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Feminism in the United Kingdom

In the United Kingdom, as in other countries, feminism seeks to establish political, social, and economic equality for women. The history of feminism in Britain dates to the very beginnings of feminism itself, as many of the earliest feminist writers and activists—such as Mary Wollstonecraft, Barbara Bodichon, and Lydia Becker—were British.

19th century edit

 
Ann Thornton Going Aloft, c. 1835

The first organised movement for British women's suffrage was the Langham Place Circle of the 1850s, led by Barbara Bodichon (née Leigh-Smith) and Bessie Rayner Parkes. They also campaigned for improved female rights in the law, employment, education, and marriage.

Property owning women and widows had been allowed to vote in some local elections, but that ended in 1835. The Chartist Movement of 1838 to 1857 was a large-scale demand for suffrage—however it only gave suffrage to men over 21. In 1851 the Sheffield Female Political Association was founded and submitted an unsuccessful petition calling for women's suffrage to the House of Lords. This probably inspired British feminist Harriet Taylor Mill to write the pro-women's-suffrage The Enfranchisement of Women (1851).[1][2][3] On 7 June 1866 a petition from 1,499 women calling for women's suffrage was presented to the Parliament, but it also did not succeed.[4]

Upper-class women could exert a little backstage political influence in high society. However, in divorce cases, rich women lost control of their children.

Careers edit

Ambitious middle-class women faced enormous challenges when they proposed entering suitable careers, such as nursing, teaching, law, and medicine, and the loftier their ambition, the greater the challenge. Physicians barred admission to the medical profession; there were a few opportunities for women lawyers, but none as clerics.[5] White collar business opportunities outside family-owned shops were few until clerical positions opened in the 20th century. Florence Nightingale demonstrated the necessity of professional nursing and warfare, and set up an educational system that tracked women into that field in the second half of the nineteenth century. Teaching was not quite as easy to break into, but the low salaries were less of the barrier to the single woman than to the married man. By the late 1860s a number of schools were preparing women for careers as governesses or teachers. The census reported in 1851 that 70,000 women in England and Wales were teachers, compared to the 170,000 who comprised three-fourths of all teachers in 1901.[6][7] The great majority came from lower middle class origins.[8] The National Union of Women Teachers (NUWT) originated in the early 20th century inside the male-controlled National Union of Teachers (NUT). It demanded equal pay with male teachers, and eventually broke away.[9] Both Oxford and Cambridge minimized the role of women, allowing small all-female colleges to operate. However the new redbrick universities and the other major cities were open to women.[10]

Medicine was the greatest challenge, with the most systematic resistance by the physicians, and the fewest women breaking through. One route to entry was to go to the United States where there were suitable schools for women as early as 1850. Britain was one of the last countries to train women physicians, so 80 to 90% of the British women departed to America for their medical degrees. Edinburgh University admitted a few women in 1869, then reversed itself in 1873, leaving a strong negative reaction among British medical educators. The first separate school for women physicians opened in London in 1874 to a handful of students. Scotland was more open. Coeducation had to wait until the World War.[11]

By the end of the nineteenth century, women had secured equality of status in most spheres – except for the vote and the holding of office.[citation needed]

Child custody edit

Before 1839 after the divorce rich women lost control of their children as those children would continue in the family unit with the father, as head of the household, and who continued to be responsible for them. Caroline Norton was one such woman; her personal tragedy where she was denied access to her three sons after a divorce led her to a life of intense campaigning which successfully led to the passing of the Custody of Infants Act 1839 and introduced the Tender years doctrine for child custody arrangement.[12][13][14][15] The Act gave women, for the first time, a right to their children and gave some discretion to the judge in child custody cases. Under the doctrine, the Act also established a presumption of maternal custody for children under the age of seven, maintaining the responsibility for financial support to the father.[12] In 1873 due to additional pressure from women, the Parliament extended the presumption of maternal custody until a child reached sixteen.[16][17] The doctrine spread in many states of the world because of the British Empire.[14]

Divorce edit

Traditionally, poor people used desertion, and (for poor men) even the practice of selling wives in the market, as a substitute for divorce.[18] In Britain before 1857 wives were under the economic and legal control of their husbands, and divorce was almost impossible. It required a very expensive private act of Parliament costing perhaps £200, of the sort only the richest could possibly afford. It was very difficult to secure divorce on the grounds of adultery, desertion, or cruelty. The first key legislative victory came with the Matrimonial Causes Act of 1857. It passed over the strenuous opposition of the highly traditional Church of England. The new law made divorce a civil affair of the courts, rather than a Church matter, with a new civil court in London handling all cases. The process was still quite expensive, at about £40, but now became feasible for the middle class. A woman who obtained a judicial separation took the status of a feme sole, with full control of her own civil rights. Additional amendments came in 1878, which allowed for separations handled by local justices of the peace. The Church of England blocked further reforms until the final breakthrough came with the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973.[19][20]

Prostitution edit

Bullough argues that prostitution in 18th-century Britain was a convenience to men of all social statuses, and economic necessity for many poor women, and was tolerated by society. The evangelical movement of the nineteenth century denounced the prostitutes and their clients as sinners, and denounced society for tolerating it.[21] Prostitution, according to the values of the Victorian middle-class, was a horrible evil, for the young women, for the men, and for all of society. Parliament in the 1860s in the Contagious Diseases Acts ("CD") adopted the French system of licensed prostitution. The "regulationist policy" was to isolate, segregate, and control prostitution. The main goal was to protect working men, soldiers and sailors near ports and army bases from catching venereal disease. Young women officially became prostitutes and were trapped for life in the system. After a nationwide crusade led by Josephine Butler and the Ladies National Association for the Repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts, Parliament repealed the acts in 1886 and ended legalised prostitution. The age of consent for young women was raised from 12 to 16, undercutting the supply of young prostitutes who were in highest demand. The new moral code meant that respectable men dared not be caught.[22][23][24][25]

Protection for rich and poor women edit

A series of four laws each called the Married Women's Property Act passed Parliament from 1870 to 1893 effectively removed the restrictions that kept wealthy married women from controlling their own property. They now had practically equal status with their husbands, and a status superior to women anywhere else in Europe.[26][27][28] Working class women were protected by a series of laws passed on the assumption that they (like children) did not have full bargaining power and needed protection by the government.[29] The Act did receive a great deal of criticism as many believed that "household harmony could only be achieved by the total subordination of women to their husband".[30]

1900–1950 edit

The early 20th century, the Edwardian era, saw a loosening of Victorian rigidity and complacency: women had more employment opportunities and were more active. Many served worldwide in the British Empire or in Protestant missionary societies.

The Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU) was formed in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst to fight for women's rights to vote.[31] Women had the vote in Australia, New Zealand and some of the American states. While WSPU was the most visible suffrage group, it was only one of many, such as the Women's Freedom League and the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) led by Millicent Garrett Fawcett.

In 1906, the Daily Mail first coined the term "suffragettes" as a form of ridicule, but the term was quickly embraced in Britain by women who used militant tactics in the cause of women's suffrage. The term became visible in distinctive green, purple, and white emblems, and the Artists' Suffrage League's dramatic graphics. Feminists learned to exploit photography and the media, and left a vivid visual record including images such as the 1914 photograph of Emmeline.[32] Violence separated the moderates from the radicals led by the Pankhursts. The radicals themselves split; Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst expelled Sylvia Pankhurst for insubordination and she formed her own group that was left-wing and oriented to broader issues affecting working class women.[33] It was first called the East London Federation of Suffragettes (ELFS), but over the years evolved politically and changed its name accordingly, first to the Women's Suffrage Federation and then to the Workers' Socialist Federation.

 
Cover of WSPU's The Suffragette, 25 April 1913 (after Delacroix's Liberty Leading the People, 1830)

The radical protests slowly became more violent, and included heckling, banging on doors, smashing shop windows, and arson. Emily Davison, a WSPU member, unexpectedly ran onto the track during the 1913 Epsom Derby and died under the King's horse. These tactics produced mixed results of sympathy and alienation.[citation needed] As many protesters were imprisoned and went on hunger-strike, the Liberal government was left with an embarrassing situation. From these political actions, the suffragists successfully created publicity around their institutional discrimination and sexism. Historians generally argue that the first stage of the militant suffragette movement under the Pankhursts in 1906 had a dramatic mobilizing effect on the suffrage movement. Women were thrilled and supportive of revolting in the streets; the membership of the militant WSPU and the older NUWSS overlapped and was mutually supportive. However a system of publicity, Ensor argues, had to continue to escalate to maintain its high visibility in the media. The hunger strikes and force-feeding did that. However the Pankhursts refused any advice and escalated their tactics. They turned to systematic disruption of Liberal Party meetings as well as physical violence in terms of damaging public buildings and arson. This went too far, as the overwhelming majority of suffragists pulled back and refused to follow because they could no longer defend the tactics. They increasingly repudiated the suffragettes as an obstacle to achieving suffrage, saying the militant suffragettes were now aiding the antis, and many historians agree[citation needed]. Searle says the methods of the suffragettes did succeed in damaging the Liberal party but failed to advance the cause of woman suffrage. When the Pankhursts decided to stop the militancy at the start of the war, and enthusiastically support the war effort, the movement split and their leadership role ended. Suffrage did come four years later, but the feminist movement in Britain permanently abandoned the militant tactics that had made the suffragettes famous.[34][35]

The First World War advanced the feminist cause, as women's sacrifices and paid employment were much appreciated. Prime Minister David Lloyd George was clear about how important the women were:

It would have been utterly impossible for us to have waged a successful war had it not been for the skill and ardour, enthusiasm and industry which the women of this country have thrown into the war.[36]

The militant suffragette movement was suspended during the war and never resumed. British society credited the new patriotic roles women played as earning them the vote in 1918.[37] However, British historians no longer emphasize the granting of woman suffrage as a reward for women's participation in war work. Pugh (1974) argues that enfranchising soldiers primarily and women secondarily was decided by senior politicians in 1916. In the absence of major women's groups demanding for equal suffrage, the government's conference recommended limited, age-restricted women's suffrage. The suffragettes had been weakened, Pugh argues, by repeated failures before 1914 and by the disorganising effects of war mobilization; therefore they quietly accepted these restrictions, which were approved in 1918 by a majority of the War Ministry and each political party in Parliament.[38] More generally, Searle (2004) argues that the British debate was essentially over by the 1890s, and that granting the suffrage in 1918 was mostly a byproduct of giving the vote to male soldiers. Women in Britain finally achieved suffrage on the same terms as men in 1928.[39]

The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 received Royal Assent on 23 December 1919.[40] The basic purpose of the act was, as stated in its long title, "... to amend the Law with respect to disqualification on account of sex", which it achieved in four short sections and one schedule. Its broad aim was achieved by section 1, which stated that:

A person shall not be disqualified by sex or marriage from the exercise of any public function, or from being appointed to or holding any civil or judicial office or post, or from entering or assuming or carrying on any civil profession or vocation, or for admission to any incorporated society (whether incorporated by Royal Charter or otherwise), [and a person shall not be exempted by sex or marriage from the liability to serve as a juror]…[41]

The Crown was given the power to regulate the admission of women to the civil service by Orders in Council, and judges were permitted to control the gender composition of juries. By section 2, women were to be admitted as solicitors after serving three years only if they possessed a University degree which would have qualified them if male, or if they had fulfilled all the requirements of a degree at a University which did not, at the time, admit women to degrees. By section 3, no statute or charter of a University was to preclude University authorities from regulating the admission of women to membership or degrees. By section 4, any orders in council, royal charters, or statutory provisions which were inconsistent with this Act were to cease to have effect.[40]

At the same time there was a relaxing of clothing restrictions on women; however, by 1920 there was negative talk about young women called "flappers" flaunting their sexuality.[42]

The BBC had a marriage bar between 1932 and 1944, although it was a partial ban and was not fully enforced due to the BBC's ambivalent views on the policy.[43]

The marriage bar was abolished in 1946 for the Home Civil Service; until then women were required to resign when they married.[44]

Lloyds Bank had a marriage bar that also meant that female employees were classified as supplementary staff, rather than permanent. The bank abolished its marriage bar in 1949.[45]

Electoral reform edit

The United Kingdom's Representation of the People Act 1918[46] gave near-universal suffrage to men, and suffrage to women over 30. The Representation of the People Act 1928 extended equal suffrage to both men and women. It also shifted the socioeconomic makeup of the electorate towards the working class, favouring the Labour Party, which was more sympathetic to women's issues.[47] The 1918 election gave Labour the most seats in the house to date. The electoral reforms also allowed women to run for Parliament. Specifically, the Parliament (Qualification of Women) Act 1918 gave women over 21 the right to stand for election as an MP. Christabel Pankhurst narrowly failed to win a seat in 1918, but in 1919 and 1920, both Lady Astor and Margaret Wintringham won seats for the Conservatives and Liberals respectively by succeeding their husband's seats. Labour swept to power in 1924. Constance Markievicz (Sinn Féin) was the first woman elected in Ireland in 1918, but as an Irish nationalist, refused to take her seat. Astor's proposal to form a women's party in 1929 was unsuccessful. Women gained considerable electoral experience over the next few years as a series of minority governments ensured almost annual elections, but there were 12 women in Parliament by 1940. Close affiliation with Labour also proved to be a problem for the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship (NUSEC), which had little support in the Conservative party. However, their persistence with Conservative Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin was rewarded with the passage of the Representation of the People (Equal Franchise) Act 1928.[48]

Social reform edit

The political change did not immediately change social circumstances. With the economic recession, women were the most vulnerable sector of the workforce. Some women who held jobs prior to the war were obliged to forfeit them to returning soldiers, and others were excessed. With limited franchise, the UK National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS) pivoted into a new organisation, the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship (NUSEC),[49] which still advocated for equality in franchise, but extended its scope to examine equality in social and economic areas. Legislative reform was sought for discriminatory laws (e.g., family law and prostitution) and over the differences between equality and equity, the accommodations that would allow women to overcome barriers to fulfillment (known in later years as the "equality vs. difference conundrum").[50] Eleanor Rathbone, who became an MP in 1929, succeeded Millicent Garrett as president of NUSEC in 1919. She expressed the critical need for consideration of difference in gender relationships as "what women need to fulfill the potentialities of their own natures".[51] The 1924 Labour government's social reforms created a formal split, as a splinter group of strict egalitarians formed the Open Door Council in May 1926.[52] This eventually became an international movement, and continued until 1965. Other important social legislation of this period included the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 (which opened professions to women), and the Matrimonial Causes Act 1923. In 1932, NUSEC separated advocacy from education, and continued the former activities as the National Council for Equal Citizenship and the latter as the Townswomen's Guild. The council continued until the end of the Second World War.[53]

In 1921, Margaret Mackworth (Lady Rhondda) founded the Six Point Group,[54] which included Rebecca West. As a political lobby group it aimed at political, occupational, moral, social, economic and legal equality. Thus it was ideologically allied with the Open Door Council, rather than National Council. It also lobbied at an international level, such as the League of Nations, and continued its work till 1983. In retrospect both ideological groups were influential in advancing women's rights in their own way. Despite women being admitted to the House of Commons from 1918, Mackworth, a Viscountess in her own right, spent a lifetime fighting to take her seat in the House of Lords against bitter opposition, a battle which only achieved its goal in the year of her death (1958). This revealed the weaknesses of the Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act. Mackworth also founded Time and Tide which became the group's journal, and to which West, Virginia Woolf, Rose Macaulay and many others contributed. A number of other women's periodicals also appeared in the 1920s, including Woman and Home, and Good Housekeeping, but whose content reflect very different aspirations. In 1925 Rebecca West wrote in Time and Tide something that reflected not only the movement's need to redefine itself post suffrage, but a continual need for re-examination of goals. "When those of our army whose voices are inclined to coolly tell us that the day of sex-antagonism is over and henceforth we have only to advance hand in hand with the male, I do not believe it."[55]

Reproductive rights edit

In 1803 the United Kingdom enacted Lord Ellenborough's Act, making abortion after quickening a capital crime, and providing lesser penalties for the felony of abortion before quickening.[56][57]

Annie Besant was tried in 1877 for publishing Charles Knowlton's Fruits of Philosophy,[58] a work on family planning, under the Obscene Publications Act 1857.[59][60] Knowlton had previously been convicted in the United States. She and her colleague Charles Bradlaugh were convicted but acquitted on appeal, the subsequent publicity resulting in a decline in the birth rate.[61][62] Not discouraged in the slightest, Besant followed this with The Law of Population.[63]

In 1929 the Infant Life (Preservation) Act 1929 was enacted; it created the offence of child destruction. It also amended the law so that an abortion carried out in good faith, for the sole purpose of preserving the life of the mother, would not be an offence.

In 1938 Dr. Aleck Bourne aborted the pregnancy of a young girl who had been raped by soldiers. Bourne was acquitted after turning himself in to authorities.

1950s – 21st century edit

1950s Britain is regarded as a bleak period for feminism. In the aftermath of World War II, a new emphasis was placed on companionate marriage and the nuclear family as a foundation of the new welfare state.[64][65]

In 1951, the proportion of adult women who were (or had been) married was 75%; more specifically, 84.8% of women between the ages of 45 and 49 were married.[66] At that time: “marriage was more popular than ever before.”[67] In 1953, a popular book of advice for women states: “A happy marriage may be seen, not as a holy state or something to which a few may luckily attain, but rather as the best course, the simplest, and the easiest way of life for us all”.[68]

While at the end of the war, childcare facilities were closed and assistance for working women became limited, the social reforms implemented by the new welfare state included family allowances meant to subsidize families, that is, to support women in the “capacity as wife and mother.”[65] Sue Bruley argues that “the progressive vision of the New Britain of 1945 was flawed by a fundamentally conservative view of women”.[67]

Women's commitment to companionate marriage was encouraged by the popular media: films, radio and popular women's magazines. In the 1950s, women's magazines had considerable influence on forming opinion in all walks of life, including the attitude to women's employment.

Nevertheless, 1950s Britain saw several strides towards the parity of women, such as equal pay required by law for women teachers (1952) and for women in the civil service (1954), thanks to activists like Edith Summerskill, who fought for women's causes both in parliament and in the traditional non-party pressure groups throughout the 1950s.[69] Barbara Caine argues: “Ironically here, as with the vote, success was sometimes the worst enemy of organised feminism, as the achievement of each goal brought to an end the campaign which had been organised around it, leaving nothing in its place.”[70]

The Act allowed for the creation of female peers entitled to sit in the House of Lords. The first such women peers were four— Barbara Wootton and Stella Isaacs, who were sworn in on 21 October 1958, and Katharine Eliot and Irene Curzon, who took office the next day.[71][72]

Feminist writers of that period, such as Alva Myrdal and Viola Klein, started to allow for the possibility that women should be able to combine home with outside employment. 1950s’ form of feminism is often derogatorily termed “welfare feminism.”[73] Indeed, many activists went to great length to stress that their position was that of ‘reasonable modern feminism,’ which accepted sexual diversity, and sought to establish what women's social contribution was rather than emphasizing equality or the similarity of the sexes. Feminism in 1950s England was strongly connected to social responsibility and involved the well-being of society as a whole. This often came at the cost of the liberation and personal fulfillment of self-declared feminists. Even those women who regarded themselves as feminists strongly endorsed prevailing ideas about the primacy of children's needs, as advocated, for example, by John Bowlby the head of the Children's Department at the Tavistock Clinic, who published extensively throughout the 1950s and by Donald Winnicott who promoted through radio broadcasts and in the press the idea of the home as a private emotional world in which mother and child are bound to each other and in which the mother has control and finds freedom to fulfill herself.[74]

The birth control pill was introduced in the UK on the National Health Service in 1961 for married women only, and made available for all women with the NHS from 1967.[75]

The Peerage Act 1963 granted suo jure hereditary women peers (other than those in the Peerage of Ireland) the right to sit in the House of Lords.

The Abortion Act 1967 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom legalising abortions by registered practitioners, and regulating the tax-paid provision of such medical practices through the National Health Service. The Act made abortion legal in all of Great Britain (but not Northern Ireland) up to 28 weeks' gestation. In 1990, the law was amended by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act so that abortion was no longer legal after 24 weeks, except in cases where it was necessary to save the life of the woman, there was evidence of extreme fetal abnormality, or there was a grave risk of physical or mental injury to the woman. Furthermore, all abortion remains officially restricted to cases of maternal life, mental health, health, rape, fetal defects, and/or socioeconomic factors.

The Ford sewing machinists strike of 1968, led by Rose Boland, Eileen Pullen, Vera Sime, Gwen Davis, and Sheila Douglass, began because women sewing machinists, as part of a regrading exercise, were informed that their jobs were graded in Category B (less skilled production jobs), instead of Category C (more skilled production jobs), and that they would be paid 15% less than the full B rate received by men.[76][77][78] At the time, it was common practice for companies to pay women less than men, irrespective of the skills involved.[79] Following the intervention of Barbara Castle, the Secretary of State for Employment and Productivity in Harold Wilson's government, the strike ended three weeks after it began, as a result of a deal that immediately increased their rate of pay to 8% below that of men, rising to the full category B rate the following year. A court of inquiry (under the Industrial Courts Act 1919) was also set up to consider their regrading, although this failed to find in their favour.[80] The women were only regraded into Category C following a further six-week strike in 1984 (source BBC documentary broadcast 9 March 2013).[81] The 1968 strike was a trigger cause of the passing of the Equal Pay Act 1970. As well, inspired by the 1968 strike, women trades unionists founded the National Joint Action Campaign Committee for Women's Equal Rights (NJACCWER), which held an equal pay demonstration attended by 1,000 people in Trafalgar Square on 18 May 1969.[82]

The Equal Pay Act 1970 is an Act of the United Kingdom Parliament from 1970 which prohibits any less favourable treatment between women and men in terms of pay and conditions of employment. The Act has now been mostly superseded by Part 5, chapter 3, of the Equality Act 2010.

The socialist feminist Brixton Black Women's Group was formed in 1973 to raise consciousness and organise around issues specifically affecting Black women.[83] Several of the group's founding members, such as Beverley Bryan, Olive Morris and Liz Obi, had previously been active in the British Black Panthers and BWG was formed partly from frustrations that the Panthers were not taking women's issues seriously.[84]

The Sex Discrimination Act 1975 (c. 65) was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which protected people from discrimination on the grounds of sex or marital status. The Act concerned employment, training, education, harassment, the provision of goods and services, and the disposal of premises. The Gender Recognition Act 2004 and The Sex Discrimination Act 1975 (Amendment) Regulations 2008 amended parts of this Act to apply to transsexual people. Other amendments were introduced by the Sex Discrimination Act 1986, the Employment Act 1989, the Equality Act 2006, and other legislation such as rulings by the European Court of Justice. The Act did not apply in Northern Ireland, however The Sex Discrimination Gender Reassignment Regulations (Northern Ireland) 1999 does. The Act was repealed in full by the Equality Act 2010.

The Grunwick dispute at the Grunwick Film Processing Laboratories in London, was an industrial dispute involving trade union recognition that led to a two-year strike between 1976 and 1978. It was led by Mrs Jayaben Desai, and involved mostly female, immigrant, East African Asian strikers. It was the first dispute where the majority of strikers were from an ethnic minority and still received widespread support from the labour movement.[85]

The United Kingdom signed the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women in 1981 and ratified it in 1986.[86]

Female genital mutilation was outlawed in the UK by the Prohibition of Female Circumcision Act 1985, which made it an offence to perform FGM on children or adults.[87]

When Margaret Thatcher (who had been the first female Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990) died the then Leader of the Opposition, Ed Miliband paid tribute to her as "the first woman Prime Minister".[88][89] However Thatcher received scant credit from feminists for breaking the ultimate glass ceiling, because she herself avoided feminism, and expressed an intensely masculine style.[90][91]

R v R [1991] UKHL 12[a] is a court judgment delivered in 1991, in which the House of Lords determined that under English criminal law it is possible for a husband to rape his wife.

Education edit

In a 2015 evaluation from Lord David Willetts stated that in 2013, the percentage of undergraduate students in the UK were 54 percent female and 46 percent male. Whereas in the 1960s only 25 percent of full-time students in the United Kingdom were female. The increase of women going to university and contributing in the educational system can be linked to the women’s suffrage movements that aimed to encourage women to enroll in higher education.[92]

21st century edit

The Sex Discrimination (Election Candidates) Act 2002 (c.2) is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom. The purpose of the Act was to exempt the selection of candidates in parliamentary elections from the provisions in the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Sex Discrimination (Northern Ireland) Order 1976 that outlaw sexual discrimination. The purposes of the Act allow political parties to select candidates based on gender in an effort to increase representation of women in British politics.

The Act applies to elections to:

The Act does not apply to selection of candidates for the Mayor of London elections. Only political parties registered under Part 2 of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 are covered by the Act.

The Act was originally scheduled to run until the end of 2015. On 6 March 2008, Minister for Women Harriet Harman announced that the exemption would be extended until 2030 under the Equality Act 2010.[93][94]

The Female Genital Mutilation Act 2003 and the Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation (Scotland) Act 2005 made it an offence to arrange FGM outside the country for British citizens or permanent residents, whether or not it is lawful in the country to which the girl is taken.[95][96][97][98][99][100] The first prosecutions took place in 2015 against a doctor for performing FGM and another man for aiding and abetting; both were found not guilty.[101]

The Equality Act 2006 (c 3) is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom, a precursor to the Equality Act 2010, which combines all of the equality enactments within Great Britain and provides comparable protections across all equality strands. Those explicitly mentioned by the Equality Act 2006 include gender; disability; age; proposed, commenced or completed gender reassignment; race; religion or belief and sexual orientation. Among other things, it created a public duty to promote equality on the ground of gender (The Equality Act 2006, section 84, inserting section 76A of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, now found in section 1 of the Equality Act 2010.)

Since 2007, Harriet Harman has been Deputy Leader of the Labour Party, the UK's current opposition party. Traditionally, being Deputy Leader has ensured the cabinet role of Deputy Prime Minister. However, Gordon Brown announced that he would not have a deputy prime minister, much to the consternation of feminists,[102] particularly with suggestions that privately Brown considered Jack Straw to be de facto deputy prime minister[103] and thus bypassing Harman. With Harman's cabinet post of Leader of the House of Commons, Brown allowed her to chair Prime Minister's Questions when he was out of the country. Harman also held the post Minister for Women and Equality.

The Equality Act 2010[104] is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom; the primary purpose of the Act is to codify the complicated and numerous array of Acts and Regulations, which formed the basis of anti-discrimination law in Great Britain. This was, primarily, the Equal Pay Act 1970, the Sex Discrimination Act 1975, the Race Relations Act 1976, the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 and three major statutory instruments protecting against discrimination in employment on grounds of religion or belief, sexual orientation and age. It requires equal treatment in access to employment as well as private and public services, regardless of the protected characteristics of sex, age, disability, gender reassignment, marriage and civil partnership, race, religion or belief, and sexual orientation. In the case of gender, there are special protections for pregnant women. The Act does not guarantee transsexuals' access to gender-specific services where restrictions are "a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim".[105] Under s.217, with limited exceptions the Act does not apply to Northern Ireland.

In 2013, the first oral history archive of the United Kingdom women's liberation movement (titled Sisterhood and After) was launched by the British Library.[106]

Sisters Uncut was founded in 2014 to take direct action in response to cuts to domestic violence services by the UK government, which has included demonstrating against cuts at 7 October London premiere of the 2015 film Suffragette. Sisters Uncut organises intersectionally and see the struggle against racism and borders as intimately connected to the struggle against violence towards women.

In 2016, a British receptionist was dismissed for not wearing high heels and she then started a petition which attracted sufficient support to be considered by the UK Parliament. Outsourcing firm Portico stated that Nicola Thorp "had signed the appearance guidelines" but after Thorp launched her online petition—"Make it illegal for a company to require women to wear high heels at work"—the firm changed their policy. The new guideline states that all female employees "can wear plain flat shoes or plain court shoes as they prefer."[107] The petition gained widespread support from public figures such as Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and MPs Caroline Dinenage, Margot James and Tulip Siddiq.[108][109] Two parliamentary committees in January 2017 decided that Portico had broken the law; the company had already changed its terms of employment.[108][110] The petition gained over 130,000 signatures, sufficient for a debate in the British parliament.[111] This took place on 6 March 2017, when MPs decided the UK government should change the law to prevent the demand being made by employers.[112][110] However, this was rejected by the government in April 2017 as they stated that existing legislation was "adequate".[113]

Timeline edit

 
A suffragette arrested in the street by two police officers in London in 1914

1700s edit

1800–1850 edit

  • 1803: The United Kingdom enacted Lord Ellenborough's Act, making abortion after quickening a capital crime, and providing lesser penalties for the felony of abortion before quickening.[56][57]
  • 1818: Jeremy Bentham advocated female suffrage in his book A Plan for Parliamentary Reform.
  • 1832: Great Reform Act – confirmed the exclusion of women from the electorate.
  • 1835: Property owning women and widows had been allowed to vote in some local elections, but that ended in 1835.
  • 1839: The Custody of Infants Act 1839 was enacted, and it gave women, for the first time, a right to their children and gave some discretion to the judge in child custody cases. Under the Tender years doctrine the Act also established a presumption of maternal custody for children under the age of seven years maintaining the responsibility for financial support to the father.[12]
  • 1844: The regulation of working hours in factories was extended to women by an Act of 1844.
  • 1847: The Factory Act 1847, also known as the Ten Hours Act, was a United Kingdom Act of Parliament which restricted the working hours of women and young persons (13-18) in textile mills to 10 hours per day. The practicalities of running a textile mill were such that the Act should have effectively set the same limit on the working hours of adult male mill-workers, but defective drafting meant that a subsequent Factory Act in 1850 imposing tighter restrictions on the hours within which women and young persons could work was needed to bring this about.

1850–1880 edit

  • 1842: The Mines and Collieries Act 1842, commonly known as the Mines Act 1842, was an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which forbade women and girls of any age to work underground and introduced a minimum age of ten for boys employed in underground work.[115] However, the employment of women did not end abruptly in 1842; with the connivance of some employers, women dressed as men continued to work underground for several years. Penalties for employing women were small and inspectors were few and some women were so desperate for work they willingly worked illegally for less pay.[116]
  • 1850s: The first organised movement for British women's suffrage was the Langham Place Circle of the 1850s, led by Barbara Bodichon (née Leigh-Smith) and Bessie Rayner Parkes. They also campaigned for improved female rights in the law, employment, education, and marriage.
  • 1851: The Sheffield Female Political Association was founded and submitted an unsuccessful petition calling for women's suffrage to the House of Lords.
  • 1851: Harriet Taylor Mill published the pro-women's-suffrage The Enfranchisement of Women.[1][2][3]
  • 1857: The Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 allowed for easier divorce through a Divorce Court based in London. Divorce remained too expensive for the working class.[117]
  • 1864–1886: The Contagious Diseases Acts, also known as the CD Acts,[118] were originally passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom in 1864,[119] with alterations and editions made in 1866 and 1869. In 1862, a committee was established to inquire into venereal disease (i.e. sexually transmitted infections) in the armed forces. On its recommendation the first Contagious Diseases Act was passed. The legislation allowed police officers to arrest women suspected of being prostitutes in certain ports and army towns. The women were then subjected to compulsory checks for venereal disease. If a woman was declared to be infected, she would be confined in what was known as a lock hospital until she recovered or her sentence finished. The original act only applied to a few selected naval ports and army towns, but by 1869 the acts had been extended to cover eighteen "subjected districts".[120] In 1886, the acts were repealed.
  • 1865: John Stuart Mill elected as an MP showing direct support for women's suffrage.
  • 1866: On 7 June 1866 a petition from 1,499 women asking for women's suffrage was presented to Parliament, but it did not succeed.[4]
  • 1867: Second Reform Act – Male franchise extended to 2.5 million; no mention of women.
  • 1869: In June 1869, Lydia Becker and fellow campaigners were successful in securing the vote for women in municipal elections.[121]
  • 1870: Married Women's Property Act enacted; it allowed married women to be the legal owners of the money they earned and to inherit property.
  • 1873: In Custody of Infants Act 1873 due to additional pressure from women, the Parliament of the United Kingdom extended the presumption of maternal custody until a child reached sixteen.[16]
  • 1877: Annie Besant was tried in 1877 for publishing Charles Knowlton's Fruits of Philosophy,[58] a work on family planning, under the Obscene Publications Act 1857.[59][60] Knowlton had previously been convicted in the United States. She and her colleague Charles Bradlaugh were convicted but acquitted on appeal, the subsequent publicity resulting in a decline in the birth rate.[61][62]
  • 1878: Magistrates courts were given the authority to grant separation and maintenance orders to wives of abusive husbands; much cheaper than divorce.[117]

1880–1900 edit

  • 1882: The Married Women's Property Act 1882 (45 & 46 Vict. c.75) was an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom that significantly altered English law regarding the property rights of married women, which besides other matters allowed married women to own and control property in their own right. The Act applied in England (and Wales) and Ireland (after Irish independence in 1922, only Northern Ireland), but did not extend to Scotland.[122]
  • 1883: Conservative Primrose League formed. "The Primrose League was the first political organisation to give women the same status and responsibilities as men" according to Alistair Cooke.[123]
  • 1884: Third Reform Act – Male electorate doubled to 5 million.
  • 1884: The Married Women's Property Act 1884 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that significantly altered English law regarding the property rights granted to married women, allowing them to own and control their own property, whether acquired before or after marriage, and sue and be sued in their own name.
  • 1886: The Contagious Disease Acts were repealed.
  • 1889: Women's Franchise League established.
  • 1893: The Married Women's Property Act 1893 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that significantly altered English law regarding the property rights granted to married women. It completed the Married Women's Property Act 1882 by granting married women the same property rights equal to unmarried women.
  • 1894: Local Government Act; women who owned property could vote in local elections, become Poor Law Guardians, serve on School Boards
  • 1894: The publication of C.C. Stopes's British Freewomen, staple reading for the suffrage movement for decades.[124]
  • 1897: National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies NUWSS formed (led by Millicent Fawcett).[125]

1900–WW1 edit

  • 1903: Women's Social and Political Union WSPU was formed (under tight control of Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters)[33]
  • 1904: WPSU Militancy begins.
  • 1905, 1908, 1913: Three phases of WSPU militancy (Civil Disobedience; Destruction of Public Property; Arson/Bombings).
  • 1906: The Daily Mail first coined the term "suffragettes" as a form of ridicule, but the term was quickly embraced in Britain by women who used militant tactics in the cause of women's suffrage.
  • February 1907: NUWSS "Mud March" – largest open air demonstration ever held (at that point) – over 3000 women took part. In this year, women were admitted to the register to vote in and stand for election to principal local authorities.
  • 1907: The Matrimonial Causes Act 1907 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that consolidated previous legislation relating to maintenance payments to separated and divorced women. It was designed in response to one cause of poverty amongst mothers and their children, marriage break-up. Support for the "endowment of motherhood" was also increased.[126]
  • 1907: The Artists' Suffrage League founded.
  • 1907: The Women's Freedom League founded.
  • 1909: The Women's Tax Resistance League founded.
  • September 1909: Force feeding introduced to WSPU hunger strikers in English prisons
  • February 1910: Cross-Party Conciliation Committee (54 MPs). Conciliation Bill (that would enfranchise women) passed its 2nd reading by a majority of 109 but Prime Minister Asquith refused to give it more parliamentary time
  • November 1910: Asquith changes Bill to enfranchise more men instead of women
  • October 1912: George Lansbury, Labour MP, resigned his seat in support of women's suffrage
  • February 1913: David Lloyd George's house burned down by WSPU[127] (despite his support for women's suffrage).
  • April 1913: Cat and Mouse Act passed, allowing hunger-striking prisoners to be released when their health was threatened and then re-arrested when they had recovered.
  • 4 June 1913: Emily Davison of WSPU jumped in front of, and was subsequently trampled and killed by, the King's Horse at The Derby.
  • 1913: The Great Pilgrimage of 1913 was a march in Britain by suffragists campaigning non-violently for women's suffrage. Women marched to London from all around England and Wales and 50,000 attended a rally in Hyde Park.[128][129][130][131][132]
  • 13 March 1914: Mary Richardson of WSPU slashed the Rokeby Venus painted by Diego Velázquez in the National Gallery with an axe, protesting that she was maiming a beautiful woman just as the government was maiming Emmeline Pankhurst with force feeding.
  • 4 August 1914: First World War declared in Britain. WSPU activity immediately ceased. NUWSS activity continued peacefully – the Birmingham branch of the organisation continued to lobby Parliament and write letters to MPs.

1918–WW2 edit

  • 1918: The Representation of the People Act of 1918 enfranchised women over the age of 30 who were either a member or married to a member of the Local Government Register. About 8.4 million women gained the vote.
  • November 1918: the Parliament (Qualification of Women) Act 1918 was passed, allowing women over 21 to be elected into Parliament.[133]
  • December 1919: The Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 received Royal Assent on 23 December 1919.[40] The basic purpose of the act was, as stated in its long title, "... to amend the Law with respect to disqualification on account of sex", which it achieved in four short sections and one schedule. Its broad aim was achieved by section 1, which stated that:

    A person shall not be disqualified by sex or marriage from the exercise of any public function, or from being appointed to or holding any civil or judicial office or post, or from entering or assuming or carrying on any civil profession or vocation, or for admission to any incorporated society (whether incorporated by Royal Charter or otherwise), [and a person shall not be exempted by sex or marriage from the liability to serve as a juror]…[41]

    The Crown was given the power to regulate the admission of women to the civil service by Orders in Council, and judges were permitted to control the gender composition of juries. By section 2, women were to be admitted as solicitors after serving three years only if they possessed a University degree which would have qualified them if male, or if they had fulfilled all the requirements of a degree at a University which did not, at the time, admit women to degrees. By section 3, no statute or charter of a University was to preclude University authorities from regulating the admission of women to membership or degrees. By section 4, any orders in council, royal charters, or statutory provisions which were inconsistent with this Act were to cease to have effect.[40]
  • 1920: The Employment of Women, Young Persons, and Children Act 1920.
  • 1928: Women received the vote on the same terms as men (over the age of 21), as a result of the Representation of the People Act 1928.
  • 1929: The Infant Life (Preservation) Act 1929 was enacted; it is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom. It created the offence of child destruction. It also amended the law so that an abortion carried out in good faith, for the sole purpose of preserving the life of the mother, would not be an offence.
  • 1931: A 1-week strike of 10,000 non-unionised factory worker women, led by communist activist Jessie Eden, caused an explosion of English women joining trade unions.[134][135][136]
  • 1932–1944: The BBC had a marriage bar between 1932 and 1944, although it was a partial ban and was not fully enforced due to the BBC's ambivalent views on the policy.[43]
  • 1937: The Matrimonial Causes Act 1937 extended the grounds for divorce, which then only included adultery, to include unlawful desertion for two years or more, cruelty, and incurable insanity.[137]
  • 1938: Dr. Aleck Bourne aborted the pregnancy of a young girl who had been raped by soldiers. Bourne was acquitted after turning himself in to authorities.
  • 1944: In the UK, the marriage bar was removed for all teachers in 1944.[138][139][140]
  • 1944: The BBC had a marriage bar between 1932 and 1944, although it was a partial ban and was not fully enforced due to the BBC's ambivalent views on the policy.[43]
  • 1946: The marriage bar was abolished in 1946 for the Home Civil Service; until then women were required to resign when they married.[44]

1945–1970 edit

  • 1949: Lloyds Bank had a marriage bar that meant that female employees were classified as supplementary staff, rather than permanent. The bank abolished its marriage bar in 1949.[45]
  • 1952: Equal pay for female teachers was required by law.
  • 1954: Equal pay for women in the civil service was required by law.
  • 1958: The Life Peerages Act 1958 allowed for the creation of female peers entitled to sit in the House of Lords. The first such women peers took their seats on 21 October 1958.[141]
  • 1961: The birth control pill was introduced in the UK on the National Health Service in 1961 for married women only.[75]
  • 1963: The Peerage Act 1963 granted suo jure hereditary women peers (other than those in the Peerage of Ireland) the right to sit in the House of Lords.
  • 1967: The birth control pill was made available for all women with the National Health Service from 1967.[75]
  • 1967: The Abortion Act 1967 was enacted; it is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom legalising abortions by registered practitioners, and regulating the tax-paid provision of such medical practices through the National Health Service. The Act made abortion legal in all of Great Britain (but not Northern Ireland) up to 28 weeks' gestation. In 1990, the law was amended by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act so that abortion was no longer legal after 24 weeks, except in cases where it was necessary to save the life of the woman, there was evidence of extreme fetal abnormality, or there was a grave risk of physical or mental injury to the woman. Furthermore, all abortion remains officially restricted to cases of maternal life, mental health, health, rape, fetal defects, and/or socioeconomic factors.
  • 1967: In the common law of crime in England and Wales, a common scold was a type of public nuisance—a troublesome and angry woman who broke the public peace by habitually arguing and quarrelling with her neighbours[citation needed]. The offence was punishable by ducking: being placed in a chair and submerged in a river or pond. Although rarely prosecuted it remained on the statute books in England and Wales until 1967.
  • 1968: The Ford sewing machinists strike of 1968, led by Rose Boland, Eileen Pullen, Vera Sime, Gwen Davis, and Sheila Douglass, began because women sewing machinists, as part of a regrading exercise, were informed that their jobs were graded in Category B (less skilled production jobs), instead of Category C (more skilled production jobs), and that they would be paid 15% less than the full B rate received by men.[76][77][78] At the time it was common practice for companies to pay women less than men, irrespective of the skills involved.[79] Following the intervention of Barbara Castle, the Secretary of State for Employment and Productivity in Harold Wilson's government, the strike ended three weeks after it began, as a result of a deal that immediately increased their rate of pay to 8% below that of men, rising to the full category B rate the following year. A court of inquiry (under the Industrial Courts Act 1919) was also set up to consider their regrading, although this failed to find in their favour.[80] The women were only regraded into Category C following a further six-week strike in 1984 (source BBC documentary broadcast 9 March 2013).[81] The 1968 strike was a trigger cause of the passing of the Equal Pay Act 1970.
  • 1969: Inspired by the Ford sewing machinists strike of 1968, women trades unionists founded the National Joint Action Campaign Committee for Women's Equal Rights (NJACCWER), which held an equal pay demonstration attended by 1,000 people in Trafalgar Square on 18 May 1969.[82]
  • 1970: During Miss World 1970, feminist protesters threw flour bombs during the live event at London's Royal Albert Hall, momentarily alarming the host, Bob Hope.[142][143]
  • 1970: The National Women's Liberation Conference (or National Women's Liberation Movement Conference) was a United Kingdom initiative organised to bring together activists in the Women's Liberation Movement with an aim to developing a shared political outlook. Ten UK conferences took place between 1970 and 1978, with the first taking place in 1970.[144]
  • 1970: The Equal Pay Act 1970 is an Act of the United Kingdom Parliament from 1970 which prohibits any less favourable treatment between women and men in terms of pay and conditions of employment. The Act has now been mostly superseded by Part 5, chapter 3, of the Equality Act 2010.

1971–2000 edit

2001–2010 edit

  • 2002: The Sex Discrimination (Election Candidates) Act 2002 (c.2) is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom. The purpose of the Act was to exempt the selection of candidates in parliamentary elections from the provisions in the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Sex Discrimination (Northern Ireland) Order 1976 that outlaw sexual discrimination. The purposes of the Act allow political parties to select candidates based on gender in an effort to increase representation of women in British politics.

The Act applies to elections to:

The Act does not apply to selection of candidates for the Mayor of London elections. Only political parties registered under Part 2 of the Political Parties, Elections and Referendums Act 2000 are covered by the Act.

The Act was originally scheduled to run until the end of 2015. On 6 March 2008, Minister for Women Harriet Harman announced that the exemption would be extended until 2030 under the Equality Act 2010.[93][94]

2011–2020 edit

  • 2011: The Forced Marriage etc. (Protection and Jurisdiction) (Scotland) Act 2011[166] gives courts the power to issue protection orders.
  • 2012–2014: In April 2012 after being sexually harassed on London public transport English journalist Laura Bates founded the Everyday Sexism Project, a website which documents everyday examples of sexism experienced by contributors from around the world. The site quickly became successful and a book compilation of submissions from the project was published in 2014.
  • 2012–2015: No More Page 3 was a campaign to stop The Sun newspaper from including pictures of topless glamour models on its Page 3; it ended when the topless feature was discontinued.[167] The campaign was started by Lucy-Anne Holmes in August 2012;[168][169] it reached 215,000 signatures by January 2015. The campaign gained widespread support from MPs and organisations but was criticised by Alison Webster, the photographer for Page 3. In January 2015, it was reported that The Sun had ended Page 3, but the feature was revived for one issue published on 22 January. Following that, Page 3 has not been featured in The Sun again.
  • 2013: The Succession to the Crown Act 2013 (c. 20) is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom which altered the laws of succession to the British throne in accordance with the 2011 Perth Agreement.[170] The act replaced male-preference primogeniture with absolute primogeniture for those born in the line of succession after 28 October 2011, which meant the eldest child regardless of gender would precede her or his siblings. It was brought into force on 26 March 2015,[171] at the same time as the other Commonwealth realms implemented the Perth Agreement in their own laws.[172]
  • 2013: The first oral history archive of the United Kingdom women's liberation movement (titled Sisterhood and After) was launched by the British Library.[106]
  • 2014: Sisters Uncut was founded in 2014 to take direct action in response to cuts to domestic violence services by the UK government, which has included demonstrating against cuts at 7 October London premiere of the 2015 film Suffragette. Sisters Uncut organises intersectionally and see the struggle against racism and borders as intimately connected to the struggle against violence towards women.
  • 2014: The Anti-Social Behaviour, Crime and Policing Act 2014 makes forcing someone to marry (including abroad) a criminal offence.[173] The law came into effect in June 2014 in England and Wales and in October 2014 in Scotland.[174][175]
  • 2015: In Northern Ireland, the Human Trafficking and Exploitation (Criminal Justice and Support for Victims) Act (Northern Ireland) 2015[176] criminalises forced marriage (section 16 - Offence of forced marriage).[177]
  • 2015: The Lords Spiritual (Women) Act 2015, an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom, was enacted. It stipulates that whenever a vacancy arose among the Lords Spiritual during the next ten years after the Act came into force, the position had to be filled by a woman, if there was one who was eligible. It did not apply to the five sees of Canterbury, York, London, Durham or Winchester, which are always represented in the House of Lords. The Act was passed shortly after the Bishops and Priests (Consecration and Ordination of Women) Measure 2014 authorised the Church of England to appoint women as bishops.[178]
  • 2016–2017: In 2016, a British receptionist was dismissed for not wearing high heels and she then started a petition which attracted sufficient support to be considered by the UK Parliament. Outsourcing firm Portico stated that Nicola Thorp "had signed the appearance guidelines" but after Thorp launched her online petition—"Make it illegal for a company to require women to wear high heels at work"—the firm changed their policy. The new guideline states that all female employees "can wear plain flat shoes or plain court shoes as they prefer."[107] The petition gained widespread support from public figures such as Scotland's First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and MPs Caroline Dinenage, Margot James and Tulip Siddiq.[108][109] Two parliamentary committees in January 2017 decided that Portico had broken the law; the company had already changed its terms of employment.[108][110] The petition gained over 130,000 signatures, sufficient for a debate in the British parliament.[111] This took place on 6 March 2017, when MPs decided the UK government should change the law to prevent the demand being made by employers.[112][110] However, this was rejected by the government in April 2017 as they stated that existing legislation was "adequate".[113]
  • 2020: Scotland became the first nation to pass a law (the Period Products (Free Provision) (Scotland) Act 2021) making period products, including tampons and pads, free and available to access in public buildings.[179]

2021–2030 edit

See also edit

References edit

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  1. ^ Compare the 18 July 1877 request for help sent to President Rutherford B. Hayes by West Virginia governor Henry M. Mathews following the outbreak of strikes and riots: "Owing to unlawful combinations and domestic violence now existing at Martinsburg and other points along the line of the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, it is impossible with any force at my command to execute the laws of the State."[151]: 24–5 
  1. ^ The first R is short for Regina, denoting a criminal case brought in the name of the Crown; the second R is an anonymised reference to the defendant; [1991] UKHL 12 is a case citation.
  2. ^ The first R is short for Regina, denoting a criminal case brought in the name of the Crown; the second R is an anonymised reference to the defendant; [1991] UKHL 12 is a case citation.

Further reading edit

  • Bartley, Paula (2000). Prostitution: prevention and reform in England, 1860-1914. London New York: Routledge. ISBN 9780415214575.
  • Brittain, Vera (1960). The women at Oxford. London: George G. Harrap. OCLC 252829150.
  • Bruley, Sue, ed. (1999). Women in Britain since 1900. New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9780333618394.
  • Bullough, Vern L. (1985). Prostitution and reform in eighteenth-century England. Vol. 9. pp. 61–74. ISBN 9780521347686. {{cite book}}: |journal= ignored (help)
Also available as: Bullough, Vera L. (1987), "Prostitution and reform in eighteenth-century England", in Maccubbin, Robert P., ed. (1987). Tis nature's fault: unauthorized sexuality during the Enlightenment. Cambridge New York: Cambridge University Press. pp. 61–74. ISBN 9780521347686.
  • Caine, Barbara, ed. (1997). English feminism, 1780-1980. Oxford, England New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198204343.
  • Caine, Barbara (1992). Victorian feminists. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198204336.
  • Ferguson, Marjorie (1983). Forever feminine: women's magazines and the cult of femininity. London: Heinemann. ISBN 9780435823023.
  • Feurer, Rosemary (Winter 1988). "The meaning of "sisterhood": the British Women's Movement and protective labor legislation, 1870-1900". Victorian Studies. 31 (2). Indiana University Press: 233–260. JSTOR 3827971.
  • Finch, Janet; Summerfield, Penny (1991), "Social reconstruction and the emergence of companionate marriage, 1945–59", in Clark, David (ed.), Marriage, domestic life, and social change: writings for Jacqueline Burgoyne, 1944-88, London New York, New York: Routledge, pp. 7–32, ISBN 9780415032469.
  • Harrison, Brian (1978). Separate spheres: the opposition to women's suffrage in Britain. New York: Holmes & Meier. ISBN 9780841903852.
  • Lewis, Jane (1983). Women's welfare: women's rights. London: Croom Helm. ISBN 9780709941002.
  • Lewis, Jane (1990), "Myrdal, Klein, Women's Two Roles and Postwar Feminism 1945–1960", in Smith, Harold L. (ed.), British feminism in the Twentieth Century, Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press, pp. 167–188, ISBN 9780870237058.
  • Lewis, Jane, ed. (1984). Women in England, 1870-1950: sexual divisions and social change. Brighton, Sussex Bloomington: Wheatsheaf Books Indiana University Press. ISBN 9780710801869.
  • Myrdal, Alva; Klein, Viola (2001). Women's two roles: home and work. London: Routledge & Kegan. ISBN 9780415176576.
  • Phillips, Melanie (2004). The ascent of woman: a history of the suffragette movement. London: Abacus. ISBN 9780349116600.
  • Pierce, Rachel M. (July 1963). "Marriage in the Fifties". The Sociological Review. 11 (2): 215–240. doi:10.1111/j.1467-954X.1963.tb01232.x. S2CID 145668360.
  • Pugh, Martin (1990), "Domesticity and the decline of feminism 1930–1950", in Smith, Harold L. (ed.), British feminism in the Twentieth Century, Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press, pp. 144–162, ISBN 9780870237058.
  • Pugh, Martin (2000). Women and the women's movement in Britain, 1914-1959. New York, New York: St. Martin's Press. ISBN 9780312234911.
  • Pugh, Martin D. (October 1974). "Politicians and the woman's vote 1914–1918". History. 59 (197): 358–374. doi:10.1111/j.1468-229X.1974.tb02222.x. JSTOR 24409414.
  • Raz, Orna (2007). Social dimensions in the novels of Barbara Pym, 1949-1963 : the Writer as Hidden Observer. Lewiston: Edwin Mellen Press. ISBN 9780773453876.
  • Shanley, Mary Lyndon (Autumn 1986). "Suffrage, protective labor legislation, and Married Women's Property Laws in England". Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society. 12 (1): 62–77. doi:10.1086/494297. JSTOR 3174357. S2CID 144723898.
  • Smith, Harold L., ed. (1990). British feminism in the Twentieth Century. Amherst: University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 9780870237058.
  • Spencer, Stephanie (2005). Gender, work and education in Britain in the 1950s. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 9781403938169.
  • Strachey, Ray; Strachey, Barbara (1978). The cause: a short history of the women's movement in Great Britain. London: Virago. ISBN 9780860680420.
  • Tamboukou, Maria (2000). "Of Other Spaces: Women's colleges at the turn of the nineteenth century in the UK" (PDF). Gender, Place & Culture: A Journal of Feminist Geography. 7 (3): 247–263. doi:10.1080/713668873. S2CID 144093378.
  • Whiteman, Phyllis, ed. (1953). Speaking as a woman. London: Chapman & Hall. OCLC 712429455.

feminism, united, kingdom, united, kingdom, other, countries, feminism, seeks, establish, political, social, economic, equality, women, history, feminism, britain, dates, very, beginnings, feminism, itself, many, earliest, feminist, writers, activists, such, m. In the United Kingdom as in other countries feminism seeks to establish political social and economic equality for women The history of feminism in Britain dates to the very beginnings of feminism itself as many of the earliest feminist writers and activists such as Mary Wollstonecraft Barbara Bodichon and Lydia Becker were British Contents 1 19th century 1 1 Careers 1 2 Child custody 1 3 Divorce 1 4 Prostitution 1 5 Protection for rich and poor women 2 1900 1950 2 1 Electoral reform 2 2 Social reform 2 3 Reproductive rights 3 1950s 21st century 4 Education 5 21st century 6 Timeline 6 1 1700s 6 2 1800 1850 6 3 1850 1880 6 4 1880 1900 6 5 1900 WW1 6 6 1918 WW2 6 7 1945 1970 6 8 1971 2000 6 9 2001 2010 6 10 2011 2020 6 11 2021 2030 7 See also 8 References 9 Further reading19th century editMain article History of women in the United Kingdom 19th century nbsp Ann Thornton Going Aloft c 1835 The first organised movement for British women s suffrage was the Langham Place Circle of the 1850s led by Barbara Bodichon nee Leigh Smith and Bessie Rayner Parkes They also campaigned for improved female rights in the law employment education and marriage Property owning women and widows had been allowed to vote in some local elections but that ended in 1835 The Chartist Movement of 1838 to 1857 was a large scale demand for suffrage however it only gave suffrage to men over 21 In 1851 the Sheffield Female Political Association was founded and submitted an unsuccessful petition calling for women s suffrage to the House of Lords This probably inspired British feminist Harriet Taylor Mill to write the pro women s suffrage The Enfranchisement of Women 1851 1 2 3 On 7 June 1866 a petition from 1 499 women calling for women s suffrage was presented to the Parliament but it also did not succeed 4 Upper class women could exert a little backstage political influence in high society However in divorce cases rich women lost control of their children Careers edit Ambitious middle class women faced enormous challenges when they proposed entering suitable careers such as nursing teaching law and medicine and the loftier their ambition the greater the challenge Physicians barred admission to the medical profession there were a few opportunities for women lawyers but none as clerics 5 White collar business opportunities outside family owned shops were few until clerical positions opened in the 20th century Florence Nightingale demonstrated the necessity of professional nursing and warfare and set up an educational system that tracked women into that field in the second half of the nineteenth century Teaching was not quite as easy to break into but the low salaries were less of the barrier to the single woman than to the married man By the late 1860s a number of schools were preparing women for careers as governesses or teachers The census reported in 1851 that 70 000 women in England and Wales were teachers compared to the 170 000 who comprised three fourths of all teachers in 1901 6 7 The great majority came from lower middle class origins 8 The National Union of Women Teachers NUWT originated in the early 20th century inside the male controlled National Union of Teachers NUT It demanded equal pay with male teachers and eventually broke away 9 Both Oxford and Cambridge minimized the role of women allowing small all female colleges to operate However the new redbrick universities and the other major cities were open to women 10 Medicine was the greatest challenge with the most systematic resistance by the physicians and the fewest women breaking through One route to entry was to go to the United States where there were suitable schools for women as early as 1850 Britain was one of the last countries to train women physicians so 80 to 90 of the British women departed to America for their medical degrees Edinburgh University admitted a few women in 1869 then reversed itself in 1873 leaving a strong negative reaction among British medical educators The first separate school for women physicians opened in London in 1874 to a handful of students Scotland was more open Coeducation had to wait until the World War 11 By the end of the nineteenth century women had secured equality of status in most spheres except for the vote and the holding of office citation needed Child custody edit Before 1839 after the divorce rich women lost control of their children as those children would continue in the family unit with the father as head of the household and who continued to be responsible for them Caroline Norton was one such woman her personal tragedy where she was denied access to her three sons after a divorce led her to a life of intense campaigning which successfully led to the passing of the Custody of Infants Act 1839 and introduced the Tender years doctrine for child custody arrangement 12 13 14 15 The Act gave women for the first time a right to their children and gave some discretion to the judge in child custody cases Under the doctrine the Act also established a presumption of maternal custody for children under the age of seven maintaining the responsibility for financial support to the father 12 In 1873 due to additional pressure from women the Parliament extended the presumption of maternal custody until a child reached sixteen 16 17 The doctrine spread in many states of the world because of the British Empire 14 Divorce edit Traditionally poor people used desertion and for poor men even the practice of selling wives in the market as a substitute for divorce 18 In Britain before 1857 wives were under the economic and legal control of their husbands and divorce was almost impossible It required a very expensive private act of Parliament costing perhaps 200 of the sort only the richest could possibly afford It was very difficult to secure divorce on the grounds of adultery desertion or cruelty The first key legislative victory came with the Matrimonial Causes Act of 1857 It passed over the strenuous opposition of the highly traditional Church of England The new law made divorce a civil affair of the courts rather than a Church matter with a new civil court in London handling all cases The process was still quite expensive at about 40 but now became feasible for the middle class A woman who obtained a judicial separation took the status of a feme sole with full control of her own civil rights Additional amendments came in 1878 which allowed for separations handled by local justices of the peace The Church of England blocked further reforms until the final breakthrough came with the Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 19 20 Prostitution edit Main article Prostitution in the United Kingdom Bullough argues that prostitution in 18th century Britain was a convenience to men of all social statuses and economic necessity for many poor women and was tolerated by society The evangelical movement of the nineteenth century denounced the prostitutes and their clients as sinners and denounced society for tolerating it 21 Prostitution according to the values of the Victorian middle class was a horrible evil for the young women for the men and for all of society Parliament in the 1860s in the Contagious Diseases Acts CD adopted the French system of licensed prostitution The regulationist policy was to isolate segregate and control prostitution The main goal was to protect working men soldiers and sailors near ports and army bases from catching venereal disease Young women officially became prostitutes and were trapped for life in the system After a nationwide crusade led by Josephine Butler and the Ladies National Association for the Repeal of the Contagious Diseases Acts Parliament repealed the acts in 1886 and ended legalised prostitution The age of consent for young women was raised from 12 to 16 undercutting the supply of young prostitutes who were in highest demand The new moral code meant that respectable men dared not be caught 22 23 24 25 Protection for rich and poor women edit A series of four laws each called the Married Women s Property Act passed Parliament from 1870 to 1893 effectively removed the restrictions that kept wealthy married women from controlling their own property They now had practically equal status with their husbands and a status superior to women anywhere else in Europe 26 27 28 Working class women were protected by a series of laws passed on the assumption that they like children did not have full bargaining power and needed protection by the government 29 The Act did receive a great deal of criticism as many believed that household harmony could only be achieved by the total subordination of women to their husband 30 1900 1950 editThe early 20th century the Edwardian era saw a loosening of Victorian rigidity and complacency women had more employment opportunities and were more active Many served worldwide in the British Empire or in Protestant missionary societies The Women s Social and Political Union WSPU was formed in 1903 by Emmeline Pankhurst to fight for women s rights to vote 31 Women had the vote in Australia New Zealand and some of the American states While WSPU was the most visible suffrage group it was only one of many such as the Women s Freedom League and the National Union of Women s Suffrage Societies NUWSS led by Millicent Garrett Fawcett In 1906 the Daily Mail first coined the term suffragettes as a form of ridicule but the term was quickly embraced in Britain by women who used militant tactics in the cause of women s suffrage The term became visible in distinctive green purple and white emblems and the Artists Suffrage League s dramatic graphics Feminists learned to exploit photography and the media and left a vivid visual record including images such as the 1914 photograph of Emmeline 32 Violence separated the moderates from the radicals led by the Pankhursts The radicals themselves split Emmeline and Christabel Pankhurst expelled Sylvia Pankhurst for insubordination and she formed her own group that was left wing and oriented to broader issues affecting working class women 33 It was first called the East London Federation of Suffragettes ELFS but over the years evolved politically and changed its name accordingly first to the Women s Suffrage Federation and then to the Workers Socialist Federation nbsp Cover of WSPU s The Suffragette 25 April 1913 after Delacroix s Liberty Leading the People 1830 The radical protests slowly became more violent and included heckling banging on doors smashing shop windows and arson Emily Davison a WSPU member unexpectedly ran onto the track during the 1913 Epsom Derby and died under the King s horse These tactics produced mixed results of sympathy and alienation citation needed As many protesters were imprisoned and went on hunger strike the Liberal government was left with an embarrassing situation From these political actions the suffragists successfully created publicity around their institutional discrimination and sexism Historians generally argue that the first stage of the militant suffragette movement under the Pankhursts in 1906 had a dramatic mobilizing effect on the suffrage movement Women were thrilled and supportive of revolting in the streets the membership of the militant WSPU and the older NUWSS overlapped and was mutually supportive However a system of publicity Ensor argues had to continue to escalate to maintain its high visibility in the media The hunger strikes and force feeding did that However the Pankhursts refused any advice and escalated their tactics They turned to systematic disruption of Liberal Party meetings as well as physical violence in terms of damaging public buildings and arson This went too far as the overwhelming majority of suffragists pulled back and refused to follow because they could no longer defend the tactics They increasingly repudiated the suffragettes as an obstacle to achieving suffrage saying the militant suffragettes were now aiding the antis and many historians agree citation needed Searle says the methods of the suffragettes did succeed in damaging the Liberal party but failed to advance the cause of woman suffrage When the Pankhursts decided to stop the militancy at the start of the war and enthusiastically support the war effort the movement split and their leadership role ended Suffrage did come four years later but the feminist movement in Britain permanently abandoned the militant tactics that had made the suffragettes famous 34 35 The First World War advanced the feminist cause as women s sacrifices and paid employment were much appreciated Prime Minister David Lloyd George was clear about how important the women were It would have been utterly impossible for us to have waged a successful war had it not been for the skill and ardour enthusiasm and industry which the women of this country have thrown into the war 36 David Lloyd George The militant suffragette movement was suspended during the war and never resumed British society credited the new patriotic roles women played as earning them the vote in 1918 37 However British historians no longer emphasize the granting of woman suffrage as a reward for women s participation in war work Pugh 1974 argues that enfranchising soldiers primarily and women secondarily was decided by senior politicians in 1916 In the absence of major women s groups demanding for equal suffrage the government s conference recommended limited age restricted women s suffrage The suffragettes had been weakened Pugh argues by repeated failures before 1914 and by the disorganising effects of war mobilization therefore they quietly accepted these restrictions which were approved in 1918 by a majority of the War Ministry and each political party in Parliament 38 More generally Searle 2004 argues that the British debate was essentially over by the 1890s and that granting the suffrage in 1918 was mostly a byproduct of giving the vote to male soldiers Women in Britain finally achieved suffrage on the same terms as men in 1928 39 The Sex Disqualification Removal Act 1919 received Royal Assent on 23 December 1919 40 The basic purpose of the act was as stated in its long title to amend the Law with respect to disqualification on account of sex which it achieved in four short sections and one schedule Its broad aim was achieved by section 1 which stated that A person shall not be disqualified by sex or marriage from the exercise of any public function or from being appointed to or holding any civil or judicial office or post or from entering or assuming or carrying on any civil profession or vocation or for admission to any incorporated society whether incorporated by Royal Charter or otherwise and a person shall not be exempted by sex or marriage from the liability to serve as a juror 41 The Crown was given the power to regulate the admission of women to the civil service by Orders in Council and judges were permitted to control the gender composition of juries By section 2 women were to be admitted as solicitors after serving three years only if they possessed a University degree which would have qualified them if male or if they had fulfilled all the requirements of a degree at a University which did not at the time admit women to degrees By section 3 no statute or charter of a University was to preclude University authorities from regulating the admission of women to membership or degrees By section 4 any orders in council royal charters or statutory provisions which were inconsistent with this Act were to cease to have effect 40 At the same time there was a relaxing of clothing restrictions on women however by 1920 there was negative talk about young women called flappers flaunting their sexuality 42 The BBC had a marriage bar between 1932 and 1944 although it was a partial ban and was not fully enforced due to the BBC s ambivalent views on the policy 43 The marriage bar was abolished in 1946 for the Home Civil Service until then women were required to resign when they married 44 Lloyds Bank had a marriage bar that also meant that female employees were classified as supplementary staff rather than permanent The bank abolished its marriage bar in 1949 45 Electoral reform edit The United Kingdom s Representation of the People Act 1918 46 gave near universal suffrage to men and suffrage to women over 30 The Representation of the People Act 1928 extended equal suffrage to both men and women It also shifted the socioeconomic makeup of the electorate towards the working class favouring the Labour Party which was more sympathetic to women s issues 47 The 1918 election gave Labour the most seats in the house to date The electoral reforms also allowed women to run for Parliament Specifically the Parliament Qualification of Women Act 1918 gave women over 21 the right to stand for election as an MP Christabel Pankhurst narrowly failed to win a seat in 1918 but in 1919 and 1920 both Lady Astor and Margaret Wintringham won seats for the Conservatives and Liberals respectively by succeeding their husband s seats Labour swept to power in 1924 Constance Markievicz Sinn Fein was the first woman elected in Ireland in 1918 but as an Irish nationalist refused to take her seat Astor s proposal to form a women s party in 1929 was unsuccessful Women gained considerable electoral experience over the next few years as a series of minority governments ensured almost annual elections but there were 12 women in Parliament by 1940 Close affiliation with Labour also proved to be a problem for the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship NUSEC which had little support in the Conservative party However their persistence with Conservative Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin was rewarded with the passage of the Representation of the People Equal Franchise Act 1928 48 Social reform edit The political change did not immediately change social circumstances With the economic recession women were the most vulnerable sector of the workforce Some women who held jobs prior to the war were obliged to forfeit them to returning soldiers and others were excessed With limited franchise the UK National Union of Women s Suffrage Societies NUWSS pivoted into a new organisation the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship NUSEC 49 which still advocated for equality in franchise but extended its scope to examine equality in social and economic areas Legislative reform was sought for discriminatory laws e g family law and prostitution and over the differences between equality and equity the accommodations that would allow women to overcome barriers to fulfillment known in later years as the equality vs difference conundrum 50 Eleanor Rathbone who became an MP in 1929 succeeded Millicent Garrett as president of NUSEC in 1919 She expressed the critical need for consideration of difference in gender relationships as what women need to fulfill the potentialities of their own natures 51 The 1924 Labour government s social reforms created a formal split as a splinter group of strict egalitarians formed the Open Door Council in May 1926 52 This eventually became an international movement and continued until 1965 Other important social legislation of this period included the Sex Disqualification Removal Act 1919 which opened professions to women and the Matrimonial Causes Act 1923 In 1932 NUSEC separated advocacy from education and continued the former activities as the National Council for Equal Citizenship and the latter as the Townswomen s Guild The council continued until the end of the Second World War 53 In 1921 Margaret Mackworth Lady Rhondda founded the Six Point Group 54 which included Rebecca West As a political lobby group it aimed at political occupational moral social economic and legal equality Thus it was ideologically allied with the Open Door Council rather than National Council It also lobbied at an international level such as the League of Nations and continued its work till 1983 In retrospect both ideological groups were influential in advancing women s rights in their own way Despite women being admitted to the House of Commons from 1918 Mackworth a Viscountess in her own right spent a lifetime fighting to take her seat in the House of Lords against bitter opposition a battle which only achieved its goal in the year of her death 1958 This revealed the weaknesses of the Sex Disqualification Removal Act Mackworth also founded Time and Tide which became the group s journal and to which West Virginia Woolf Rose Macaulay and many others contributed A number of other women s periodicals also appeared in the 1920s including Woman and Home and Good Housekeeping but whose content reflect very different aspirations In 1925 Rebecca West wrote in Time and Tide something that reflected not only the movement s need to redefine itself post suffrage but a continual need for re examination of goals When those of our army whose voices are inclined to coolly tell us that the day of sex antagonism is over and henceforth we have only to advance hand in hand with the male I do not believe it 55 Reproductive rights edit In 1803 the United Kingdom enacted Lord Ellenborough s Act making abortion after quickening a capital crime and providing lesser penalties for the felony of abortion before quickening 56 57 Annie Besant was tried in 1877 for publishing Charles Knowlton s Fruits of Philosophy 58 a work on family planning under the Obscene Publications Act 1857 59 60 Knowlton had previously been convicted in the United States She and her colleague Charles Bradlaugh were convicted but acquitted on appeal the subsequent publicity resulting in a decline in the birth rate 61 62 Not discouraged in the slightest Besant followed this with The Law of Population 63 In 1929 the Infant Life Preservation Act 1929 was enacted it created the offence of child destruction It also amended the law so that an abortion carried out in good faith for the sole purpose of preserving the life of the mother would not be an offence In 1938 Dr Aleck Bourne aborted the pregnancy of a young girl who had been raped by soldiers Bourne was acquitted after turning himself in to authorities 1950s 21st century edit1950s Britain is regarded as a bleak period for feminism In the aftermath of World War II a new emphasis was placed on companionate marriage and the nuclear family as a foundation of the new welfare state 64 65 In 1951 the proportion of adult women who were or had been married was 75 more specifically 84 8 of women between the ages of 45 and 49 were married 66 At that time marriage was more popular than ever before 67 In 1953 a popular book of advice for women states A happy marriage may be seen not as a holy state or something to which a few may luckily attain but rather as the best course the simplest and the easiest way of life for us all 68 While at the end of the war childcare facilities were closed and assistance for working women became limited the social reforms implemented by the new welfare state included family allowances meant to subsidize families that is to support women in the capacity as wife and mother 65 Sue Bruley argues that the progressive vision of the New Britain of 1945 was flawed by a fundamentally conservative view of women 67 Women s commitment to companionate marriage was encouraged by the popular media films radio and popular women s magazines In the 1950s women s magazines had considerable influence on forming opinion in all walks of life including the attitude to women s employment Nevertheless 1950s Britain saw several strides towards the parity of women such as equal pay required by law for women teachers 1952 and for women in the civil service 1954 thanks to activists like Edith Summerskill who fought for women s causes both in parliament and in the traditional non party pressure groups throughout the 1950s 69 Barbara Caine argues Ironically here as with the vote success was sometimes the worst enemy of organised feminism as the achievement of each goal brought to an end the campaign which had been organised around it leaving nothing in its place 70 The Act allowed for the creation of female peers entitled to sit in the House of Lords The first such women peers were four Barbara Wootton and Stella Isaacs who were sworn in on 21 October 1958 and Katharine Eliot and Irene Curzon who took office the next day 71 72 Feminist writers of that period such as Alva Myrdal and Viola Klein started to allow for the possibility that women should be able to combine home with outside employment 1950s form of feminism is often derogatorily termed welfare feminism 73 Indeed many activists went to great length to stress that their position was that of reasonable modern feminism which accepted sexual diversity and sought to establish what women s social contribution was rather than emphasizing equality or the similarity of the sexes Feminism in 1950s England was strongly connected to social responsibility and involved the well being of society as a whole This often came at the cost of the liberation and personal fulfillment of self declared feminists Even those women who regarded themselves as feminists strongly endorsed prevailing ideas about the primacy of children s needs as advocated for example by John Bowlby the head of the Children s Department at the Tavistock Clinic who published extensively throughout the 1950s and by Donald Winnicott who promoted through radio broadcasts and in the press the idea of the home as a private emotional world in which mother and child are bound to each other and in which the mother has control and finds freedom to fulfill herself 74 The birth control pill was introduced in the UK on the National Health Service in 1961 for married women only and made available for all women with the NHS from 1967 75 The Peerage Act 1963 granted suo jure hereditary women peers other than those in the Peerage of Ireland the right to sit in the House of Lords The Abortion Act 1967 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom legalising abortions by registered practitioners and regulating the tax paid provision of such medical practices through the National Health Service The Act made abortion legal in all of Great Britain but not Northern Ireland up to 28 weeks gestation In 1990 the law was amended by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act so that abortion was no longer legal after 24 weeks except in cases where it was necessary to save the life of the woman there was evidence of extreme fetal abnormality or there was a grave risk of physical or mental injury to the woman Furthermore all abortion remains officially restricted to cases of maternal life mental health health rape fetal defects and or socioeconomic factors The Ford sewing machinists strike of 1968 led by Rose Boland Eileen Pullen Vera Sime Gwen Davis and Sheila Douglass began because women sewing machinists as part of a regrading exercise were informed that their jobs were graded in Category B less skilled production jobs instead of Category C more skilled production jobs and that they would be paid 15 less than the full B rate received by men 76 77 78 At the time it was common practice for companies to pay women less than men irrespective of the skills involved 79 Following the intervention of Barbara Castle the Secretary of State for Employment and Productivity in Harold Wilson s government the strike ended three weeks after it began as a result of a deal that immediately increased their rate of pay to 8 below that of men rising to the full category B rate the following year A court of inquiry under the Industrial Courts Act 1919 was also set up to consider their regrading although this failed to find in their favour 80 The women were only regraded into Category C following a further six week strike in 1984 source BBC documentary broadcast 9 March 2013 81 The 1968 strike was a trigger cause of the passing of the Equal Pay Act 1970 As well inspired by the 1968 strike women trades unionists founded the National Joint Action Campaign Committee for Women s Equal Rights NJACCWER which held an equal pay demonstration attended by 1 000 people in Trafalgar Square on 18 May 1969 82 The Equal Pay Act 1970 is an Act of the United Kingdom Parliament from 1970 which prohibits any less favourable treatment between women and men in terms of pay and conditions of employment The Act has now been mostly superseded by Part 5 chapter 3 of the Equality Act 2010 The socialist feminist Brixton Black Women s Group was formed in 1973 to raise consciousness and organise around issues specifically affecting Black women 83 Several of the group s founding members such as Beverley Bryan Olive Morris and Liz Obi had previously been active in the British Black Panthers and BWG was formed partly from frustrations that the Panthers were not taking women s issues seriously 84 The Sex Discrimination Act 1975 c 65 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which protected people from discrimination on the grounds of sex or marital status The Act concerned employment training education harassment the provision of goods and services and the disposal of premises The Gender Recognition Act 2004 and The Sex Discrimination Act 1975 Amendment Regulations 2008 amended parts of this Act to apply to transsexual people Other amendments were introduced by the Sex Discrimination Act 1986 the Employment Act 1989 the Equality Act 2006 and other legislation such as rulings by the European Court of Justice The Act did not apply in Northern Ireland however The Sex Discrimination Gender Reassignment Regulations Northern Ireland 1999 does The Act was repealed in full by the Equality Act 2010 The Grunwick dispute at the Grunwick Film Processing Laboratories in London was an industrial dispute involving trade union recognition that led to a two year strike between 1976 and 1978 It was led by Mrs Jayaben Desai and involved mostly female immigrant East African Asian strikers It was the first dispute where the majority of strikers were from an ethnic minority and still received widespread support from the labour movement 85 The United Kingdom signed the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women in 1981 and ratified it in 1986 86 Female genital mutilation was outlawed in the UK by the Prohibition of Female Circumcision Act 1985 which made it an offence to perform FGM on children or adults 87 When Margaret Thatcher who had been the first female Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1979 to 1990 died the then Leader of the Opposition Ed Miliband paid tribute to her as the first woman Prime Minister 88 89 However Thatcher received scant credit from feminists for breaking the ultimate glass ceiling because she herself avoided feminism and expressed an intensely masculine style 90 91 R v R 1991 UKHL 12 a is a court judgment delivered in 1991 in which the House of Lords determined that under English criminal law it is possible for a husband to rape his wife Education editIn a 2015 evaluation from Lord David Willetts stated that in 2013 the percentage of undergraduate students in the UK were 54 percent female and 46 percent male Whereas in the 1960s only 25 percent of full time students in the United Kingdom were female The increase of women going to university and contributing in the educational system can be linked to the women s suffrage movements that aimed to encourage women to enroll in higher education 92 21st century editThe Sex Discrimination Election Candidates Act 2002 c 2 is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom The purpose of the Act was to exempt the selection of candidates in parliamentary elections from the provisions in the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Sex Discrimination Northern Ireland Order 1976 that outlaw sexual discrimination The purposes of the Act allow political parties to select candidates based on gender in an effort to increase representation of women in British politics The Act applies to elections to the House of Commons the Scottish Parliament the National Assembly for Wales the Northern Ireland Assembly Local Government Elections including the London Assembly and the European Parliament The Act does not apply to selection of candidates for the Mayor of London elections Only political parties registered under Part 2 of the Political Parties Elections and Referendums Act 2000 are covered by the Act The Act was originally scheduled to run until the end of 2015 On 6 March 2008 Minister for Women Harriet Harman announced that the exemption would be extended until 2030 under the Equality Act 2010 93 94 The Female Genital Mutilation Act 2003 and the Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation Scotland Act 2005 made it an offence to arrange FGM outside the country for British citizens or permanent residents whether or not it is lawful in the country to which the girl is taken 95 96 97 98 99 100 The first prosecutions took place in 2015 against a doctor for performing FGM and another man for aiding and abetting both were found not guilty 101 The Equality Act 2006 c 3 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom a precursor to the Equality Act 2010 which combines all of the equality enactments within Great Britain and provides comparable protections across all equality strands Those explicitly mentioned by the Equality Act 2006 include gender disability age proposed commenced or completed gender reassignment race religion or belief and sexual orientation Among other things it created a public duty to promote equality on the ground of gender The Equality Act 2006 section 84 inserting section 76A of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 now found in section 1 of the Equality Act 2010 Since 2007 Harriet Harman has been Deputy Leader of the Labour Party the UK s current opposition party Traditionally being Deputy Leader has ensured the cabinet role of Deputy Prime Minister However Gordon Brown announced that he would not have a deputy prime minister much to the consternation of feminists 102 particularly with suggestions that privately Brown considered Jack Straw to be de facto deputy prime minister 103 and thus bypassing Harman With Harman s cabinet post of Leader of the House of Commons Brown allowed her to chair Prime Minister s Questions when he was out of the country Harman also held the post Minister for Women and Equality The Equality Act 2010 104 is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom the primary purpose of the Act is to codify the complicated and numerous array of Acts and Regulations which formed the basis of anti discrimination law in Great Britain This was primarily the Equal Pay Act 1970 the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 the Race Relations Act 1976 the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 and three major statutory instruments protecting against discrimination in employment on grounds of religion or belief sexual orientation and age It requires equal treatment in access to employment as well as private and public services regardless of the protected characteristics of sex age disability gender reassignment marriage and civil partnership race religion or belief and sexual orientation In the case of gender there are special protections for pregnant women The Act does not guarantee transsexuals access to gender specific services where restrictions are a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim 105 Under s 217 with limited exceptions the Act does not apply to Northern Ireland In 2013 the first oral history archive of the United Kingdom women s liberation movement titled Sisterhood and After was launched by the British Library 106 Sisters Uncut was founded in 2014 to take direct action in response to cuts to domestic violence services by the UK government which has included demonstrating against cuts at 7 October London premiere of the 2015 film Suffragette Sisters Uncut organises intersectionally and see the struggle against racism and borders as intimately connected to the struggle against violence towards women In 2016 a British receptionist was dismissed for not wearing high heels and she then started a petition which attracted sufficient support to be considered by the UK Parliament Outsourcing firm Portico stated that Nicola Thorp had signed the appearance guidelines but after Thorp launched her online petition Make it illegal for a company to require women to wear high heels at work the firm changed their policy The new guideline states that all female employees can wear plain flat shoes or plain court shoes as they prefer 107 The petition gained widespread support from public figures such as Scotland s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and MPs Caroline Dinenage Margot James and Tulip Siddiq 108 109 Two parliamentary committees in January 2017 decided that Portico had broken the law the company had already changed its terms of employment 108 110 The petition gained over 130 000 signatures sufficient for a debate in the British parliament 111 This took place on 6 March 2017 when MPs decided the UK government should change the law to prevent the demand being made by employers 112 110 However this was rejected by the government in April 2017 as they stated that existing legislation was adequate 113 Timeline edit nbsp A suffragette arrested in the street by two police officers in London in 1914 1700s edit 1792 Mary Wollstonecraft published A Vindication of the Rights of Woman 114 1800 1850 edit 1803 The United Kingdom enacted Lord Ellenborough s Act making abortion after quickening a capital crime and providing lesser penalties for the felony of abortion before quickening 56 57 1818 Jeremy Bentham advocated female suffrage in his book A Plan for Parliamentary Reform 1832 Great Reform Act confirmed the exclusion of women from the electorate 1835 Property owning women and widows had been allowed to vote in some local elections but that ended in 1835 1839 The Custody of Infants Act 1839 was enacted and it gave women for the first time a right to their children and gave some discretion to the judge in child custody cases Under the Tender years doctrine the Act also established a presumption of maternal custody for children under the age of seven years maintaining the responsibility for financial support to the father 12 1844 The regulation of working hours in factories was extended to women by an Act of 1844 1847 The Factory Act 1847 also known as the Ten Hours Act was a United Kingdom Act of Parliament which restricted the working hours of women and young persons 13 18 in textile mills to 10 hours per day The practicalities of running a textile mill were such that the Act should have effectively set the same limit on the working hours of adult male mill workers but defective drafting meant that a subsequent Factory Act in 1850 imposing tighter restrictions on the hours within which women and young persons could work was needed to bring this about 1850 1880 edit 1842 The Mines and Collieries Act 1842 commonly known as the Mines Act 1842 was an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which forbade women and girls of any age to work underground and introduced a minimum age of ten for boys employed in underground work 115 However the employment of women did not end abruptly in 1842 with the connivance of some employers women dressed as men continued to work underground for several years Penalties for employing women were small and inspectors were few and some women were so desperate for work they willingly worked illegally for less pay 116 1850s The first organised movement for British women s suffrage was the Langham Place Circle of the 1850s led by Barbara Bodichon nee Leigh Smith and Bessie Rayner Parkes They also campaigned for improved female rights in the law employment education and marriage 1851 The Sheffield Female Political Association was founded and submitted an unsuccessful petition calling for women s suffrage to the House of Lords 1851 Harriet Taylor Mill published the pro women s suffrage The Enfranchisement of Women 1 2 3 1857 The Matrimonial Causes Act 1857 allowed for easier divorce through a Divorce Court based in London Divorce remained too expensive for the working class 117 1864 1886 The Contagious Diseases Acts also known as the CD Acts 118 were originally passed by the Parliament of the United Kingdom in 1864 119 with alterations and editions made in 1866 and 1869 In 1862 a committee was established to inquire into venereal disease i e sexually transmitted infections in the armed forces On its recommendation the first Contagious Diseases Act was passed The legislation allowed police officers to arrest women suspected of being prostitutes in certain ports and army towns The women were then subjected to compulsory checks for venereal disease If a woman was declared to be infected she would be confined in what was known as a lock hospital until she recovered or her sentence finished The original act only applied to a few selected naval ports and army towns but by 1869 the acts had been extended to cover eighteen subjected districts 120 In 1886 the acts were repealed 1865 John Stuart Mill elected as an MP showing direct support for women s suffrage 1866 On 7 June 1866 a petition from 1 499 women asking for women s suffrage was presented to Parliament but it did not succeed 4 1867 Second Reform Act Male franchise extended to 2 5 million no mention of women 1869 In June 1869 Lydia Becker and fellow campaigners were successful in securing the vote for women in municipal elections 121 1870 Married Women s Property Act enacted it allowed married women to be the legal owners of the money they earned and to inherit property 1873 In Custody of Infants Act 1873 due to additional pressure from women the Parliament of the United Kingdom extended the presumption of maternal custody until a child reached sixteen 16 1877 Annie Besant was tried in 1877 for publishing Charles Knowlton s Fruits of Philosophy 58 a work on family planning under the Obscene Publications Act 1857 59 60 Knowlton had previously been convicted in the United States She and her colleague Charles Bradlaugh were convicted but acquitted on appeal the subsequent publicity resulting in a decline in the birth rate 61 62 1878 Magistrates courts were given the authority to grant separation and maintenance orders to wives of abusive husbands much cheaper than divorce 117 1880 1900 edit 1882 The Married Women s Property Act 1882 45 amp 46 Vict c 75 was an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom that significantly altered English law regarding the property rights of married women which besides other matters allowed married women to own and control property in their own right The Act applied in England and Wales and Ireland after Irish independence in 1922 only Northern Ireland but did not extend to Scotland 122 1883 Conservative Primrose League formed The Primrose League was the first political organisation to give women the same status and responsibilities as men according to Alistair Cooke 123 1884 Third Reform Act Male electorate doubled to 5 million 1884 The Married Women s Property Act 1884 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that significantly altered English law regarding the property rights granted to married women allowing them to own and control their own property whether acquired before or after marriage and sue and be sued in their own name 1886 The Contagious Disease Acts were repealed 1889 Women s Franchise League established 1893 The Married Women s Property Act 1893 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that significantly altered English law regarding the property rights granted to married women It completed the Married Women s Property Act 1882 by granting married women the same property rights equal to unmarried women 1894 Local Government Act women who owned property could vote in local elections become Poor Law Guardians serve on School Boards 1894 The publication of C C Stopes s British Freewomen staple reading for the suffrage movement for decades 124 1897 National Union of Women s Suffrage Societies NUWSS formed led by Millicent Fawcett 125 1900 WW1 edit 1903 Women s Social and Political Union WSPU was formed under tight control of Emmeline Pankhurst and her daughters 33 1904 WPSU Militancy begins 1905 1908 1913 Three phases of WSPU militancy Civil Disobedience Destruction of Public Property Arson Bombings 1906 The Daily Mail first coined the term suffragettes as a form of ridicule but the term was quickly embraced in Britain by women who used militant tactics in the cause of women s suffrage February 1907 NUWSS Mud March largest open air demonstration ever held at that point over 3000 women took part In this year women were admitted to the register to vote in and stand for election to principal local authorities 1907 The Matrimonial Causes Act 1907 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that consolidated previous legislation relating to maintenance payments to separated and divorced women It was designed in response to one cause of poverty amongst mothers and their children marriage break up Support for the endowment of motherhood was also increased 126 1907 The Artists Suffrage League founded 1907 The Women s Freedom League founded 1909 The Women s Tax Resistance League founded September 1909 Force feeding introduced to WSPU hunger strikers in English prisons February 1910 Cross Party Conciliation Committee 54 MPs Conciliation Bill that would enfranchise women passed its 2nd reading by a majority of 109 but Prime Minister Asquith refused to give it more parliamentary time November 1910 Asquith changes Bill to enfranchise more men instead of women October 1912 George Lansbury Labour MP resigned his seat in support of women s suffrage February 1913 David Lloyd George s house burned down by WSPU 127 despite his support for women s suffrage April 1913 Cat and Mouse Act passed allowing hunger striking prisoners to be released when their health was threatened and then re arrested when they had recovered 4 June 1913 Emily Davison of WSPU jumped in front of and was subsequently trampled and killed by the King s Horse at The Derby 1913 The Great Pilgrimage of 1913 was a march in Britain by suffragists campaigning non violently for women s suffrage Women marched to London from all around England and Wales and 50 000 attended a rally in Hyde Park 128 129 130 131 132 13 March 1914 Mary Richardson of WSPU slashed the Rokeby Venus painted by Diego Velazquez in the National Gallery with an axe protesting that she was maiming a beautiful woman just as the government was maiming Emmeline Pankhurst with force feeding 4 August 1914 First World War declared in Britain WSPU activity immediately ceased NUWSS activity continued peacefully the Birmingham branch of the organisation continued to lobby Parliament and write letters to MPs 1918 WW2 edit 1918 The Representation of the People Act of 1918 enfranchised women over the age of 30 who were either a member or married to a member of the Local Government Register About 8 4 million women gained the vote November 1918 the Parliament Qualification of Women Act 1918 was passed allowing women over 21 to be elected into Parliament 133 December 1919 The Sex Disqualification Removal Act 1919 received Royal Assent on 23 December 1919 40 The basic purpose of the act was as stated in its long title to amend the Law with respect to disqualification on account of sex which it achieved in four short sections and one schedule Its broad aim was achieved by section 1 which stated that A person shall not be disqualified by sex or marriage from the exercise of any public function or from being appointed to or holding any civil or judicial office or post or from entering or assuming or carrying on any civil profession or vocation or for admission to any incorporated society whether incorporated by Royal Charter or otherwise and a person shall not be exempted by sex or marriage from the liability to serve as a juror 41 The Crown was given the power to regulate the admission of women to the civil service by Orders in Council and judges were permitted to control the gender composition of juries By section 2 women were to be admitted as solicitors after serving three years only if they possessed a University degree which would have qualified them if male or if they had fulfilled all the requirements of a degree at a University which did not at the time admit women to degrees By section 3 no statute or charter of a University was to preclude University authorities from regulating the admission of women to membership or degrees By section 4 any orders in council royal charters or statutory provisions which were inconsistent with this Act were to cease to have effect 40 1920 The Employment of Women Young Persons and Children Act 1920 1928 Women received the vote on the same terms as men over the age of 21 as a result of the Representation of the People Act 1928 1929 The Infant Life Preservation Act 1929 was enacted it is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom It created the offence of child destruction It also amended the law so that an abortion carried out in good faith for the sole purpose of preserving the life of the mother would not be an offence 1931 A 1 week strike of 10 000 non unionised factory worker women led by communist activist Jessie Eden caused an explosion of English women joining trade unions 134 135 136 1932 1944 The BBC had a marriage bar between 1932 and 1944 although it was a partial ban and was not fully enforced due to the BBC s ambivalent views on the policy 43 1937 The Matrimonial Causes Act 1937 extended the grounds for divorce which then only included adultery to include unlawful desertion for two years or more cruelty and incurable insanity 137 1938 Dr Aleck Bourne aborted the pregnancy of a young girl who had been raped by soldiers Bourne was acquitted after turning himself in to authorities 1944 In the UK the marriage bar was removed for all teachers in 1944 138 139 140 1944 The BBC had a marriage bar between 1932 and 1944 although it was a partial ban and was not fully enforced due to the BBC s ambivalent views on the policy 43 1946 The marriage bar was abolished in 1946 for the Home Civil Service until then women were required to resign when they married 44 1945 1970 edit 1949 Lloyds Bank had a marriage bar that meant that female employees were classified as supplementary staff rather than permanent The bank abolished its marriage bar in 1949 45 1952 Equal pay for female teachers was required by law 1954 Equal pay for women in the civil service was required by law 1958 The Life Peerages Act 1958 allowed for the creation of female peers entitled to sit in the House of Lords The first such women peers took their seats on 21 October 1958 141 1961 The birth control pill was introduced in the UK on the National Health Service in 1961 for married women only 75 1963 The Peerage Act 1963 granted suo jure hereditary women peers other than those in the Peerage of Ireland the right to sit in the House of Lords 1967 The birth control pill was made available for all women with the National Health Service from 1967 75 1967 The Abortion Act 1967 was enacted it is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom legalising abortions by registered practitioners and regulating the tax paid provision of such medical practices through the National Health Service The Act made abortion legal in all of Great Britain but not Northern Ireland up to 28 weeks gestation In 1990 the law was amended by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act so that abortion was no longer legal after 24 weeks except in cases where it was necessary to save the life of the woman there was evidence of extreme fetal abnormality or there was a grave risk of physical or mental injury to the woman Furthermore all abortion remains officially restricted to cases of maternal life mental health health rape fetal defects and or socioeconomic factors 1967 In the common law of crime in England and Wales a common scold was a type of public nuisance a troublesome and angry woman who broke the public peace by habitually arguing and quarrelling with her neighbours citation needed The offence was punishable by ducking being placed in a chair and submerged in a river or pond Although rarely prosecuted it remained on the statute books in England and Wales until 1967 1968 The Ford sewing machinists strike of 1968 led by Rose Boland Eileen Pullen Vera Sime Gwen Davis and Sheila Douglass began because women sewing machinists as part of a regrading exercise were informed that their jobs were graded in Category B less skilled production jobs instead of Category C more skilled production jobs and that they would be paid 15 less than the full B rate received by men 76 77 78 At the time it was common practice for companies to pay women less than men irrespective of the skills involved 79 Following the intervention of Barbara Castle the Secretary of State for Employment and Productivity in Harold Wilson s government the strike ended three weeks after it began as a result of a deal that immediately increased their rate of pay to 8 below that of men rising to the full category B rate the following year A court of inquiry under the Industrial Courts Act 1919 was also set up to consider their regrading although this failed to find in their favour 80 The women were only regraded into Category C following a further six week strike in 1984 source BBC documentary broadcast 9 March 2013 81 The 1968 strike was a trigger cause of the passing of the Equal Pay Act 1970 1969 Inspired by the Ford sewing machinists strike of 1968 women trades unionists founded the National Joint Action Campaign Committee for Women s Equal Rights NJACCWER which held an equal pay demonstration attended by 1 000 people in Trafalgar Square on 18 May 1969 82 1970 During Miss World 1970 feminist protesters threw flour bombs during the live event at London s Royal Albert Hall momentarily alarming the host Bob Hope 142 143 1970 The National Women s Liberation Conference or National Women s Liberation Movement Conference was a United Kingdom initiative organised to bring together activists in the Women s Liberation Movement with an aim to developing a shared political outlook Ten UK conferences took place between 1970 and 1978 with the first taking place in 1970 144 1970 The Equal Pay Act 1970 is an Act of the United Kingdom Parliament from 1970 which prohibits any less favourable treatment between women and men in terms of pay and conditions of employment The Act has now been mostly superseded by Part 5 chapter 3 of the Equality Act 2010 1971 2000 edit 1972 Jockey Club rules began permitting women jockeys in 1972 145 1973 The Matrimonial Causes Act 1973 c 18 is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom governing divorce law and marriage in England and Wales 1973 Women were first admitted to the London Stock Exchange 146 1973 The first known use of the term domestic violence in a modern context meaning violence in the home was in an address to the Parliament of the United Kingdom by Jack Ashley in 1973 147 148 The term previously referred primarily to civil unrest violence from within a country as opposed to violence perpetrated by a foreign power 149 150 nb 1 1973 The marriage bar was abolished in 1973 for the Foreign Service until then women were required to resign when they married 44 1975 The British Geological Survey had a marriage bar until 1975 152 1975 The Sex Discrimination Act 1975 c 65 was an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom which protected people from discrimination on the grounds of sex or marital status The Act concerned employment training education harassment the provision of goods and services and the disposal of premises The Gender Recognition Act 2004 and The Sex Discrimination Act 1975 Amendment Regulations 2008 amended parts of this Act to apply to transgender people Other amendments were introduced by the Sex Discrimination Act 1986 the Employment Act 1989 the Equality Act 2006 and other legislation such as rulings by the European Court of Justice The Act did not apply in Northern Ireland however The Sex Discrimination Gender Reassignment Regulations Northern Ireland 1999 does The Act was repealed in full by the Equality Act 2010 1976 The Sex Discrimination Northern Ireland Order 1976 against sex discrimination was enacted 1977 Marches were held in 11 towns in England in response to the Yorkshire Ripper murders the marches were organised by the Leeds Revolutionary Feminist Group 1978 Sisterwrite Britain s first feminist bookshop 153 opened in 1978 it was run as a collective 154 155 156 1979 The Kennel Club began admitting women members in 1979 157 1981 The United Kingdom signed the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women in 1981 86 1982 In the case Gill and Coote v El Vino Co Ltd Tess Gill and Anna Coote successfully challenged El Vino s ban on women being served at the bar and drinking there rather than having their drinks brought to them at a table the ban was held to be an illegal violation of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 158 1985 Female genital mutilation was outlawed in the UK by the Prohibition of Female Circumcision Act 1985 which made it an offence to perform FGM on children or adults 87 1986 The United Kingdom ratified the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women in 1986 86 1990 The Abortion Act 1967 was amended by the Human Fertilisation and Embryology Act so that abortion was no longer legal after 24 weeks except in cases where it was necessary to save the life of the woman there was evidence of extreme fetal abnormality or there was a grave risk of physical or mental injury to the woman 1991 R v R 1991 UKHL 12 b is a court judgment delivered in 1991 in which the House of Lords determined that under English criminal law it is possible for a husband to rape his wife 1998 The British Boxing Board of Control initially refused to grant Jane Couch a professional licence on the sole ground that she was a woman and argued that PMS made women too unstable to box 159 160 Claiming sexual discrimination and supported by the Equal Opportunities Commission Couch managed to have this decision overturned by a tribunal in March 1998 161 162 2001 2010 edit 2002 The Sex Discrimination Election Candidates Act 2002 c 2 is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom The purpose of the Act was to exempt the selection of candidates in parliamentary elections from the provisions in the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 and the Sex Discrimination Northern Ireland Order 1976 that outlaw sexual discrimination The purposes of the Act allow political parties to select candidates based on gender in an effort to increase representation of women in British politics The Act applies to elections to the House of Commons the Scottish Parliament the National Assembly for Wales the Northern Ireland Assembly Local Government Elections including the London Assembly and the European Parliament The Act does not apply to selection of candidates for the Mayor of London elections Only political parties registered under Part 2 of the Political Parties Elections and Referendums Act 2000 are covered by the Act The Act was originally scheduled to run until the end of 2015 On 6 March 2008 Minister for Women Harriet Harman announced that the exemption would be extended until 2030 under the Equality Act 2010 93 94 2003 2005 The Female Genital Mutilation Act 2003 and the Prohibition of Female Genital Mutilation Scotland Act 2005 made it an offence to arrange FGM outside the country for British citizens or permanent residents whether or not it is lawful in the country to which the girl is taken 95 96 97 98 99 100 2004 The Domestic Violence Crime and Victims Act 2004 c 28 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom It is concerned with criminal justice and concentrates upon legal protection and assistance to victims of crime particularly domestic violence It also expands the provision for trials without a jury brings in new rules for trials for causing the death of a child or vulnerable adult and permits bailiffs to use force to enter homes 163 2005 In England and Wales the term spinster was abolished in favor of single for the purpose of marriage registration 164 2006 A Reclaim the Night march was organized in Ipswich as a response to the murders of five prostitutes there with between 200 and 300 attendees 165 2006 The Equality Act 2006 c 3 is an Act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom a precursor to the Equality Act 2010 which combines all of the equality enactments within Great Britain and provides comparable protections across all equality strands Those explicitly mentioned by the Equality Act 2006 include gender disability age proposed commenced or completed gender reassignment race religion or belief and sexual orientation Among other things it created a public duty to promote equality on the ground of gender The Equality Act 2006 section 84 inserting section 76A of the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 now found in section 1 of the Equality Act 2010 2007 The Forced Marriage Civil Protection Act 2007 applicable in England and Wales and in Northern Ireland was passed which enables the victims of forced marriage to apply for court orders for their protection 2010 The Equality Act 2010 104 is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom the primary purpose of the Act is to codify the complicated and numerous array of Acts and Regulations which formed the basis of anti discrimination law in Great Britain This was primarily the Equal Pay Act 1970 the Sex Discrimination Act 1975 the Race Relations Act 1976 the Disability Discrimination Act 1995 and three major statutory instruments protecting discrimination in employment on grounds of religion or belief sexual orientation and age It requires equal treatment in access to employment as well as private and public services regardless of the protected characteristics of sex age disability gender reassignment marriage and civil partnership race religion or belief and sexual orientation In the case of gender there are special protections for pregnant women The Act does not guarantee transgender people s access to gender specific services where restrictions are a proportionate means of achieving a legitimate aim 105 Under s 217 with limited exceptions the Act does not apply to Northern Ireland 2011 2020 edit 2011 The Forced Marriage etc Protection and Jurisdiction Scotland Act 2011 166 gives courts the power to issue protection orders 2012 2014 In April 2012 after being sexually harassed on London public transport English journalist Laura Bates founded the Everyday Sexism Project a website which documents everyday examples of sexism experienced by contributors from around the world The site quickly became successful and a book compilation of submissions from the project was published in 2014 2012 2015 No More Page 3 was a campaign to stop The Sun newspaper from including pictures of topless glamour models on its Page 3 it ended when the topless feature was discontinued 167 The campaign was started by Lucy Anne Holmes in August 2012 168 169 it reached 215 000 signatures by January 2015 The campaign gained widespread support from MPs and organisations but was criticised by Alison Webster the photographer for Page 3 In January 2015 it was reported that The Sun had ended Page 3 but the feature was revived for one issue published on 22 January Following that Page 3 has not been featured in The Sun again 2013 The Succession to the Crown Act 2013 c 20 is an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom which altered the laws of succession to the British throne in accordance with the 2011 Perth Agreement 170 The act replaced male preference primogeniture with absolute primogeniture for those born in the line of succession after 28 October 2011 which meant the eldest child regardless of gender would precede her or his siblings It was brought into force on 26 March 2015 171 at the same time as the other Commonwealth realms implemented the Perth Agreement in their own laws 172 2013 The first oral history archive of the United Kingdom women s liberation movement titled Sisterhood and After was launched by the British Library 106 2014 Sisters Uncut was founded in 2014 to take direct action in response to cuts to domestic violence services by the UK government which has included demonstrating against cuts at 7 October London premiere of the 2015 film Suffragette Sisters Uncut organises intersectionally and see the struggle against racism and borders as intimately connected to the struggle against violence towards women 2014 The Anti Social Behaviour Crime and Policing Act 2014 makes forcing someone to marry including abroad a criminal offence 173 The law came into effect in June 2014 in England and Wales and in October 2014 in Scotland 174 175 2015 In Northern Ireland the Human Trafficking and Exploitation Criminal Justice and Support for Victims Act Northern Ireland 2015 176 criminalises forced marriage section 16 Offence of forced marriage 177 2015 The Lords Spiritual Women Act 2015 an Act of Parliament of the United Kingdom was enacted It stipulates that whenever a vacancy arose among the Lords Spiritual during the next ten years after the Act came into force the position had to be filled by a woman if there was one who was eligible It did not apply to the five sees of Canterbury York London Durham or Winchester which are always represented in the House of Lords The Act was passed shortly after the Bishops and Priests Consecration and Ordination of Women Measure 2014 authorised the Church of England to appoint women as bishops 178 2016 2017 In 2016 a British receptionist was dismissed for not wearing high heels and she then started a petition which attracted sufficient support to be considered by the UK Parliament Outsourcing firm Portico stated that Nicola Thorp had signed the appearance guidelines but after Thorp launched her online petition Make it illegal for a company to require women to wear high heels at work the firm changed their policy The new guideline states that all female employees can wear plain flat shoes or plain court shoes as they prefer 107 The petition gained widespread support from public figures such as Scotland s First Minister Nicola Sturgeon and MPs Caroline Dinenage Margot James and Tulip Siddiq 108 109 Two parliamentary committees in January 2017 decided that Portico had broken the law the company had already changed its terms of employment 108 110 The petition gained over 130 000 signatures sufficient for a debate in the British parliament 111 This took place on 6 March 2017 when MPs decided the UK government should change the law to prevent the demand being made by employers 112 110 However this was rejected by the government in April 2017 as they stated that existing legislation was adequate 113 2020 Scotland became the first nation to pass a law the Period Products Free Provision Scotland Act 2021 making period products including tampons and pads free and available to access in public buildings 179 2021 2030 edit 2021 Britain abolished the tampon tax meaning there is now a zero rate of VAT applying to women s sanitary products 180 181 2024 The Garrick Club voted to admit women 182 See also editFirst wave feminism History of feminism History of women in the United Kingdom New Left New social movements Post war Britain Pro life feminism Second wave feminism Sex positive feminism The left and feminism The Women s Library London Third wave feminism Timeline of women s rights other than voting Mary Wollstonecraft Women s suffrage in the United KingdomReferences edit a b BBC History Historic Figures Harriet Taylor 1807 1858 www bbc co uk a b Harriet Taylor Mill 1807 1858 Archived 14 April 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b Harriet Taylor Mill Enfranchisement of Women 1851 womhist alexanderstreet com a b The 1866 women s suffrage petition LSE History Blogs lse ac uk 12 June 2016 Retrieved 7 February 2018 Halevy Elie 1934 A history of the English people London Ernest Benn pp 500 506 OCLC 504342781 Halevy Elie 1934 A history of the English people London Ernest Benn p 500 OCLC 504342781 Copelman Dina 2014 London s women teachers gender class and feminism 1870 1930 London Routledge ISBN 9780415867528 Coppock David A 1997 Respectability as a prerequisite of moral character the social and occupational mobility of pupil teachers in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries History of Education 26 2 165 186 doi 10 1080 0046760970260203 Owen Patricia 1988 Who would be free herself must strike the blow History of Education 17 1 83 99 doi 10 1080 0046760880170106 Tamboukou Maria 2000 Of Other Spaces Women s colleges at the turn of the nineteenth century in the UK PDF Gender Place amp Culture A Journal of Feminist Geography 7 3 247 263 doi 10 1080 713668873 S2CID 144093378 Bonner Thomas Neville 1995 The fight for coeducation in Britain in Bonner Thomas Neville ed To the ends of the earth women s search for education in medicine Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press pp 120 137 ISBN 9780674893047 a b c Wroath John 2006 Until they are seven the origins of women s legal rights Winchester England Waterside Press ISBN 9781872870571 Mitchell L G 1997 Lord Melbourne 1779 1848 Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198205920 a b Perkins Jane Gray 2013 1909 Life of the honourable Mrs Norton London Theclassics Us ISBN 9781230408378 Hilton Boyd 2006 Ruling ideologies the status of women and ideas about gender in Hilton Boyd ed A mad bad and dangerous people England 1783 1846 Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 353 355 ISBN 9780198228301 a b Katz Sanford N 1992 That they may thrive goal of child custody reflections on the apparent erosion of the tender years presumption and the emergence of the primary caretaker presumptions Journal of Contemporary Health Law and Policy 8 1 Columbus School of Law The Catholic University of America Coppel E G 1939 The Control of the Custody of Children by the Supreme Court of Victoria Res Judicatae 2 33 Stone Lawrence 11 October 1990 Road to Divorce Oxford University Press pp 140 148 doi 10 1093 acprof oso 9780198226512 003 0006 Stone Lawrence ed 1990 Road to divorce England 1530 1987 Oxford New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198226512 Halevy Elie 1934 A history of the English people London Ernest Benn OCLC 504342781 Bullough Vern L 1987 Prostitution and reform in eighteenth century England In Maccubbin Robert P ed Tis nature s fault unauthorized sexuality during the Enlightenment Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press pp 61 74 ISBN 9780521347686 Halevy Elie 1934 A history of the English people London Ernest Benn pp 498 500 OCLC 504342781 Strachey Ray Strachey Barbara 1978 The cause a short history of the women s movement in Great Britain London Virago pp 187 222 ISBN 9780860680420 Bartley Paula 2000 Prostitution prevention and reform in England 1860 1914 London New York Routledge ISBN 9780415214575 Smith F B August 1990 The Contagious Diseases Acts reconsidered Social History of Medicine 3 2 197 215 doi 10 1093 shm 3 2 197 PMID 11622578 Halevy Elie 1934 A history of the English people London Ernest Benn pp 495 496 OCLC 504342781 Griffin Ben March 2003 Class gender and liberalism in Parliament 1868 1882 the case of the Married Women s Property Acts The Historical Journal 46 1 59 87 doi 10 1017 S0018246X02002844 S2CID 159520710 Lyndon Shanley Mary Autumn 1986 Suffrage protective labor legislation and Married Women s Property Laws in England Signs Journal of Women in Culture and Society 12 1 62 77 doi 10 1086 494297 JSTOR 3174357 S2CID 144723898 Feurer Rosemary Winter 1988 The meaning of sisterhood the British Women s Movement and protective labor legislation 1870 1900 Victorian Studies 31 2 Indiana University Press 233 260 JSTOR 3827971 GRIFFIN BEN 2003 CLASS GENDER AND LIBERALISM IN PARLIAMENT 1868 1882 THE CASE OF THE MARRIED WOMEN s PROPERTY ACTS The Historical Journal 46 1 63 doi 10 1017 s0018246x02002844 Purvis June 2003 Socialist and public representative in Purvis June ed 2003 Emmeline Pankhurst a biography London Routledge p 45 ISBN 9781280051128 Broom Christina 1989 Atkinson Diane ed Mrs Broom s suffragette photographs photographs by Christina Bloom 1908 to 1913 London Dirk Nishen Publishing ISBN 9781853781100 a b Mitchell David J 1967 The fighting Pankhursts a study in tenacity London J Cape OCLC 947754857 Ensor Robert C K England 1870 1914 Oxford Clarendon Press pp 389 399 OCLC 24731395 Searle Geoffrey Russell 30 October 2004 A New England Peace and War 1886 1918 Clarendon Press ISBN 9780198207146 via Google Books Whitfield Bob 2001 How did the First World War affect the campaign for women s suffrage in Whitfield Bob ed 2001 The extension of the franchise 1832 1931 Oxford Heinemann Educational p 167 ISBN 9780435327170 Taylor A J P 1965 English History 1914 1945 Oxford Clarendon Press pp 29 94 OCLC 185566309 Pugh Martin D October 1974 Politicians and the woman s vote 1914 1918 History 59 197 358 374 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1974 tb02222 x JSTOR 24409414 Searle G R 2004 War and the reshaping of identities gender and generation in Searle G R ed A new England Peace and war 1886 1918 Oxford New York Clarendon Press Oxford University Press p 791 ISBN 9780198207146 a b c d Oliver amp Boyd s new Edinburgh almanac and national repository for the year 1921 p213 a b Passage in brackets repealed by the Criminal Justice Act 1972 other parts of s 1 repealed by the Courts Act 1971 and Statute Law Repeals Act 1989 Langhamer Claire 2000 Stepping out with the young set youthful freedom and independence in Langhamer Claire ed 2000 Women s leisure in England 1920 60 Manchester New York Manchester University Press p 53 ISBN 9780719057373 a b c Murphy Kate 1 December 2014 A Marriage Bar of Convenience The BBC and Married Women s Work 1923 39 PDF Twentieth Century British History 25 4 533 561 doi 10 1093 tcbh hwu002 PMID 25608371 a b c Women in the UK Civil Service History www civilservant org uk Retrieved 13 November 2021 a b 1901 1950 Lloyds Banking Group plc www lloydsbankinggroup com Representation of the People Act 1918 parliament uk Parliament of the United Kingdom Smyth James J 2000 Labour in Glasgow 1896 1936 socialism suffrage sectarianism East Linton East Lothian Scotland Tuckwell Press ISBN 9781862321373 Close David H December 1977 The collapse of resistance to democracy conservatives adult suffrage and Second Chamber reform 1911 1928 The Historical Journal 20 4 893 918 doi 10 1017 S0018246X00011456 JSTOR 2638413 S2CID 159852100 Strand 2 Women s Suffrage Societies 2NSE Records of the National Union of Societies for Equal Citizenship twl calm library lse ac uk The Women s Library London School of Economics Offen Karen Summer 1995 Women in the western world Journal of Women s Studies 7 2 145 151 doi 10 1353 jowh 2010 0359 S2CID 144349823 Wayne Tiffany K 2011 The Old and the New Feminism 1925 by Eleanor Rathbone in Wayne Tiffany K ed 2011 Feminist writings from ancient times to the modern world a global sourcebook and history Santa Barbara Greenwood pp 484 485 ISBN 9780313345814 Strand 5 5ODC Campaigning Organisations Records of the Open Door Council twl calm library lse ac uk The Women s Library London School of Economics Pedersen Susan 2004 Eleanor Rathbone and the politics of conscience New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 9780300102451 Strand 5 5SPG Records of the Six Point Group including the Papers of Hazel Hunkins Hallinan twl calm library lse ac uk The Women s Library London School of Economics Walters Margaret 2005 Early 20th century feminism In Walters Margaret ed 2005 Feminism a very short introduction Oxford New York Oxford University Press pp 88 89 ISBN 9780192805102 a b Lord Ellenborough s Act 1998 The Abortion Law Homepage Retrieved 20 February 2007 a b Keown John 1988 Abortion doctors and the law some aspects of the legal regulation of abortion in England from 1803 to 1982 Cambridge Cambridge University Press p 26 ISBN 978 0 521 89413 5 OCLC 49550035 a b Knowlton Charles October 1891 1840 Besant Annie Bradlaugh Charles eds Fruits of philosophy a treatise on the population question San Francisco Reader s Library OCLC 626706770 View original copy See also Langer William L Spring 1975 The origins of the birth control movement in England in the early nineteenth century Journal of Interdisciplinary History 5 4 669 686 doi 10 2307 202864 JSTOR 202864 PMID 11619426 a b Chandrasekhar Sripati 1981 A dirty filthy book The writings of Charles Knowlton and Annie Besant on reproductive physiology and birth control and an account of the Bradlaugh Besant trial Berkeley University of California Press OCLC 812924875 a b Manvell Roger 1976 The trial of Annie Besant and Charles Bradlaugh London Elek Pemberton ISBN 9780236400058 a b Banks J A Banks Olive July 1954 The Bradlaugh Besant trial and the english newspapers Population Studies A Journal of Demography 8 1 22 34 doi 10 1080 00324728 1954 10415306 JSTOR 2172561 a b Balaram P 10 August 2003 Population Current Science 85 3 Current Science Association India 233 234 Archived from the original on 9 August 2016 Besant Annie 1877 The law of population its consequences and its bearing upon human conduct and morals London Freethought Publishing Company OCLC 81167553 Ward Paul 2004 Gender and national identity Gender race and home in post war Britain in Ward Paul ed Britishness since 1870 London New York Routledge p 50 ISBN 9780415220170 a b Pugh Martin 1990 Domesticity and the decline of feminism 1930 1950 in Smith Harold L ed British feminism in the Twentieth Century Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press p 158 ISBN 9780870237058 Lewis Jane 1984 Patterns of marriage and motherhood in Lewis Jane 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15 June 2008 Retrieved 18 March 2008 Myrdal Alva Klein Viola Women s two roles home and work London Routledge amp Kegan OCLC 896729837 Cited in Banks Olive 1981 Faces of feminism a study of feminism as a social movement Oxford England Martin Robertson p 176 ISBN 9780855202606 Finch Janet Summerfield Penny 1991 Social reconstruction and the emergence of companionate marriage 1945 59 in Clark David ed Marriage domestic life and social change writings for Jacqueline Burgoyne 1944 88 London New York New York Routledge p 11 ISBN 9780415032469 a b c Sarah Bridge 12 September 2007 A history of the pill Society The Guardian Retrieved 7 February 2018 a b LELR Issue 121 Archived 22 April 2017 at the Wayback Machine Thompsons Law Retrieved 4 October 2010 a b The Reunion BBC published 2003 Retrieved 4 October 2010 a b Dagenham car plant stitch up that triggered fight for equal pay The Times 24 April 2009 Retrieved 4 October 2010 a b Equal Pay Heroes Honoured Breakthrough 2006 Archived 13 March 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amp Ohio Railroad it is impossible with any force at my command to execute the laws of the State 151 24 5 The first R is short for Regina denoting a criminal case brought in the name of the Crown the second R is an anonymised reference to the defendant 1991 UKHL 12 is a case citation The first R is short for Regina denoting a criminal case brought in the name of the Crown the second R is an anonymised reference to the defendant 1991 UKHL 12 is a case citation Further reading editBartley Paula 2000 Prostitution prevention and reform in England 1860 1914 London New York Routledge ISBN 9780415214575 Brittain Vera 1960 The women at Oxford London George G Harrap OCLC 252829150 Bruley Sue ed 1999 Women in Britain since 1900 New York St Martin s Press ISBN 9780333618394 Bullough Vern L 1985 Prostitution and reform in eighteenth century England Vol 9 pp 61 74 ISBN 9780521347686 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a journal ignored help Also available as Bullough Vera L 1987 Prostitution and reform in eighteenth century England in Maccubbin Robert P ed 1987 Tis nature s fault unauthorized sexuality during the Enlightenment Cambridge New York Cambridge University Press pp 61 74 ISBN 9780521347686 dd Caine Barbara ed 1997 English feminism 1780 1980 Oxford England New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198204343 Caine Barbara 1992 Victorian feminists New York Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198204336 Ferguson Marjorie 1983 Forever feminine women s magazines and the cult of femininity London Heinemann ISBN 9780435823023 Feurer Rosemary Winter 1988 The meaning of sisterhood the British Women s Movement and protective labor legislation 1870 1900 Victorian Studies 31 2 Indiana University Press 233 260 JSTOR 3827971 Finch Janet Summerfield Penny 1991 Social reconstruction and the emergence of companionate marriage 1945 59 in Clark David ed Marriage domestic life and social change writings for Jacqueline Burgoyne 1944 88 London New York New York Routledge pp 7 32 ISBN 9780415032469 Harrison Brian 1978 Separate spheres the opposition to women s suffrage in Britain New York Holmes amp Meier ISBN 9780841903852 Lewis Jane 1983 Women s welfare women s rights London Croom Helm ISBN 9780709941002 Lewis Jane 1990 Myrdal Klein Women s Two Roles and Postwar Feminism 1945 1960 in Smith Harold L ed British feminism in the Twentieth Century Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press pp 167 188 ISBN 9780870237058 Lewis Jane ed 1984 Women in England 1870 1950 sexual divisions and social change Brighton Sussex Bloomington Wheatsheaf Books Indiana University Press ISBN 9780710801869 Myrdal Alva Klein Viola 2001 Women s two roles home and work London Routledge amp Kegan ISBN 9780415176576 Phillips Melanie 2004 The ascent of woman a history of the suffragette movement London Abacus ISBN 9780349116600 Pierce Rachel M July 1963 Marriage in the Fifties The Sociological Review 11 2 215 240 doi 10 1111 j 1467 954X 1963 tb01232 x S2CID 145668360 Pugh Martin 1990 Domesticity and the decline of feminism 1930 1950 in Smith Harold L ed British feminism in the Twentieth Century Amherst University of Massachusetts Press pp 144 162 ISBN 9780870237058 Pugh Martin 2000 Women and the women s movement in Britain 1914 1959 New York New York St Martin s Press ISBN 9780312234911 Pugh Martin D October 1974 Politicians and the woman s vote 1914 1918 History 59 197 358 374 doi 10 1111 j 1468 229X 1974 tb02222 x JSTOR 24409414 Raz Orna 2007 Social dimensions in the novels of Barbara Pym 1949 1963 the Writer as Hidden Observer Lewiston Edwin Mellen Press ISBN 9780773453876 Shanley Mary Lyndon Autumn 1986 Suffrage protective labor legislation and Married Women s Property Laws in England Signs Journal of Women in Culture and Society 12 1 62 77 doi 10 1086 494297 JSTOR 3174357 S2CID 144723898 Smith Harold L ed 1990 British feminism in the Twentieth Century Amherst University of Massachusetts Press ISBN 9780870237058 Spencer Stephanie 2005 Gender work and education in Britain in the 1950s Houndmills Basingstoke Hampshire New York Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 9781403938169 Strachey Ray Strachey Barbara 1978 The cause a short history of the women s movement in Great Britain London Virago ISBN 9780860680420 Tamboukou Maria 2000 Of Other Spaces Women s colleges at the turn of the nineteenth century in the UK PDF Gender Place amp Culture A Journal of Feminist Geography 7 3 247 263 doi 10 1080 713668873 S2CID 144093378 Whiteman Phyllis ed 1953 Speaking as a woman London Chapman amp Hall OCLC 712429455 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Feminism in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1222877692, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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