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Today is the 110th International Women s Day By Lara Rasin A short history of International Women s Day The first Women s Day dates back to the early 20th century. It emerged during times marked by industrialization, as workers organizations and women s movements for universal suffrage developed in parallel. A movement started in the United States In 1908, the US Socialist Party established the Women s National Committee, which adopted a proposal to mark Women s Day once a year. Its fundamental goal? Fighting for women s suffrage. The following year marked the first National Women s Day in the US, and with it came the first-ever mass, nationwide strikes. Some were a part of the continuous struggle for women s voting rights, and others encompassed numerous protests against awful working conditions in factories. ....
Paramos para cambiarlo todo | Una radiografía del 8... pagina12.com.ar - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pagina12.com.ar Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Los orígenes del Día Internacional de la Mujer: emancipación política y condiciones laborales eldiario.es - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from eldiario.es Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
SUPPLEMENT: Women’s Day established March 8 2021 marks 110 years since International Women’s Day was first commemorated by the working class movement. What follows is what we believe to be the first English translation of a report of the 1910 International Socialist Congress of Women in Copenhagen, which passed the resolution to establish the event as a regular feature in the international socialist calendar. The unsigned article first appeared in Die Gleichheit ( Equality), the fortnightly paper of German Social Democracy’s women’s movement. Die Gleichheit regularly featured reports from its sister organisations around the world. Edited by Clara Zetkin - once branded by kaiser Wilhelm II as the “most dangerous witch” in the country - she insisted that women’s liberation presupposed working class political organisation. Zetkin was eventually removed as editor by the SPD leadership in 1917: the paper had been struggling against the pro-war ‘fo ....