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Otero-Warren with three Yucca flowers and the Spanish inscription Voto para la mujer (Vote for Women). [46] Craig Campbell: Chris Costello: August 15, 2022 219,200,000
(October 2020) Click [show] for important translation instructions. View a machine-translated version of the Spanish article. Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate , is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy ...
El derecho de voto para la mujer. Frente Único Pro Derechos de la Mujer. 1936. Las mujeres mexicanas (with Miguel Alemán) (1945) La mujer en la política en el próximo sexenio (1946) El problema de la penitenciaría del Distrito Federal (1947) Apuntes de prácticas de microbiología (with Pedro Pérez Grovas) (1941)
Clara Campoamor created the Female Republican Union (Unión Republicana de Mujeres) during the early part of the Second Republic. [ 10 ] [ 26 ] The Female Republican Union was interested only in advocating for women's suffrage, maintaining that women having the right to vote was the only ethical option available to the government.
The women's suffrage was a reform which was actively promoted since the 1920s by the organizations Consejo Nacional de Mujeres de Chile Comité Nacional pro Derechos de la Mujer, Pro-Emancipation Movement of Chilean Women and Federación Chilena de Instituciones Femeninas (FECHIF).
Women's suffrage in Francoist Spain and the democratic transition was constrained by age limits, definitions around heads of household and a lack of elections. Women got the right to vote in Spain in 1933 as a result of legal changes made during the Second Spanish Republic.
Shakira's newest album, 'Las Mujeres Ya No Lloran,' is on its way. 'While writing each song I was rebuilding myself,' the Latin pop diva said on social media.
Aída Peláez de Villa Urrutia (1895–1923) – writer, journalist and suffragist who published "Necesidad del voto para la mujer" (Necessity of the vote for women) in El Sufragista magazine Pilar Jorge de Tella (1884–1967) – suffragist who presented petitions to the Cuban legislature and constitutional conventions demanding suffrage [ 39 ]