Women's health services
Found in 8 Collections and/or Records:
Audiotape collection of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, 1973-2000
Collection includes radio and conference appearances by Collective members, a benefit, board meeting proceedings, and a variety of materials on topics relating to women's health, etc.
Additional Records of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, 1966-2010
Additional records of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, a non-profit women's health education, advocacy and consulting organization, including administrative records; founder's files; engagements and project files; material relating to the publication, revision, and adaptation of several versions of Our Bodies, Ourselves; memorabilia; audiovisual material; and electronic records.
Boston Women's Health Book Collective printed collection, 1972-2006
Printed material about women's health sent to and collected by the Boston Women's Health Book Collective from around the world and from other locations in the United States.
Kathy Davis oral history interviews, 1998-2005
Oral histories with the Boston Women's Health Book Collective founders, leaders, and staff conducted by scholar and feminist Kathy Davis.
Papers of Barbara Seaman, 1920-1983
Correspondence, letters from readers, minutes, etc., of Barbara Seaman, feminist and author.
Papers of Emily Hartshorne Mudd, 1873-1990
Writings, correspondence, etc., of Emily Hartshorne Mudd, marriage counselor, advocate for family planning, researcher, and professor.
Records of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, 1905-2003 (inclusive), 1972-1997 (bulk)
Records of the Boston Women's Health Book Collective, a non-profit women's health education, advocacy and consulting organization that grew out of a small discussion group in 1969, and first became known for their pioneering handbook, Our Bodies, Ourselves.
Records of the Committee on the Status of Women at Harvard, 1969-1971
Correspondence, memos, notes, etc., of the Committee on the Status of Women at Harvard, created in 1970 to study the status of Harvard’s women students and faculty members.