Causes in Common: Welsh Women and the Struggle for Social Democracy

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University of Wales Press, Apr 1, 2022 - History - 192 pages

Causes in Common tells the compelling and revealing story of women's politics in modern Wales. Its panoramic sweep takes the reader on a journey from the nineteenth-century campaigns in support of democracy and the right to vote, and in opposition to slavery, through to the construction of the labour movement in the twentieth century, and on to the more recent demands for sexual liberation and LGBTQ+ rights. At its core is the argument that the Welsh women’s movement was committed to social democracy, rather than to liberal or conservative alternatives, and that material conditions were the central motivation of those women involved. Drawing on an array of sources, some of which appear in print for the first time, this is a vivid portrait of women who, out of a struggle for equality, individually and collectively became political activists, grassroots journalists, members of councils and parliaments, and inspirational community leaders.

 

Contents

Abbreviations
Before the Vote
A Womens Labour Party
Between the Acts
Against Fascism Austerity and
Raising Consciousness
Womens Liberation Now
Acknowledgements
Copyright

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This book is suitable for adult readers from sixteen onwards. Although scholarly in intent, its purpose is to provide the fruits of research for a general audience.

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