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suffrage
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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review 11676598.
Published: 30 December 2024
...Elizabeth Manley [email protected] Women's Suffrage in the Americas . Edited by Stephanie Mitchell . Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press , 2024 . Photograph. Figures. Notes. Bibliography. Index. xvii, 413 pp. Cloth, $65.00 . Copyright © 2025 by Duke University...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2013) 93 (2): 315–316.
Published: 01 May 2013
...María Inés Tato The Women’s Suffrage Movement and Feminism in Argentina from Roca to Perón . By Hammond Gregory . Albuquerque : University of New Mexico Press , 2011 . Photographs. Tables. Notes. Bibliography. Index. xi, 267 pp. Paper , $28.95 . Copyright 2013 by Duke...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2017) 97 (2): 223–258.
Published: 01 May 2017
... imposed on women a duty to defend country, race, and gender—increasingly in the public sphere—the lack of suffrage constrained women's political participation. At least two Sonoran women, María de Jesús Váldez and Emélida Carrillo, imagined the vote for women, a vision in which women's suffrage depended...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1965) 45 (1): 164.
Published: 01 February 1965
...Robert E. Quirk Woman Suffrage in Mexico . By Morton Ward M. . Gainesville, Florida , 1962 . University of Florida Press . Illustrations. Notes. Bibliography. Index . Pp. ix , 160 . $5.50 . Copyright 1965 by Duke University Press 1965 In 1953 the Mexican Congress...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2004) 84 (2): 339–342.
Published: 01 May 2004
... University Press 2004 This collection of 15 essays originated in a 1999 conference held at the University of Costa Rica to celebrate the 50th anniversary of women’s suffrage in that country. Four chapters on the struggles of female academics to establish themselves, as well as the discipline of gender...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2002) 82 (1): 175–176.
Published: 01 February 2002
... the view that a strong cross-class women’s suffrage movement developed in the 1920s, but differ on how wide the class divide was. For Barceló-Miller elite suffragists split along party lines, one faction promoting literacy-restricted suffrage, the other paying lip service to womanhood suffrage. For Jiménez...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review 11676702.
Published: 30 December 2024
... weaknesses of ALBA is critical. Lubbock s book offers an important beginning to that conversation. joshua frens-string, University of Texas at Austin doi 10.1215/00182168-11676702 Women s Suffrage in the Americas. Edited by stephanie mitchell. Albuquerque: University of New Mexico Press, 2024. Photograph...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1997) 77 (3): 554–555.
Published: 01 August 1997
... differences, the two most controversial issues she emphasizes are divorce and suffrage. Cool relations between church and state and the liberal reformers in Uruguay led to an early granting of divorce (1907) and suffrage (1938). Argentina’s influx of immigrants brought European influence, but not until Juan...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2003) 83 (1): 182–183.
Published: 01 February 2003
... , $60.00 . Copyright 2003 by Duke University Press 2003 In Vagrants and Citizens , Richard Warren illuminates political activity at the popular level in Mexico City. He argues that the greatest threat to Spain in its last decade of imperial rule was not insurrection, but popular suffrage. Using...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review 11684010.
Published: 30 December 2024
... women s enfranchisement frequently served to deny the vote to others, and to present more nuanced versions of suffrage histories that narrate activists as political actors with agency rather than just passive recipients of the vote from men in power. As Eugenia Rodr´ guez Sa´enz points out in her...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2003) 83 (4): 777–778.
Published: 01 November 2003
... never forgave President Washington for not intervening to release him from prison during the Terror in France. Paine pleaded for universal male suffrage when France and the United States both restricted suffrage to property owners and defended slavery. Abbé Grégoire, champion of Jewish and slave...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1971) 51 (2): 237–249.
Published: 01 May 1971
...David Bushnell It is unlikely that the lack of nineteenth-century data can ever be wholly remedied. From independence through 1852, not only was the suffrage limited by social-economic qualifications but elections were indirect, and only electoral vote totals are readily available. Totals...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2008) 88 (1): 130–131.
Published: 01 February 2008
... moment at hand and shows how Mexican activists, male and female, drew on three modes of citizenship: “liberal invocations of suffrage, traditional expectations of patronage, and revolutionary commitments to popular mobilization” (p. 11). The performance of revolutionary citizenship, she continues...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1997) 77 (2): 245–279.
Published: 01 May 1997
... in power, after 1930, the Liberals passed new electoral legislation and reintroduced universal male suffrage while claiming that theirs was the party of clean elections. In a 1936 message to Congress, President Alfonso López Pumarejo distinguished the new regime from the previous one: the Conservative...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2007) 87 (3): 616–617.
Published: 01 August 2007
... such as the Socialists and Communists but are most interesting when they explore civil-society organizations such as the elite, conservative Catholic Ladies’ League and the liberal National Women’s Council of Uruguay (CONAMU) and Uruguayan Women’s Suffrage Alliance (Alianza), secular middle-class organizations...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2022) 102 (4): 747–749.
Published: 01 November 2022
... in the other two cases. An extremely rigid socioeconomic structure, along with the existence of a cohesive elite, helped the government exclude the plebeians from political bargaining. Political order was imposed in the early 1830s via restrictive suffrage and limited military recruitment that disenfranchised...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (2004) 84 (4): 661–699.
Published: 01 November 2004
... literature on the role of women in Chilean national life in general, and in the political sphere in particular. 9 While much of this literature examines women’s suffrage and political role at the local and national levels, no one has yet studied female elected officials’ actual performance in office. 10...
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Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1998) 78 (4): 631–662.
Published: 01 November 1998
... have remained rather obscure. One of these almost forgotten events was the introduction of universal male suffrage. This change first became a factor in the political life of Puerto Rico during the March 1898 elections for the House of Representatives, elections mandated by the Autonomic Charter...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1969) 49 (4): 801–803.
Published: 01 November 1969
... of Latin America in the early twentieth century is one of “emergent middle sectors” and a shift in the locus of political power from the countryside to the city. The triumph in Argentina of popular suffrage and the Radical Party is usually cited as a case in point. The adequacy of this interpretation...
Journal Article
Hispanic American Historical Review (1999) 79 (3): 575–577.
Published: 01 August 1999
... of the population acquired their political rights in a process culminating in the promulgation of the 1912 Sáenz Peña Law that granted universal male suffrage. As Sábato demonstrates, this widening of the political sphere was not as linear as often thought. In actual fact, universal male suffrage was either...
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