Feminism and the Making of a Child Rights Revolution
1969ā1979
- English
- ePUB (mobile friendly)
- Available on iOS & Android
About This Book
When Australian women's liberationists challenged prevailing expectations of female domesticity, they were accused of being anti-mother and anti-child. Feminism and the Making of a Child Rights Revolution provides a much-needed reassessment of this stereotype. Drawing on extensive archival research and personal accounts, it places feminists at the forefront of a new wave of children's rights activism that went beyond calls for basic protections for children, instead demanding their liberation. Historian Isobelle Barrett Meyering revisits this revolutionary approach and charts the debates it sparked within the women's movement. Her examination of feminists' ground-breaking campaigns on major social issues of the 1970sāfrom childcare to sex education to family violenceāalso reveals women's concerted efforts to apply this ideal in their personal lives and to support children's own activism. Feminism and the Making of a Child Rights Revolution sheds light on the movement's expansive vision for social change and its lasting impact on the way we view the rights of women and children.
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Table of contents
- Cover
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Contents
- Introduction: Childhood is Hell
- Chapter 1: Why Childrenās Liberation?
- Chapter 2: Free Mum, Free Dad, Free Me, Free Child Care
- Chapter 3: Educate to Liberate
- Chapter 4: What Every Girl Should Know
- Chapter 5: Exposing Abuse
- Afterword: Care for Kids?
- Endnotes
- Bibliography
- Index