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  2. Women's suffrage in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women's_suffrage_in_Japan

    The government sector was perhaps the most significant, as it spawned the League for the Realization of Women's Suffrage (Fujin Sanseiken Kakutoku Kisei Domei), later the Women's Suffrage League (Fusen Kakutoku Domei), which became the most influential and outspoken women's advocacy collective of the era. The government satellite issued a ...

  3. Ichikawa Fusae - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ichikawa_Fusae

    Ichikawa Fusae (市川 房枝, May 15, 1893 – February 11, 1981) was a Japanese feminist, politician and a leader of the women's suffrage movement. [1] Ichikawa was a key supporter of women's suffrage in Japan, and her activism was partially responsible for the extension of the franchise to women in 1945.

  4. Women in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Japan

    Women in Japan were recognized as having equal legal rights to men after World War II. Japanese women first gained the right to vote in 1880, but this was a temporary event limited to certain municipalities, [6] [7] and it was not until 1945 that women gained the right to vote on a permanent, nationwide basis. [8]

  5. Feminism in Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Feminism_in_Japan

    A women's rights group meeting in Tokyo, to push for universal suffrage. While women's advocacy has been present in Japan since the nineteenth century, aggressive calls for women's suffrage in Japan surfaced during the turbulent interwar period of the 1920s. Enduring a societal, political, and cultural metamorphosis, Japanese citizens lived in ...

  6. New Japan Women's League - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_Japan_Women's_League

    The New Japan Women's League (NJWL or Shin Nihon Fujin Dōmei) was a non-partisan [1] women's organization in Japan formed by Fusae Ichikawa on November 3, 1945, after WWII. . The NJWL was established to improve women's legal status in Japan, [2] gain women's suffrage, develop policies for women's lives, education and work, [3] and inform Japanese women about democracy and citizenship

  7. League of Women Voters of Japan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/.../League_of_Women_Voters_of_Japan

    The League of Women Voters of Japan (Nihon Fujin Yūkensha Dōmei) was a Japanese NGO advocating equal rights for women. It was established by Senator Fusae Ichikawa and other feminists in 1945, when Japanese women obtained the right to vote, inspired by the American League of Women Voters .

  8. Kusunose Kita - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kusunose_Kita

    This is how, for the first time in modern Japan, active participation in elections for women was realized. Because the national government revised the above-mentioned law in 1884, however, the towns and villages were deprived of their right to enact their own election rulebook, and the right to vote was again restricted to men only.

  9. Women in government - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_government

    Since the enactment of the modern Japanese Constitution in 1947, Japanese women have been given the right to vote, and the new version of the constitution also allows for a more democratic form of government that guarantees women equality under the law.