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Taylor and Francis (volume 21 onwards) Asian Journal of Women's Studies is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal published by Ewha Womans University Press . Its articles have a theoretical focus, and its country reports provide information on specific subjects and countries.
Asian American feminists also contributed to the Third World Women's Alliance (TWWA) which was born out of SNCC (Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee), and became an independent organization in 1970 under the name Black Women's Alliance, becoming the TWWA in 1971 after a group of Puerto Rican women asked to join.
Asian Women is a quarterly peer-reviewed academic journal and the official journal of the Research Institute of Asian Women (Sookmyung Women's University). Its focus is recent gender issues and its editor-in-chief is Youngshin Kim. [1]
"Rebecca Jennison and Laura Hein. "Against Forgetting: Three Generations of Artists in Japan in Dialogue about the Legacies of World War II," The Asia-Pacific Journal Vol 9, Issue 30 No 1 (July 25, 2011). Jennison, Rebecca (1997). ""Postcolonial" Feminist Locations: The Art of Tomiyama Taeko and Shimada Yoshiko". U.S.-Japan Women's Journal.
Asian Journal of Women's Studies; Asian Women (journal) Australian Feminist Studies; C. Canadian Woman Studies; Contemporary Women's Writing; D. Differences (journal) E.
Africa. Democratic Republic of the Congo; Egypt; Ethiopia; Ghana; Mali; Nigeria; Senegal; South Africa; Albania; Australia; Bangladesh; Canada; China; Denmark ...
Journal asiatique; Journal of Asian and African Studies; The Journal of Asian Studies; Journal of Contemporary Asia; Journal of the American Oriental Society; Journal of the International Association of Tibetan Studies; Journal of the Malaysian Branch of the Royal Asiatic Society; Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society; Journal of Vietnamese Studies
Matsuoka, Yayori Matsui and others were members of the Ajia Josei Kaihō (Asian Women's Liberation Group). [50]: 246 Another ūman ribu publication was Onna erosu, which started in the 1970s and had a diverse perspective on social movements. [51] The ūman ribu anthology for women in Japan came out in 1972 and was called Onna's Thought. [52]