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How the International Women’s Movement Discovered the ‘Troubles’

Brokered and Broken Transnational Interactions during the Northern Ireland Conflict, 1968–1981

by Janou Glencross (Author)
©2011 Thesis 226 Pages

Summary

This book analyses women’s transnational encounters in the Northern Ireland case. It connects both the different national contexts of women’s movements and different strands of feminism against the setting of a raging local conflict and new international frameworks. During the 1970s the international women’s movement, composed of a spectrum ranging from radical feminist to conservative, focussed on problems arising from the ‘Troubles’. Using a wide range of European and American sources this book highlights the nationality of the women involved and what it meant for their activism. It argues that activists reflected their own national backgrounds as they worked through a new international framework – driven by media, European integration, the UN’s decade for women and international social movements. This work contributes to both women’s and gender history and to the study of international social movements and transnationalism. It brings them together to show activists’ complicated agendas and how they intersected at national, local and international levels.

Details

Pages
226
Year
2011
ISBN (Softcover)
9783631602843
Language
English
Keywords
Internationale Frauenbewegung Transnationalismus Nordirlandkonflikt Frauenorganisationen
Published
Frankfurt am Main, Berlin, Bern, Bruxelles, New York, Oxford, Wien, 2011. 225 pp., num. tables

Biographical notes

Janou Glencross (Author)

Janou Glencross, née Vorderwülbecke, earned her PhD from the European University Institute, Florence, in 2008. She worked as a research assistant with the Robert Schuman Centre for Advanced Studies and is currently managing an interdisciplinary research consortium at Leibniz Universität Hannover where she also teaches undergraduate and graduate classes.

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Title: How the International Women’s Movement Discovered the ‘Troubles’