Equal rights amendments
Found in 33 Collections and/or Records:
Poster collection of the Schlesinger Library, 1911-2011
Collection of over 250 posters, mostly in English, about women and women's issues.
Records of the Project on Equal Education Rights, 1966-1991
Records of PEER, a project of the National Organization for Women Legal Defense & Education Fund (NOW LDEF), established in 1974 to monitor the government's progress in enforcing federal laws against sex discrimination in the public schools.
Records of Massachusetts NOW, 1970-2006
Records of the Massachusetts Chapter of the National Organization for Women (NOW) document its efforts on behalf of women's rights and an end to violence against women through lobbying the state legislature, advocating before government agencies, and organizing public demonstrations.
Records of the American Association of University Women. Boston Branch, 1886-1978
Constitutions and bylaws, histories, minutes, etc., of the Boston Branch of the American Association of University Women.
Records of the Women's Equity Action League, 1966-1979
Records of the Women's Equity Action League (WEAL), a national membership organization with state affiliates, founded in 1968 and dedicated to improving the status and lives of all women primarily through education, litigation, and legislation.
Videotape collection of the National Organization for Women, 1977-1988
Videotapes of interviews, marches, press conferences, etc., of the National Organization for Women, the largest feminist organization in the United States.
Papers of Helen Hunt West, 1917-1964
Correspondence, speeches, articles, etc., of Helen Hunt West, lawyer and journalist.
Oral history collection of the Women's Action Organization, 1970-1979
Audtio recordings and transcripts of interviews focusing on women and their involvement in the beginnings of the women’s reform movement in the United States Department of State during the early 1970s, conducted by the Women's Action Organization, formed to address some of the long-standing inequities in the treatment of women in the State Department and its "sister" Foreign Service agencies.