women's rights activist

Ireland[]

  • Hilary Boyle (1899–1988) – journalist, broadcaster, and activist
  • Margaret "Gretta" Cousins (1878–1954): see India.
  • Anna Haslam (1829–1922) – early women's movement figure, founded the Dublin Women's Suffrage Association
  • Francis Hutcheson (8 August 1694 – 8 August 1746) – philosopher born to activist family of Scots Presbyterians, opponent of slavery and advocate of women's rights
  • Sarah Winstedt (4 April 1886 – 9 September 1972) – physician, surgeon and suffragist

Israel[]

  • Ketzia Alon (born 1971) – academic, social activist, Mizrahi feminist, art curator and critic; one of the founders of the
  • Esther Eillam (born 1939) – founder of the Feminist Movement organization; Mizrahi second wave and Mizrahi feminism activist
  • Carmen Elmakiyes (born 1979) – social and political activist, Mizrahi feminist; works on behalf of women in public housing
  • Marcia Freedman (born 1938) – founder of Israel's feminist movement (1971); politician, social activist and writer
  • Anat Hoffman (born 1954) – executive director, Israel Religious Action Center; director and founding member, Women of the Wall
  • Shula Keshet (born 1959) – social and political activist and entrepreneur, Mizrahi feminist, artist, curator, writer, educator, and publisher; one of the founders and the executive director of the Ahoti – for Women in Israel
  • Vicki Knafo (born 1960) – social activist; led the 2003 single-mothers struggle against austerity decrees
  • Reut Naggar (born 1983) – producer, cultural entrepreneur and social activist, mainly focusing on LGBT and women's rights
  • Vicki Shiran (1947–2004) – one of the founders of the Mizrahi feminism movement
  • Iris Stern Levi (born 1953) – activist for rehabilitation of trafficked women

Italy[]

  • Alma Dolens (1869–1948) – pacifist, suffragist and journalist, founder of several women's organizations
  • Linda Malnati (1855–1921) – women's rights activist, trade unionist, suffragist, pacifist and writer
  • Anna Maria Mozzoni (1837–1920) – pioneering women's rights activist and suffragist
  • Eugenia Rasponi Murat (1873–1958) – women's rights activist and open lesbian who fought for civil protections.
  • Gabriella Rasponi Spalletti (1853–1931) – feminist, educator and philanthropist, founder of the National Council of Italian Women in 1903
  • Laura Terracina (1519–c.1577) – widely published poet, writer, protested violence against women and promoted women's writing

Japan[]

  • Raicho Hiratsuka (1886–1971)
  • Sayaka Osakabe (born 1978)
  • Umeko Tsuda (1864–1929)
  • Yajima Kajiko (1833–1925)

Kenya[]

  • Nice Nailantei Leng'ete (born 1991)– Advocate for alternative rite of passage (ARP) for girls in Africa and campaigning to stop female genital mutilation (FGM).
  • Wangari Maathai (1940–2011)

Latvia[]

Lebanon[]

  • Lydia Canaan
  • Laure Moghaizel (1929–1997) – lawyer and women's rights advocate

Libya[]

  • Alaa Murabit (born 1989) – physician, advocate of inclusive security, peace-building and post-conflict governance

Lithuania[]

Luxembourg[]

Mali[]

  • Jacqueline Ki-Zerbo(1933 – 2015) – activist, nationalist and educator

Mauritania[]

  • Zeinebou Mint Taleb Moussa

Netherlands[]

  • Ayaan Hirsi Ali (born 1969) – see Stomalia.
  • Wilhelmina Drucker (1847–1925) – politician and writer
  • Mariane van Hogendorp (1834–1909)
  • Mietje Hoitsema (1847–1934)
  • Cornélie Huygens (1848–1902) – writer, social democrat and feminist
  • Aletta Jacobs (1854–1929) – physician and women's suffrage activist
  • Charlotte Jacobs
  • Jeltje Kemper
  • Selma Meyer
  • Anette Poelman
  • Cornelia Ramondt-Hirschmann

Namibia[]

  • Monica Geingos
  • Gwen Lister
  • Rosa Namises

New Zealand[]

  • Kate Sheppard (1848–1934) – suffragette, influential in winning voting rights for women in 1893 (first country and national election in which women have vote)

Nigeria[]

  • Priscilla Achapka – women and gender environmental activist
  • Osai Ojigho (born 1976) – human rights and gender equality advocate
  • Funmilayo Ransome-Kuti (1900–1978) – women's rights activist

Norway[]

  • Marit Aarum (1903–1956), economist, politician, activist
  • Irene Bauer (1945–2016), government official, activist
  • Anna Louise Beer (1924–2010), lawyer, judge, activist
  • Margunn Bjørnholt (born 1958), sociologist, economist, gender researcher, activist
  • Randi Blehr (1851–1928), feminist, co-founder of the Norwegian Association for Women's Rights
  • Karin Maria Bruzelius (born 1941), Swedish-born Norwegian judge, government official, rights activist
  • Nicoline Hambro (1861–1926), politician, women's rights proponent
  • Siri Hangeland (born 1952), politician, activist
  • Aasta Hansteen (1824–1908), painter, writer, feminist
  • Sigrun Hoel (born 1951), government official, activist
  • Anniken Huitfeldt (born 1969), historian, politician, reported on women's rights
  • Grethe Irvoll(born 1939), political supporter of women's rights
  • Martha Larsen Jahn (1875–1954), peace and women's activist
  • Dakky Kiær (1892–1980), politician, civic leader, activist
  • Betzy Kjelsberg (1866–1950), right's activist, suffragist, politician
  • Eva Kolstad (1918–1999), politician, minister, proponent of gender equality
  • Gina Krog (1947–1916), proponent of women's right to education, politician, editor
  • Berit Kvæven (born 1942), politician, activist
  • Aadel Lampe (1857–1944), women's rights leader, suffragist, teacher
  • Mimi Sverdrup Lunden (1894–1955), educator, writer, women's rights proponent
  • Fredrikke Mørck (1861–1934), editor, teacher, activist
  • Ragna Nielsen (1845–1924), headmistress, politician, activist
  • Marit Nybakk (born 1947), politician, activist
  • Amalie Øvergaard (1874–1960), women's leader, active in housewives associations
  • Kjellaug Pettersen (1934–2012), government official, politician, gender equality proponent
  • Kjellaug Pettersen (1843–1938), politician, founder of the Norwegian Women's Public Health Association
  • Ingerid Gjøstein Resi (1901–1955), philologist, women's rights leader, politician
  • Torild Skard (born 1936), psychologist, politician, women's rights leader
  • Kari Skjønsberg (1926–2003), academic, writer, activist
  • Anna Stang (1834–1901), politician, women's rights leader
  • Sigrid Stray (1893–1978), lawyer, women's rights proponent
  • Signe Swensson (1888–1974), physician, politician, women's leader
  • Thina Thorleifsen (1855–1959), women's movement activist
  • Clara Tschudi (1856–1945), writer, biographer of women's rights activists
  • Vilhelmine Ullmann (1816–1915), pedagogue, writer, women's rights proponent
  • Grethe Værnø (born 1938), politician, writer, national and international women's rights supporter
  • Margrethe Vullum (1846–1918), Danish-born Norwegian journalist, writer, women's rights proponent
  • Fredrikke Waaler (1865–1952), musician, activist
  • Gunhild Ziener (1868–1937), pioneer in the women's movement, editor

Pakistan[]

  • Gulalai Ismail (born 1986) – Pashtun women's rights activist compaigning in the Pashtun Tahafuz Movement, and founder of [[Aware Girls
  • Fatima Lodhi (born 1989) – Pakistani women's rights activist who addressed colorism
  • Zubeida Habib Rahimtoola (1917–2015) – member of All Pakistan Women's Association
  • Malala Yousafzai (born 1997) – Pakistani women's rights activist shot in assassination attempt by Taliban for advocating for girls' education, now in UK

Peru[]

Philippines[]

  • Risa Hontiveros-Baraquel – women's right activities
  • Liza Maza
  • Teresita Quintos Deles

Poland[]

  • Maria Konopnicka

Portugal[]

Puerto Rico[]

  • Luisa Capetillo (1879–1922) – labor union suffragette jailed for wearing pants in public

Romania[]

Russia[]

  • Anna Filosofova (1837–1912) – early women's rights activist
  • Evgenia Konradi (1838–1898) – early women's rights activist and writer
  • Tatiana Mamonova (born 1943) – founder of modern Russian women's movement
  • Nadezhda Stasova (1822–1895) – early women's rights activist
  • Maria Trubnikova (1835–1897) – early women's rights activist

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines[]

  • Nelcia Robinson-Hazell

Saudi Arabia[]

  • Loujain al-Hathloul (born 1989) – women's rights leader, social media influencer, political prisoner

Serbia[]

  • Ksenija Atanasijević (1894–1981) – philosopher, suffragette, first PhD Doctor in Serbian universities
  • Helen of Anjou (1236–1314) – queen, feminist, establisher of women schools
  • Jefimija (1349–1405) – politician, poet, diplomat, feminist
  • Draga Ljočić
  • Milica of Serbia (1335–1405) – empress, feminist, poet
  • Katarina Milovuk
  • Milunka Savić (1888–1973) – first female combatant, soldier, feminist
  • Stasa Zajovic (born 1953) – co-founder and coordinator of Women in Black

Slovenia[]

  • Alojzija Štebi (1883–1956) – suffragist, who saw socialism as a means of equalizing society for both men and women.

Somalia[]

  • Ayaan Hirsi Ali (born 1969) – Somali-Dutch feminist and atheist activist, writer and politician
  • Halima Ali Adan – Somali gender rights activist and an expert on female genital mutilation (FGM).

South Africa[]

  • Shamima Shaikh (1960–1998) – member of the Muslim Youth Movement of South Africa, exponent of Islamic gender equality

Spain[]

  • Concepción Arenal (1820–1893) – feminist and activist
  • Clara Campoamor (1888–1972) – politician and feminist

Sri-Lanka[]

Sweden[]

  • Gertrud Adelborg (1853–1942) – teacher, leading member of the women's rights movement
  • Sophie Adlersparre (1823–1895) – publisher, women's rights activist, pioneer
  • Alma Åkermark (1853–1933) – editor, journalist, activist
  • Ellen Anckarsvärd (1833–1898) – women's rights activist, co-founded Föreningen för gift kvinnas äganderätt (Married Woman's Property Rights Association)
  • Carolina Benedicks-Bruce (1856–1935) – sculptor, rights activist
  • Ellen Bergman (1842–1921) – musician, rights activist
  • Fredrika Bremer (1801–1865) – writer, feminist activist and pioneer
  • Frigga Carlberg (1851–1925) – writer, feminist and women's suffragist
  • Maria Cederschiöld (1856–1935) - journalist and women's rights activist
  • Josefina Deland (1814–1890) – feminist, writer, teacher, founded Svenska lärarinnors pensionsförening (Society for Retired Female Teachers)
  • Lizinka Dyrssen (1866–1952) – women's rights activist
  • Agda Montelius (1850–1920) – philanthropist feminist, chairman of the Fredrika-Bremer-förbundet
  • Ebba von Eckermann (1866–1960) – women's rights activist
  • Ruth Gustafson (1881–1960) – politician, trade unionist, women's rights activist, editor
  • Anna Hierta-Retzius (1841–1924) – women's rights activist and philanthropist
  • Lilly Engström (1843–1921) – women's rights activist, government official
  • Soheila Fors (born 1967) – Iranian-Swedish women's rights activist
  • Ruth Gustafson (1881–1960) – politician, union worker and women's rights activist
  • Ellen Hagen (1873–1967) – suffragette, rights activist, politician
  • Lina Hjort (1881–1959) - schoolteacher, house builder and suffragist
  • Amanda Kerfstedt (1835–1920) – writer, active in the women's rights movement
  • Ellen Kleman (1867–1943) – writer, journal editor, women's rights activist
  • Lotten von Kræmer (1828–1912) – writer, poet, philanthropist, founder of literary society Samfundet De Nio
  • Sara Mohammad (born 1967) – Iraqi Kurdish-born Swedish human rights activist campaigning against honour killing
  • Agda Montelius (1850–1920) – philanthropist, suffrage activist
  • Rosalie Olivecrona (1823–1898) – pioneer of the women's rights movement
  • Gulli Petrini (1867–1941) – suffragette, women's rights activist, politician
  • Anna Pettersson (1886–1929) – lawyer and pioneer in legal advice to women
  • Emilie Rathou (1862–1948) – journalist, editor, activist
  • Hilda Sachs (1857–1935) – journalist, writer and feminist
  • Sophie Sager, (1825–1902) – women's rights activist and writer
  • Anna Sandström (1854–1931) – educational reformer
  • Ida Schmidt (1857–1932) – women's rights activist, educator, politician
  • Alexandra Skoglund (1862–1938) – suffragette, activist, politician
  • Frida Stéenhoff (1865–1945) – writer, women's rights activist
  • Elisabeth Tamm (1880–1958) – politician, women's rights activist
  • Kajsa Wahlberg – Sweden's national rapporteur on human trafficking opposition activities
  • Anna Whitlock (1852–1930) – school pioneer, journalist and feminist

Switzerland[]

  • Marianne Ehrmann (1755–1795) – among first women novelists and publicists in German-speaking countries
  • Margarethe Faas-Hardegger
  • Marie Goegg-Pouchoulin (1826–1899) – founder of the Swiss women's movement

Tunisia[]

  • Néziha Zarrouk (born 1946) – minister who contributed to improvements in women's rights and women's health

Turkey[]

  • Nezihe Muhiddin – feminist, founded a women's party
  • Sebahat Tuncel – women's rights activist, former nurse and member of Parliament in Turkey

United Kingdom[]

  • Lesley Abdela (born 1945) – women's rights campaigner, gender consultant, journalist who has worked for women's representation in over 40 countries including post-conflict countries: Kosovo, Sierra Leone, Iraq, Afghanistan, Nepal, and Aceh. In 1980 she founded the all-Party 300 Group to campaign to get more women into local, national, and European politics in the UK. Author of hundreds of features in Guardian, Times, Independent, and major women's magazines and the paperback Women with X Appeal: Women Politicians in Britain Today (London: Macdonald Optima 1989).
  • Jane Austen (1775–1817) – writer and feminist, focus on women rights and marriage complications through 6 novels
  • Clementina Black (1853–1922) – writer prominent in the Women's Trade Union League and the forerunner of the Women's Industrial Council
  • Helen Blackburn (1842–1903) – suffragist and campaigner for women's employment rights
  • Barbara Bodichon (1827–1891) – active in the Langham Place Circle, promoter of first journal to press for women's rights, the English Woman's Journal (1858–64)
  • Jessie Boucherett (1825–1905) – co-founder of Society for Promoting the Employment of Women in 1859, editor of Englishwoman's Review (1866–70), co-founder of Women's Employment Defence League in 1891
  • Myra Sadd Brown (1872–1938) – suffragette, activist for women's rights and internationalist
  • Constance Bryer (1870–1952) – suffragette who went on hunger strike and was forcibly-fed
  • Ida Craft (fl. 1910s) – suffragist, among main organizers of Suffrage Hikes
  • Laura Ormiston Chant (1848 –1923) – social reformer, womens rights activist, writer, and member of the International Council of Women (1888).
  • Emily Davison
  • June Eric-Udorie – Anti-FGM campaigner
  • Kate Williams Evans (1866–1961) – suffragette and activist for women's rights
  • Millicent Fawcett (1847–1929) – suffragist and feminist, president of National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies
  • Mary Fildes (1789–1876) – political activist and founder of Manchester Female Reform Society
  • Edith Margaret Garrud (1872–1971) – trained "Bodyguard" unit of Women's Social and Political Union in jujutsu techniques
  • Katharine Gatty (1870–1952) – journalist, lecturer, militant suffragette
  • Cicely Hamilton (1872–1952) – English actress, writer, journalist, suffragist, feminist
  • Diana Reader Harris (1912–1996) – educator and advocate of female ordination in the Church of England
  • Matilda Hays (1820–1897) – co-founder of first journal to press for women's rights, the English Woman's Journal (1858–64)
  • Margaret Hills (1892–1967) – organiser of the Election Fighting Fund
  • Anna Mary Howitt (1824–1884) – feminist prominent in the campaign that led to the Married Women's Property Act 1870
  • Anne Knight (1786–1862) – feminist and social reformer
  • Priscilla Bright McLaren (1815–1906) – women's rights campaigner
  • Hannah Mitchell (1872–1956) – suffragette and socialist, author of The Hard Way Up
  • John Stuart Mill (1806–1873) – philosopher, political economist, author of The Subjection of Women
  • Elizabeth Montagu (1718–1800) – social reformer and Bluestocking
  • Olive Morris (1952–1979) – feminist, black nationalist, squatters' rights activist
  • Caroline Norton (1808–1877) – social campaigner influencing the Custody of Infants Act 1839, Matrimonial Causes Act 1857, and Married Women's Property Act 1870
  • Christabel Pankhurst (1880–1958) – suffragette, co-founder and leader of Women's Social and Political Union
  • Emmeline Pankhurst (1858–1928) – founder leader of suffragette movement
  • Bessie Rayner Parkes (1829–1925) – editor of first journal to press for women's rights, the English Woman's Journal (1858–64)
  • Pleasance Pendred (1865–1948) – a secretary for the WSPU, writer and speaker for women's suffrage
  • Dora Russell (1894–1986) – campaigner, advocate of marriage reform, birth control, and female emancipation
  • Sophia Alexandra Duleep Singh (8 August 1876 – 22 August 1948) – suffragette, involved in the Women's Tax Resistance League
  • Charlotte Carmichael Stopes (1840–1929) – author and campaigner for women's rights, mother of Marie Stopes
  • Marie Stopes (1880–1958) – advocate of birth control and equality in marriage
  • Alice Vickery (1844–1929) – physician, supporter of birth control as means of women's emancipation
  • Emma Watson (born 1990) – actress, feminist, women's rights activist
  • Catherine Winkworth (1827–1878) – translator and women's rights activist, secretary of the Clifton Association for Higher Education for Women
  • Mary Wollstonecraft (1759–1797) – writer and feminist
  • Malala Yousafzai (born 1997) – see Pakistan
  • Alice Zimmern (1855–1939) – writer and suffragist

United States[]

  • Jane Addams (1860–1935) – major social activist, president Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
  • Susan B. Anthony (1820–1906) – prominent opponent of slavery, played a pivotal role in the 19th-century women's rights movement to introduce women's suffrage into the United States
  • Yolanda Bako (born 1946) – New York activist, focused on addressing domestic violence
  • Helen Valeska Bary (1888–1973) – suffragist, researcher, social reformer[3][4]
  • Alice Stone Blackwell (1857–1950) – feminist and journalist, editor of the Woman's Journal, a major women's rights publication
  • Antoinette Brown Blackwell (1825–1921) – founded American Woman Suffrage Association with Lucy Stone in 1869
  • Henry Browne Blackwell (1825–1909) – businessman, abolitionist, journalist, suffrage leader and campaigner
  • Harriot Stanton Blatch (1856–1940) – writer, suffragist, daughter of pioneering women's rights activist Elizabeth Cady Stanton
  • Amelia Bloomer (1818–1894) – advocate of women's issues, suffragist, publisher and editor of The Lily
  • Helen Gurley Brown (1922–2012) – author of Sex and the Single Girl, long-time editor of Cosmopolitan, advocate of women's self-fulfillment
  • Lucy Burns (1879–1966) – suffragist and women's rights activist
  • Carrie Chapman Catt (1859–1947) – suffragist leader, president of National American Woman Suffrage Association, founder of League of Women Voters and International Alliance of Women
  • Jacqueline Ceballos (born 1925) – feminist and founder of Veteran Feminists of America
  • Rebecca Chalker – women's health writer and activist who fought for abortion rights and promoted self-help techniques for women to avoid the gynecologist's office
  • William Henry Channing (1810–1884) – minister, author
  • Grace Julian Clarke (1865–1938) – suffragist, journalist, author
  • Hillary Rodham Clinton (born 1947) – lawyer, professor, author, First Lady, U.S. Senator, U.S. Secretary of State, first female presidential nominee in U.S. history
  • Mabel Craft Deering (1873–1953) – journalist
  • Frederick Douglass (1818–1895) – abolitionist, writer, speaker
  • Virginia Hewlett Douglass (1849–1889) – suffragist
  • Carol Downer (born 1933) – founder of women's self-help movement, feminist, attorney
  • Muriel Fox (born 1928) – public relations executive and feminist activist[5]
  • Elisabeth Freeman (1876–1942) – suffragist, civil rights activist, participated in Suffrage Hikes
  • Nancy Friday (born 1933) – writer and activist
  • Betty Friedan (1921–2006) – writer, activist, feminist
  • Margaret Fuller (1810–1850) – Transcendentalist, advocate of women's education, author of Woman in the Nineteenth Century
  • Matilda Joslyn Gage (1826–1898) – suffragist, editor, writer, organizer
  • William Lloyd Garrison (1805–1879) – abolitionist, journalist, organizer, advocate
  • Ruth Bader Ginsburg (1933–2020) – academic and lawyer for several women's rights cases before the United States Supreme Court. She herself became a Supreme Court Justice in 1993.
  • Emma Goldman (1869–1940) – campaigner for birth control and other rights
  • Judy Goldsmith (born 1938) – feminist activist, President of National Organization for Women (NOW)
  • Helen M. Gougar (1843–1907) – lawyer, temperance and women's rights advocate
  • Grace Greenwood (1823–1904) – first woman reporter on New York Times, advocate of social reform and women's rights
  • Thomas Wentworth Higginson (1828–1911) – abolitionist, minister, author
  • Marjorie Hillis (1889-1971), author writing in support of single working women
  • Isabella Beecher Hooker (1822–1907) – leader, lecturer and activist in the American Suffragist movement
  • Julia Ward Howe (1818–1910) – suffragist, writer, organizer
  • Jane Hunt (1812–1889) – philanthropist
  • Rosalie Gardiner Jones (1883–1978) – suffragist and organizer of the Suffrage Hikes
  • Abby Kelley (1811–1887) – opponent of slavery, women's rights activist, one of the first women to voice views in public speeches
  • Kate Kelly (born 1980) – feminist and human rights lawyer, founder of Ordain Women, works for Planned Parenthood
  • Eva Kotchever (1891–1943) – friend of Emma Goldman, owner of the Eve's Hangout in New York, assassinated at Auschwitz
  • Mabel Ping-Hua Lee (1896–1966) – suffragist, advocate for women's rights and for the Chinese immigrant community
  • Mary Livermore (1820–1905) – suffragist and women's rights journalist
  • Ah Quon McElrath (1915–2008) – labor and women's rights activist
  • Inez Milholland (1886–1916) – suffragist, key participant in National Woman's Party and Woman Suffrage Parade of 1913
  • Lee Minto (born 1927) – women's health and rights activist, sex education advocate, former Executive Director of Seattle-King County Planned Parenthood
  • Janet Mock (born 1983) – writer, transgender rights activist, producer, journalist
  • Robin Morgan (born 1941) – poet, political theorist, journalist, lecturer
  • Lucretia Mott (1793–1880) – abolitionist, women's rights activist, social reformer, who helped write Declaration of Sentiments during 1848 Seneca Falls Convention
  • Pauli Murray (1910–1985) – civil and women's rights activist, lawyer, Episcopal priest[6]
  • Diane Nash (born 1938) – Civil Rights Movement leader and organizer, voting rights exponent
  • John Neal (1793-1876) – eccentric, writer and critic, America's first women's rights lecturer[7]
  • Zelda Kingoff Nordlinger (born 1932) – instigator of first rape-reform laws
  • Rose O'Neill (1874–1944) – famous illustrator (Kewpie creator) who worked for women's right to vote by creating posters and advertising material to promoting the women's movement
  • Mary Hutcheson Page (1860–1940) – member of the Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government, National American Woman Suffrage Association, and National Executive Committee of the Congressional Union for Women Suffrage, 1910 President of the National Woman Suffrage Association
  • Maud Wood Park (1871–1955) – founder College Equal Suffrage League, first president League of Women Voters
  • Adele Parker (1870–1956) – ardent suffragist, 1903 University of Washington law school graduate, 1911-1913 owned and operated the Western Woman Voter newspaper,[8] 1934 House Representative 37th District in WA
  • Deborah Parker (born 1970) – major player in the Violence Against Women Reauthorization Act of 2013[9][10] and activist for indigenous women's rights[9]
  • Alice Paul (1885–1977) – one of the leaders of the 1910s Women's Voting Rights Movement for the 19th Amendment, founder of National Woman's Party, initiator of Silent Sentinels and 1913 Women's Suffrage Parade, author of the proposed Equal Rights Amendment
  • Frédérique Petrides (1903–1983) – see Belgium
  • Wendell Phillips (1811–1884) – abolitionist, orator, lawyer
  • Mónica Ramírez – author, civil rights attorney, speaker
  • Margaret Sanger (1879–1966) – writer, nurse, founder American Birth Control League, founder and first president of Planned Parenthood
  • May Wright Sewall (1844–1920) – educator, feminist, president of National Council of Women for the United States, president of the International Council of Women
  • Anna Howard Shaw (1847–1919) – president of National Women's Suffrage Association
  • Pauline Agassiz Shaw (1841–1917) – founder president of Boston Equal Suffrage Association for Good Government
  • Eleanor Smeal (born 1939) – organizer, initiator, president of NOW, founder and president of the Feminist Majority Foundation
  • Elizabeth Cady Stanton (1815–1902) – social activist, abolitionist, suffragist, organizer of 1848 Women's Rights Convention, co-founder of National Woman Suffrage Association and International Council of Women
  • Gloria Steinem (born 1934) – writer, activist, feminist, women's rights journalist
  • Doris Stevens (1892–1963) – organizer for National American Women Suffrage Association and National Woman's Party, Silent Sentinels participant, author of Jailed for Freedom
  • Lucy Stone (1818–1893) – orator, one of the initiators of the first National Women's Rights Convention, founder of Woman's Journal, force behind the American Woman Suffrage Association, noted for retaining her surname after marriage
  • Roshini Thinakaran – film-maker focusing on lives of women in post-conflict zones
  • Dorothy Thompson (1893–1961) – Buffalo and New York suffragist, later journalist and radio broadcaster
  • Sojourner Truth (c. 1797–1883) – abolitionist, women's rights activist and speaker
  • Ella Lillian Wall Van Leer (1892–1986) – American artist, architect, women's rights activist
  • Maryly Van Leer Peck (1930–2011) – American academic, first female engineer at Vanderbilt University, pioneer, women's rights activist and board member of Society of Women Engineers
  • Frances Willard (1839–1898) – long-time president of the Woman's Christian Temperance Union, which, under her leadership, supported women's suffrage
  • Mabel Vernon (1883–1975) – suffragist, member of Congressional Union for Women Suffrage, organizer for Silent Sentinels
  • Ida B. Wells (1862–1931) – civil rights and anti-lynching activist, journalist, educator, suffragist noted for refusal to avoid media attention as an African American
  • Victoria Woodhull (1838–1927) – suffragist, eugenicist, publisher, organizer, first woman to run for U.S. presidency

Uruguay[]

Venezuela[]

  • Sheyene Gerardi – human rights advocate, peace activist, founder of the SPACE movement

Yemen[]

  • Muna Luqman

Zimbabwe[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Richard J. Evans: The feminist movement in Germany. London, Beverly Hills 1976 (SAGE Studies in 20th Century History, Vol. 6). ISBN 0-8039-9951-8, S. 120
  2. ^ Prah, Mansah (2002). "Jiagge, Annie (1918–1996)". In Commire, Anne (ed.). Women in World History: A Biographical Encyclopedia. Waterford, Connecticut: Yorkin Publications. ISBN 0-7876-4074-3. Archived from the original on 2016-04-09.
  3. ^ Parker, Jacqueline (1974). Helen Valeska Bary: Labor Administration and Social Security: A Woman's Life. Berkeley CA: University of California.
  4. ^ Santiago-Valles, Kelvin A. (1994). Subject People and Colonial Discourses: Economic Transformation and Social Disorder in Puerto Rico, 1898–1947. SUNY Press. pp. 58, 161. ISBN 9781438418650. Retrieved 1 January 2017.
  5. ^ "Fox, Muriel, 1928- . Papers of NOW officer Muriel Fox, 1966-1971: A Finding Aid". Oasis.lib.harvard.edu. 1928-02-03. Archived from the original on 2018-07-03. Retrieved 2018-02-21.
  6. ^ [1], additional text.
  7. ^ Daggett, Windsor. A Down-East Yankee From the District of Maine. A.J. Huston, 1920. p. 30
  8. ^ "Western Women's Suffrage Newspapers". Accessible Archives Inc. Retrieved 2020-05-24.
  9. ^ a b Lane, Temryss MacLean (January 15, 2018). "The frontline of refusal: indigenous women warriors of standing rock". . Routledge. 31 (3): 209. doi:10.1080/09518398.2017.1401151. eISSN 1366-5898. ISSN 0951-8398. S2CID 149347362. Her courage in sharing her personal story of sexual violence with congress was vital in the passing of the 2013 Violence Against Women Act (VAWA). [...] Her dignified poise and presence was pivotal and necessary to pass the tribal provisions that protect Native women and their communities in the VAWA.
  10. ^ Nichols, John (May 24, 2016). "The Democratic Platform Committee Now Has a Progressive Majority. Thanks, Bernie Sanders". Democrats. The Nation. Katrina vanden Heuvel. ISSN 0027-8378. Archived from the original on June 3, 2018. Retrieved June 3, 2018. The Sanders selections are all noted progressives: [...] Native American activist and former Tulalip Tribes Vice Chair Deborah Parker (a key advocate for reauthorization of the Violence Against Women Act) [...].
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