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Annotated Bibliography of: Carrie Chapman Catt." American Social Reform Movements: (2008); Gale U.S. History in Context. "Margaret Sanger Champions Birth Control, 1920." ; EQUAL PROTECTION." ENCYCLOPEDIA OF THE SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STAT

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Annotated biography Gale U.S. History in Context. "Margaret Sanger Champions Birth Control, 1920." U.S. History in Context (2015): 1-3.Gale, Cengage Learning. Web. 23 July 2016. This paper looks at the 1920 birth control movement started by Margret Sanger to free the feminine spirit from the bondage of pregnancy and matriarchal care. By accepting to be enslaved by her reproductive powers the woman had enslaved the world, argued Margret Sanger. I have chosen to use this paper as a source because of it's rich and stern assertions about women rights. Not only does it call for freedom in several areas of human life, it was focused on female independence in its totality, i.e. economically, socially, and biologically. The paper offers my research a great foundational point of view in the subject. The assertions of the leaders of feminine movements in the 1920s offer great insight into how the whole journey of women rights struggles began. Jessie Faulkner. "The Right to Vote." HUMBOLDT HISTORIAN (2001): 2-15. Web. 23 July 2016. This article published by Humboldt Society association's public relations manager, Jessie Faulker, explores the activities of women in the early years of the 20th century that led to the full-blown push for women's rights to vote. This push later led to the vote on whether women should be given the right to vote, therefore declaring them intellectual equals of men. The writer narrates eloquently the rough struggle that women leaders went through in order to get their voices heard. Their struggle, as seen from the article, were supported by several men of good social standing who, even though did not agree that women were their equals intellectually, supported the idea of women having a vote on how public policy was formulated. The article also notes the important role played by the media to ensure that the struggle for suffrage succeeded. The passage of a state constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote was an important milestone in the struggle for human rights and specifically for women's rights. The writer is forthcoming on the role of the media and men in the success of this great struggle at that particular moment in time. I will use this article extensively in my research to show the long way the struggle has come and the great victories along that way that keep it going. It will also inform my paper greatly on the role of leadership in the women struggle for total rights. E SoJ. "Carrie Chapman Catt." American Social Reform Movements: (2008): 1-12. Web. 23 July 2016. This paper centers its analysis of the suffrage movement on an excerpt from the leader of the National American Woman Suffrage Association (NAWSA), Carrie Chapman. Having lost her husband several years before, Chapman had dedicated her time, knowledge, and energy to the women suffrage. In 1915 she came back to her former job as the leader of the NAWSA suffrage movement after a conflict broke out between moderate activist and those who preferred more combative means. In her speech, an excerpt of which is contained and is the main subject of the paper, Chapman calls for unity within the movement and a focus on a single agenda, the issue of total women suffrage in the entire nation. Her speech equates social change to evolution and urges the movement followers to understand that, like evolution, it takes time to come to pass. She argues that by allowing the change, from a patriarchal society that America was to a society where women enjoyed equal voting rights with men, pass through all the necessary gates, it would be more meaningful and sustainable. I will use this paper as a source for the realistic angle it takes on the leadership in women rights movements. By drawing information from it I hope my paper can submit a clear analysis of how the history of women rights can inform the present and help women rights groups anticipate the future.

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Annotated biography

Gale U.S. History in Context. "Margaret Sanger Champions Birth Control, 1920." U.S. History
in Context (2015): 1-3.Gale, Cengage Learning. Web. 23 July 2016.

This paper looks at the 1920 birth control movement started by Margret Sanger to free the
feminine spirit from the bondage of pregnancy and matriarchal care. By accepting to be enslaved
by her reproductive powers the woman had enslaved the world, argued Margret Sanger. I have
chosen to use this paper as a source because of it's rich and stern assertions about women rights.
Not only does it call for freedom in several areas of human life, it was focused on female
independence in its totality, i.e. economically, socially, and biologically. The paper offers my
research a great foundational point of view in the subject. The assertions of the leaders of
feminine movements in the 1920s offer great insight into how the whole journey of women
rights struggles began.

Jessie Faulkner. "The Right to Vote." HUMBOLDT HISTORIAN (2001): 2-15. Web. 23 July
2016.

This article published by Humboldt Society association's public relations manager, Jessie
Faulker, explores the activities of women in the early years of the 20th century that led to the
full-blown push for women's rights to vote. This push later led to the vote on whether women
should be given the right to vote, therefore declaring them intellectual equals of men. The writer
narrates eloquently the rough struggle that women leaders went through in order to get their
voices heard. Their struggle, as seen from the article, were supported by several men of good
social standing who, even though did not agree that women were their equals intellectually,
supported the idea of women having a vote on how public policy was formulated. The article
also notes the important role played by the media to ensure that the struggle for suffrage
succeeded. The passage of a state constitutional amendment giving women the right to vote was
an important milestone in the struggle for human rights and specifically for women's rights. The
writer is forthcoming on the role of the media and men in the success of this great struggle at that
particular moment in time. I will use this article extensively in my research to show the long way
the struggle has come and the great victories along that way that keep it going. It will also inform
my paper greatly on the role of leadership in the women struggle for total rights.

E SoJust.net. "Carrie Chapman Catt." American Social Reform Movements: (2008): 1-12. Web.
23 July 2016.

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