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      <title>The Suffragettes by marica</title>
      <link>https://padlet.com/mbmarims/iewiphfmq1vh</link>
      <description>Made with wonder</description>
      <language>en-us</language>
      <pubDate>2018-03-12 15:39:39 UTC</pubDate>
      <lastBuildDate>2021-05-26 11:29:26 UTC</lastBuildDate>
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         <title>The Suffragettes</title>
         <author>mbmarims</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/mbmarims/iewiphfmq1vh/wish/240942222</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<div>The Suffragettes wanted the right for women to vote.<br><br></div><div>The move for women to have the vote had really started in 1897 when Millicent Fawcett founded the<strong>National Union of Women’s Suffrage</strong>. “Suffrage” means the right to vote and that is what women wanted – hence its inclusion in Fawcett’s title.<br>Millicent Fawcett believed in peaceful protest. She felt that any violence or trouble would persuade men that women could not be trusted to have the right to vote. Her game plan was patience and logical arguments. Fawcett argued that women could hold responsible posts in society such as sitting on school boards – but could not be trusted to vote; she argued that if parliament made laws and if women had to obey those laws, then women should be part of the process of making those laws; she argued that as women had to pay taxes as men, they should have the same rights as men and one of her most powerful arguments was that wealthy mistresses of large manors and estates employed gardeners, workmen and labourers who could vote……..but the women could not regardless of their wealth…<br>However, Fawcett’s progress was very slow. She converted some of the members of the Labour Representation Committee (soon to be the Labour Party) but most men in Parliament believed that women simply would not understand how Parliament worked and therefore should not take part in the electoral process. This left many women angry and in <strong>1903</strong> the <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/women's_social_political_union.htm"><strong>Women’s Social and Political Union</strong></a> was founded by <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/emmeline_pankhurst.htm">Emmeline Pankhurst</a> and her daughters Christabel and Sylvia. They wanted women to have the right to vote and they were not prepared to wait. The Union became better known as the <strong>Suffragettes</strong>. Members of the Suffragettes were prepared to use violence to get what they wanted.<br><br></div><div><strong>Emmeline Pankhurst</strong> | <strong>Christabel Pankhurst</strong></div><div>In fact, the Suffragettes started off relatively peacefully.&nbsp; It was only in 1905 that the organisation created a stir when Christabel Pankhurst and Annie Kenney interrupted a political meeting in Manchester to ask two Liberal politicians (Winston Churchill and Sir Edward Grey) if they believed women should have the right to vote. Neither man replied. As a result, the two women got out a banner which had on it “Votes for Women” and shouted at the two politicians to answer their questions. Such actions were all but unheard of then when public speakers were usually heard in silence and listened to courteously even if you did not agree with them. Pankhurst and Kenney were thrown out of the meeting and arrested for causing an obstruction and a technical assault on a police officer.<br><br></div><div>Both women refused to pay a fine preferring to go to prison to highlight the injustice of the system as it was then. <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/emmeline_pankhurst.htm">Emmeline Pankhurst</a> later wrote in her autobiography that:<br><br><strong>“this was the beginning of a campaign the like of which was never known in England, or for that matter in any other country…..we interrupted a great many meetings……and we were violently thrown out and insulted. Often we were painfully bruised and hurt.”</strong>&nbsp; &nbsp;<br><br></div><div>The Suffragettes refused to bow to violence. They burned down churches as the Church of England was against what they wanted; they vandalised Oxford Street, apparently breaking all the windows in this famous street; they chained themselves to Buckingham Palace as the Royal Family were seen to be against women having the right to vote; they hired out boats, sailed up the Thames and shouted abuse through loud hailers at Parliament as it sat; others refused to pay their tax. Politicians were attacked as they went to work. Their homes were fire bombed. Golf courses were vandalised. The first decade of Britain in the twentieth century was proving to be violent in the extreme.<br><br></div><div>Suffragettes were quite happy to go to prison. Here they refused to eat and went on a hunger strike. The government was very concerned that they might die in prison thus giving the movement martyrs. Prison governors were ordered to force feed Suffragettes but this caused a public outcry as forced feeding was traditionally used to feed lunatics as opposed to what were mostly educated women.<br><br></div><div>The government of Asquith responded with the<strong> </strong><a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/cat_and_mouse_act.htm">Cat and Mouse Act</a>. When a Suffragette was sent to prison, it was assumed that she would go on hunger strike as this caused the authorities maximum discomfort. The Cat and Mouse Act allowed the Suffragettes to go on a hunger strike and let them get weaker and weaker. Force feeding was not used. When the Suffragettes were very weak……….they were released from prison. If they died out of prison, this was of no embarrassment to the government. However, they did not die but those who were released were so weak that they could take no part in violent Suffragette struggles. When those who had been arrested and released had regained their strength, they were re-arrested for the most trivial of reason and the whole process started again. This, from the government’s point of view, was a very simple but effective weapon against the Suffragettes.<br><br></div><div>As a result, the Suffragettes became more extreme. The most famous act associated with the Suffragettes was at the <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/derby_of_june_1913.htm">June 1913 Derby</a> when <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/emily_wilding_davison.htm">Emily Wilding Davison</a> threw herself under the King’s horse, Anmer,&nbsp; as it rounded Tattenham Corner. She was killed and the Suffragettes had their first martyr. However, her actions probably did more harm than good to the cause as she was a highly educated woman. Many men asked the simple question – if this is what an educated woman does, what might a lesser educated woman do? How can they possibly be given the right to vote?<br>It is possible that the Suffragettes would have become more violent. They had, after all, in February 1913 blown up part of <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/david_lloyd_george.htm">David Lloyd George’s</a> house – he was probably Britain’s most famous politician at this time and he was thought to be a supporter of the right for women to have the vote!<br><br></div><div>However, Britain and Europe was plunged into <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/world_war_one.htm">World War One</a> in August 1914. In a display of patriotism, <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/emmeline_pankhurst.htm">Emmeline Pankhurst</a> instructed the Suffragettes to stop their campaign of violence and support in every way the government and its war effort. The work done by women in the <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/women_in_world_war_one.htm">First World</a> <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/women_in_world_war_one.htm">War</a>&nbsp; was to be vital for Britain’s war effort. In 1918, the <a href="http://www.historylearningsite.co.uk/1918_representation_of_the_peopl.htm">Representation of the People Act</a> was passed by Parliament.&nbsp;<br>The 1918 Representation of the People Act was the start of female suffrage in Great Britain. The bill was passed by an overwhelming majority in the House of Commons, it gave women of property over the age of 30 the right to vote – not all women, therefore, could vote – but it was a major start.<br><br></div>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2018-03-12 15:45:20 UTC</pubDate>
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         <title>Women’s struggle for their rights in pictures</title>
         <author>mbmarims</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/mbmarims/iewiphfmq1vh/wish/240949363</link>
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         <pubDate>2018-03-12 15:54:48 UTC</pubDate>
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         <author>mbmarims</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/mbmarims/iewiphfmq1vh/wish/240952432</link>
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         <pubDate>2018-03-12 15:58:42 UTC</pubDate>
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         <author>mbmarims</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/mbmarims/iewiphfmq1vh/wish/240953363</link>
         <description><![CDATA[]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2018-03-12 15:59:50 UTC</pubDate>
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      <item>
         <title>The Women Suffrage Timeline</title>
         <author>mbmarims</author>
         <link>https://padlet.com/mbmarims/iewiphfmq1vh/wish/240958689</link>
         <description><![CDATA[<div><br></div><div>Right to Vote Right to Stand for Election<br><br></div><div><br>Afghanistan | 1965* | 1965*<br><em>Afghanistan Notes</em> | <em>*Revoked during Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001.</em> | <em>*Revoked during Taliban rule from 1996 to 2001.</em><br>Albania | 1920 | 1920<br>Algeria | July 5th, 1962 | July 5th, 1962<br>Andora | April 14th, 1970 | September 5th, 1973<br>Angola | November 11th, 1975 | November 11th, 1975<br>Antigua &amp; Barbuda | December 1st, 1951 | December 1st, 1951<br>Argentina | September 29th, 1947 | September 29th, 1947<br>Armenia | February 2nd, 1921 | February 2nd, 1921<br>Australia | June 12th, 1902 | June 12th, 1902<br>Australia (Aboriginal) | June 18th, 1962 | June 18th, 1962<br>Austria | December 19th, 1918 | December 19th, 1918Azerbaijan | May 19th, 1921 | May 19th, 1921<br>The Bahamas | February 18th, 1961 | February 18th, 1961<br>Bahrain | October 24th, 2002 | October 24th, 2002<br>Bangladesh | November 4th, 1972 | November 4th, 1972<br>Barbados | October 23rd, 1950 | October 23rd, 1950<br>Belarus | February 4th, 1919 | February 4th, 1919<br>Belgium | May 9th, 1919*/March 27th, 1948** | February 7th, 1921*/March 27th, 1948**<br><em>Belgium Notes</em> | *”Right to vote in national elections to the widows and mothers of servicemen killed in World War I, to the widows and mothers of citizens shot or killed by the enemy, and to female political prisoners who had been held by the enemy” (p. 34). | **Right to vote extended to “all women… with the same conditions applied to men” (p. 34).<br>Belize | March 25th, 1954 | March 25th, 1954<br>Benin | 1956 | 1956<br>Bhutan | 1953 | 1953<br>Bolivia | 1938*/<br>July 21, 1952 | July 21, 1952<br><em>Bolivia Notes</em> | <em>*Right to vote extended to “literate women and those with a certain level of income” (p. 41).</em> | <br>Bosnia and Herzegovina | January 31st, 1949 | January 31st, 1949<br>Botswana | March 1st, 1965 | March 1st, 1965<br>Brazil | July 16th, 1934 | July 16th, 1934<br>Brunei | Men/women not allowed to vote since 1962. | Men/women not allowed to stand for election since 1962.<br>Bulgaria | October 16th, 1944 | October 16th, 1944<br>Burkina Faso | September 28th, 1958 | September 28th, 1958<br>Burundi | August 17th, 1961 | August 17th, 1961<br>Cambodia | September 25th, 1955 | September 25th, 1955<br>Camerooon | October 1946 | October 1946<br>Benin | 1956 | 1956<br>Canada | September 1917*/<br>May 1918** | July 1920<br><em>Canada Notes</em> | <em>*”Women who had close male relatives serving in the military were granted the right to vote at the federal level” (p. 61).</em> | **Most women won the federal vote, but most Aboriginal women excluded.<br>Canada (Aboriginal) | 1950* | 1950<br><em>Canada (Aboriginal) Notes</em> | <em>Right to vote extended “only if they waived their tax exemption under the Indian Act. In August 1960, the unqualified extension of federal voting rights…” (p. 69).</em> | <em>“Quebec in 1969, became the last province to extend franchise rights to all native Indians at the provincial level” (p. 69).</em><br>Cape Verde | July 5th, 1975 | July 5th, 1975<br>Central African Republic | 1986 | 1986<br>Chad | 1958 | <br>Chile | May 30th, 1931*/<br>May 15th, 1949** | May 30th, 1931*/<br>May 15th, 1949**<br><em>Chile Notes</em> | <em>*Right to vote/stand for election in “municipal elections” (p. 77).</em> | <em>**Right to vote/stand for election in “legislative and provincial elections” (p. 77).</em><br>China (People’s Republic) | October 1st, 1949<br>(also granted in 1911 after revolution) | October 1st, 1949<br>China (Republic of)/Taiwan | 1947 | <br>Colombia | August 25th, 1954 | August 25th, 1954<br>Comoros | 1956 | 1956<br>Democratic Republic of the Congo (Kinshasa) | May 3rd, 1967 | April 17th, 1970<br>Congo Republic (Brazzaville) | December 8th, 1963 | December 8th, 1963<br>Costa Rica | November 17th, 1949 | November 17th, 1949<br>Cote d’Ivoire | 1952 | 1952<br>Croatia | August 11th, 1945 | August 11th, 1945<br>Cuba | January 2nd, 1934 | January 2nd, 1934<br>Cyprus | August 16th, 1960 | August 16th, 1960<br>Czech Republic | 1920 | 1920<br>Denmark | 1908 (local authorities)/<br>June 5th, 1915 | 1908 (local authorities)/<br>June 5th, 1915<br>Djibouti | 1946 | 1986<br>Dominica | July 1951 | July 1951<br>Dominican Republic | 1942 | 1942<br>Ecuador* | March 3rd, 1929** | March 3rd, 1929<br><em>Ecuador Notes</em> | <em>*First country in South American to grant woman suffrage.</em> | <em>**”Between 1929 and 1967, voting was compulsory for men and optional for women; in 1967 it became compulsory for bothe sexes” (p. 115).</em><br>Egypt | June 23rd, 1956 | June 23rd, 1956<br>El Salvador | 1939 | 1961<br>Equatorial Guinea | December 15th, 1963 | December 15th, 1963<br>Eritrea | November 4th, 1955 | November 4th, 1955<br>Estonia | November 24th, 1918 | November 24th, 1918<br>Ethiopia | November 4th, 1955 | November 4th, 1955<br>Fiji | April 17th, 1963 | May 5th, 1963<br>Finland | July 20th, 1906 | July 20th, 1906<br><mark>France | April 21st, 1944 | April 21st, 1944</mark><br>Gabon | May 23rd, 1956 | May 23rd, 1956<br>Gambia | 1960 | 1960<br>Georgia | November 22nd, 1918 | November 22nd, 1918<br><mark>Germany | November 12th, 1918 | November 12th, 1918</mark><br>Ghana | 1954 | 1954<br><mark>Greece | January 1st, 1952 | January 1st, 1952</mark><br>Grenada | August 1951 | August 1951<br>Guatemala | 1946 | 1946<br>Guinea | October 2nd, 1958 | October 2nd, 1958<br>Guinea-Bissau | 1977 | 1977<br>Guyana | 1953 | 1945*<br><em>Guyana Notes</em> |&nbsp; | <em>*”Eligible to sit on the British Guiana Legislation Council” (p. 163).</em><br>Haiti | November 25th, 1950 | November 25th, 1950<br>Honduras | January 25th, 1955 | January 25th, 1955<br>Hungary | 1918 | 1918<br>Iceland | June 19th, 1915 | June 19th, 1915<br>India | January 26th, 1950 | January 26th, 1950<br>Indonesia | August 17th, 1945 | August 17th, 1945<br>Iran | September 1963 | September 1963<br>Iraq | 1958*/<br>February 1980 | 1958/<br>February 1980<br><em>Iraq Notes</em> | <em>*Government “overthrown during the summer of 1958, before any elections with female participation” (p. 188).</em> | <br><mark>Ireland | June 2nd, 1918 (Women over 30 years of age)/<br>July 2nd 1928 | June 2nd, 1918 (Women over 30 years of age)/<br>July 2nd 1928</mark><br>Israel | May 15th, 1948 | May 15th, 1948<br><strong><mark>Italy | February 1st, 1945 | February 1st, 1945 (</mark></strong><strong><br></strong><strong><mark>1925</mark></strong><mark><figure class="attachment attachment--preview" data-trix-attachment="{&quot;contentType&quot;:&quot;image&quot;,&quot;height&quot;:15,&quot;url&quot;:&quot;https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/0/03/Flag_of_Italy.svg/23px-Flag_of_Italy.svg.png&quot;,&quot;width&quot;:23}" data-trix-content-type="image"><img src="https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/en/thumb/0/03/Flag_of_Italy.svg/23px-Flag_of_Italy.svg.png" width="23" height="15"><figcaption class="attachment__caption"></figcaption></figure></mark><a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Italy"><mark>Italy</mark></a><mark> (limited to local elections)</mark></div><div><br>Jamaica | November 20th, 1944 | November 20th, 1944<br>Japan | December 12th, 1945*/February 24th, 1947** | December 12th, 1945*/February 24th, 1947**<br><em>Japan Notes</em> | <em>*”For the House of Representatives” (p. 202).</em> | <em>**”For the House of Councillors” (p. 202).</em><br>Jordan | 1974* | 1974*<br><em>Jordan Notes</em> | <em>“Women actually exercised the right to vote and stand for election for the first time in 1989” (p. 206).</em> | <br>Kazakhstan | January 31st, 1924 | January 31st, 1924<br>Kenya | December 12th, 1963* | December 12th, 1963*<br><em>Kenya Notes</em> | <em>“The right to vote and stand for office had been given to European women in Kenya in 1919; in 1956, those rights were extended to African men and women under certain conditions related to educational level and property ownership.”</em> | <em>“In 1963, all Kenyans, regardless of color and other previously restricting factors, were given the right to vote and stand for election” (p. 209).</em><br>Kiribati | November 15th, 1967 | November 15th, 1967<br>Democratic People’s Republic of Korea | July 30th, 1946 | July 30th, 1946<br>Republic of Korea | July 17th, 1948 | July 17th, 1948<br>Kuwait |&nbsp; | <br>Kyrgyzstan | June 1918 | June 1918<br>Laos | 1958 | 1958<br>Latvia | November 18th, 1918 | December 18th, 1918<br>Lebanon | 1952 | 1952<br>Lesotho | April 30th, 1965 | April 30th, 1965<br>Liberia | May 7th, 1946 | May 7th, 1946<br>Libya | 1963 | 1963<br><mark>Liechtenstein* | July 1st, 1984 | July 1st, 1984</mark><br><em><mark>Liechtenstein Notes</mark></em><mark> | </mark><em><mark>Last country in Europe to grant women suffrage.</mark></em><mark> |</mark> <br>Lithuania | October 5th, 1921 | October 5th, 1921<br>Luxembourg | May 15th, 1919 | May 15ht, 1919<br>Macedonia | December 31st, 1946 | December 31st, 1946<br>Madagascar | April 29th, 1959 | April 29th, 1959<br>Malawi | 1961 | 1961<br>Malaysia | August 31st, 1957 | August 31st, 1957<br>Maldives | 1932 | 1932<br>Mali | 1956 | 1956<br>Malta | September 5th, 1947 | September 5th, 1947<br>Marshall Islands | May 1st, 1979 | May 1st, 1979<br>Mauritania | May 20th, 1961 | May 20th, 1961<br>Mauritius | 1956 | 1956<br>Mexico | February 15th, 1947* | October 17th, 1953<br><em>Mexico Notes</em> | <em>“Women were permitted to vote in some local and state elections at an earlier date”.</em> | <em>“Yucatan and San Luis Potosi were the first states to extend the franchise, in 1922 and 1923, respectively” (p. 255).</em><br>Federated States of Micronesia | November 3rd, 1979 | November 3rd, 1979<br>Moldova | April 4th, 1978 | April 4th, 1978<br>Monaco | December 17th, 1962 | December 17th, 1962<br>Mongolia | November 1st, 1924 | November 1st, 1924<br>Morocco | May 1963 | May 1963<br>Mozambique | June 25th, 1975 | June 25th, 1975<br>Myanmar | 1935 | March 19th, 1946<br>Namibia | November 7th, 1989 | November 7th, 1989<br>Nauru | January 3rd, 1968 | January 3rd, 1968<br>Nepal | 1951 | 1951<br>Netherlands | August 9th, 1919 | November 29, 1917<br>New Zealand | September 19th, 1893 | October 29th, 1919<br>Nicaragua | April 21st, 1955 | April 21st, 1955<br>Niger | 1948 | 1948<br>Nigeria | 1958* | 1958*<br><em>Nigeria Notes</em> | <em>*“Women in Nigeria’s southern region were enfranchised in stages, beginning in 1950, whereas women in the northern region (predominantly Muslim) were not. Southern women voted and contested offices in the 1959 federal elections, but no northern women were allowed to do so. Northern women finally received their full electoral franchise (to vote and contest office) in 1976” (p. 286).</em> | <br>Norway | 1907* | 1907*/1913<br><em>Norway Notes</em> | <em>*“Special conditions related to private mans, property, and income. Those restrictions were removed in 1913” (p. 289).</em> | <br>Oman | 1997 | 1997<br>Pakistan | 1947 | 1947<br>Palau | April 2nd, 1979 | April 2nd, 1979<br>Panama | July 5, 1941* | July 5, 1941/<br>March 1st, 1946<br><em>Panama Notes</em> | <em>*“A 1941 electoral law granted a limited franchise to women (to vote for and be elected to provincial bodies) if they held a university degree or had completed vocational raining, a teacher’s college, or secondary schooling. Full political rights were granted to women in 1946.” (p. 298)</em> | <br>Papua New Guinea | February 15th, 1964 | February 27th, 1963<br>Paraguay | July 5th, 1961 | July 5th, 1961<br>Peru | September 7th, 1955 | September 7th, 1955<br>Philippines | April 30th, 1937 | April 30th, 1937<br>Poland | November 28th, 1918 | November 28th, 1918<br><mark>Portugal | May 5th, 1931* | May 5th, 1931/<br>November 16th, 1934/<br>June 2nd, 1976<br></mark><em><mark>Portugal Notes</mark></em><mark> | </mark><em><mark>*“In 1931, women were given the right to vote and stand for election, with the restriction that they had to have completed secondary or higher education (men only had to know how to read and write). All citizens who were literate were granted the right to vote and stand for election in 1934. Some restrictions on women, however, remained for election to certain local administrative bodes under a l968 law. Full equality of the sexes with regard to the franchise and right of election to all bodies was achieved in 1976″</mark></em><em> (p. 312).</em> | <br>Qatar | 1999 | 1999<br>Romania | 1929*/<br>1946** | 1929*/<br>July 1946**<br><em>Romania Notes</em> | <em>*”Restricted electoral rights” (p. 316).</em> | <em>**”Under the same conditions as men” (p. 316).</em><br>Russia | June 1918 | June 1918<br>Rwanda | September 25th, 1961 | September 25th, 1961*<br><em>Rwanda Notes</em> | <em>*”For all offices except that of president of the republic; that restriction was removed in 1978″ (p. 323).</em> | <br>Saint Kitts and Nevis | 1951 | 1951<br>Saint Lucia | 1924 | 1924<br>Saint Vincent and the Grenadines | May 5th, 1951 | May 5th, 1951<br>Samoa | October 1990 | October 1990<br>San Marino | April 29th, 1959 | September 10th, 1973<br>Sao Tome and Principe | July 12th, 1975 | July 12th, 1975<br>Saudia Arabia | 2015 Municipal Elections (expected) | 2015 Municipal Elections (expected)<br>Senegal | February 19th, 1945 | February 19th, 1945<br>Seychelles | August 6th, 1948 | August 6th, 1948<br>Sierra Leone | April 27th, 1961 | April 27th, 1961<br>Singapore | July 18th, 1947 | July 18th, 1947<br>Slovakia | 1920 | 1920<br>Slovenia | August 10th, 1945 | August 10th, 1945<br>Solomon Islands | 1978 | 1978<br>Somalia | 1956 | 1956<br>South Africa | May 21, 1930 (“whites”)/<br>March 30th, 1984 (“coloreds and Indians”)/<br>January 14th, 1994 (“blacks”) [p. 351] | May 21, 1930 (“whites”)/<br>March 30th, 1984 (“coloreds and Indians”)/<br>January 14th, 1994 (“blacks”) [p. 351]<br><mark>Spain | December 9th, 1931 | May 8th, 1931</mark><br>Sri Lanka | March 20th, 1931 | March 20th, 1931<br>Sudan | November 1964 | November 1964<br>Suriname | December 9th, 1948 | December 9th, 1948<br>Swaziland | September 6th, 1968 | September 6th, 1968<br>Sweden | 1862/<br>1918 “local elections”/<br>May 1919 “granted”/<br>1921 “in effect” | 1862/<br>1918 “local elections”/<br>May 1919 “granted”/<br>1921 “in effect”<br>Switzerland | February 7th, 1971 | February 7th, 1971<br>Syria | September 10th, 1949* | 1953<br><em>Syria Notes</em> | <em>“women who had reached a sixth-grade educational level; it was then extended to all literate women, and in 1953 all educational restrictions on voting were lifted for women” (p. 371).</em> |&nbsp;<br>Tajikistan | 1924 | 1924<br>Tanzania | 1959 | 1959<br>Thailand | December 10th, 1932 | December 10th, 1932<br>Togo | August 22nd, 1945 | August 22nd, 1945<br>Tonga | 1960 | 1960<br>Trinidad and Tobago | 1946 | 1946<br>Tunisia | 1957 (“municipal elections”)/<br>June 1st, 1959 | June 1st, 1959<br>Turkey | April 3rd, 1930 | December 5th, 1934<br>Turkmenistan | 1927 | 1927<br>Tuvalu | January 1st, 1947 | January 1st, 1967<br>Uganda | 1962 | 1962<br>Ukraine | March 10th, 1919 | March 10th, 1919<br>United Arab Emirates | 2006 | 2006<br>United Kingdom | February 2nd, 1918 (“over 30 years of age”)/<br>July 2nd, 1928 | February 2nd, 1918 (“over 30 years of age”)/<br>July 2nd, 1928<br>United States of America | 1920 | 1920<br>Uruguay | December 16th, 1932 | December 16th, 1932<br>Uzbekistan | 1938 | 1938<br>Vanutua | November 1975 | November 1975<br>Vatican City | No parliament/no political parties. | No parliament/no political parties.<br>Venezuela | March 28th, 1946 | March 28th, 1946<br>Vietnam | January 6th, 1946 | January 6th, 1946<br>Yemen | 1967 (People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen)/<br>1970 (Arab Republic of Yemen) | 1967 (People’s Democratic Republic of Yemen)/<br>1970 (Arab Republic of Yemen)<br>Yugoslavia | January 31st, 1946 | January 31st, 1946<br>Zambia | October 30th, 1962 | October 30th, 1962<br>Zimbabwe | Before 1957 (“Only men and European women”)/<br>After 1957 (“a qualified right to vote was gradually extended over the years to black women”) [p. 429] | March 1978</div>]]></description>
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         <pubDate>2018-03-12 16:07:11 UTC</pubDate>
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