Women's Rights.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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In 1840 Lucretia Mott and Elizabeth Cady Stanton traveled to London to attend the World Anti-Slavery Convention.
Upon arrival, however, the women were barred fromparticipating in the conference and forced to sit behind a curtain.
This experience of discrimination inspired them to organize the first women’s rights convention.
Thisconvention met in Seneca Falls, New York, on July 19 and 20, 1848.
The Seneca Falls Convention attracted more than 200 women and approximately 40 men.
For theconvention, Stanton, Mott, and several others wrote a Declaration of Sentiments and Resolutions , often considered the founding text of the American women’s rights movement.
Based on the Declaration of Independence, the Declaration of Sentiments stated that men and women were created equal and that, like men, women were born with certain natural rights.
The document criticized men for denying women the right to vote, the right to hold property, equal terms in a divorce, and custody ofchildren.
It also criticized men for blocking women’s access to higher education, the professions, and “nearly all the profitable employments.” The declaration also faultedthe church for excluding women from the ministry.
IV U.S.
LEGISLATION FOR WOMEN’S RIGHTS
In the 19th century, state and federal laws that discriminated against women posed some of the most significant obstacles to securing women’s rights.
The earliestcampaigns to improve women’s legal status in the United States centered on gaining property rights for women.
Women also led legislative efforts in the 19th and 20thcenturies to ensure their voting, employment, and reproductive rights.
A Property Rights
Beginning in the 1830s, states passed laws and statutes that gradually gave married women greater control over property.
New York state passed the Married Women’sProperty Act in 1848, allowing women to acquire and retain assets independently of their husbands.
This was the first law that clearly established the idea that amarried woman had an independent legal identity.
The New York law inspired nearly all other states to eventually pass similar legislation.
B The Right to Vote
American women did not gain the right to vote until 1920, after amendments were made to the Constitution of the United States.
The passage of the 14th Amendmentin 1866 and the 15th Amendment in 1870 helped to focus the women’s rights movement on suffrage.
The 14th Amendment provided that all citizens were guaranteedequal protection under the law and that no citizen could be denied due process of law.
The 15th Amendment stated that citizens could not be denied the right to voteon the basis of race, color, or previous status as a slave.
Activists like Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Susan B.
Anthony argued that the 14th Amendment conferred onwomen constitutional equality and the rights of full citizenship.
They also insisted that the 15th Amendment be expanded to guarantee suffrage to women.
With theformation of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in 1890, the women’s rights movement focused almost exclusively on attaining the right to vote.
In1920 the 19th Amendment granted women this right.
In theory, the 19th Amendment extended voting rights to all women.
However, the vast majority of AfricanAmericans—men and women—continued to face restrictions on voting, such as literacy tests and other measures that discouraged them from registering to vote.
TheVoting Rights Act of 1965 finally banned such restrictions.
C Protective Labor Legislation
Increasing numbers of women began to enter the industrial labor force in the 19th century.
As a result, some social reformers grew concerned about the impact of longhours and poor working conditions on women’s health.
The National Consumers’ League, founded in 1899, and the Women’s Trade Union League, founded in 1903,spearheaded efforts to limit women’s work hours and the types of work they could perform.
By 1908 the states had passed 19 laws limiting work hours or abolishingnight work for women.
Even greater numbers of women entered the workforce during World War I (1914-1918), prompting the establishment of the Women’s Bureauof the Department of Labor in 1920, which initiated the passage of legislation to protect working women.
Protective legislation for women has been a controversial issue throughout the history of the women’s rights movement.
Opponents of protective legislation have arguedthat special rules for women would inhibit women’s struggle for equality with men, even if the legislation related only to labor laws.
They have claimed that sex-basedlabor legislation upheld stereotypes of women as weak and defenseless, limited their options for employment, and reinforced the notion that women belonged in thehome.
Protective legislation has been challenged repeatedly in the courts.
In Ritchie v.
People (1895), the Illinois Supreme Court ruled that limiting women’s work day to eight hours infringed upon a woman’s right to contract for her labor, and thus violated her 14th Amendment right to equal protection under the law.
In Lochner v.
New York (1905) the Supreme Court deemed all protective labor legislation to be unconstitutional.
The Lochner decision was revised three years later in Muller v.
Oregon (1908). In that case, American jurist Louis D.
Brandeis argued that women’s role as mothers required that they be given special protection in the workplace.
American courtsrepeatedly struck down statutes establishing minimum wages for women.
In Adkins v.
Children’s Hospital (1923), the Supreme Court decided that a minimum wage for women violated the right to freedom of contract.
However, passage of the National Fair Labor Standards Act (1938) established a national minimum wage for men andwomen alike.
In 1969 the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) declared protective legislation for women invalid.
D Equal Rights Amendment
After the passage of the 19th Amendment granting women the right to vote, members of the women’s movement focused on gaining other rights for women.
Alice Pauland Lucy Burns directed their efforts toward prohibiting all other inequities between men and women.
Paul and Burns had established the National Women’s Party in1916 to work for women’s suffrage.
However, they believed that winning the right to vote marked only the beginning of women’s struggle for equality.
In the early1920s the National Women’s Party aimed to pass an Equal Rights Amendment (ERA) to the Constitution that would make illegal all forms of discrimination based on sex.
Under the influence of the National Women’s Party, the U.S.
Congress introduced the ERA in 1923, but the issue failed to gain significant support.
Some people who hadpreviously supported women’s right to vote nevertheless opposed the ERA.
They included moderate social reformers, such as Florence Kelley and Jane Addams, andadministrators in the Women’s Bureau of the Department of Labor.
These people opposed the ERA because they believed that strict enforcement of equal rights wouldmean the elimination of protective legislation for women.
They thought that the ERA would be particularly harmful to working-class women.
In the 1960s the so-called second wave of the women’s rights movement revived the ERA debate.
On the suggestion of Esther Peterson, director of the Women’sBureau of the Department of Labor, President John F.
Kennedy established the first national Commission on the Status of Women in 1961.
In 1963 the commissionissued a report detailing employment discrimination, unequal pay, legal inequality, and insufficient support services for working women.
Nevertheless, the majority ofthe commission members opposed the ERA, primarily on the grounds that equal rights were already guaranteed in the Constitution.
The ERA measure won congressional approval in 1972 as the 27th Amendment, but it had to be ratified by at least 38 states to become law.
Under the leadership offemale politicians like U.S.
representative Bella Abzug, of New York, and groups such as the National Organization for Women (NOW), which was established in 1966 byactivist Betty Friedan, supporters of the ERA campaigned to gain passage of the amendment at the state level.
Congress recognized the general support for the ERAand, in an unprecedented step, extended the seven-year deadline for ratification to ten years.
Opponents of the ERA argued that a legal doctrine of equality threatened.
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