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5 Malala Yousafzai Quotes to Get You Through the Week

  Education equity activist. Youngest-ever Nobel Prize laureate. Inspiration to girls across the globe. On Friday, Malala Yousafzai turned 22, and today we celebrate all she has accomplished and all she is committed to achieving. Here are some of our favorite words of wisdom from Malala to get you through the week: “I raise up …

Media Round Up: Week of July 7th

  Happy Friday! Welcome to our Media Round Up. Each week we’ll be collecting and sharing our favorite gender + politics stories, and here’s what caught our eye this week: 2019 Belongs to Shirley Chisholm Jennifer Steinhauer, The New York Times Fifty years ago, Shirley Chisholm was sworn in as the first Black woman in …

The National Women’s Political Caucus: A Brief History

  On July 10th 1971, more than 320 women came together in Washington D.C. to found the National Women’s Political Caucus (NWPC), the first national organization devoted to increasing women’s involvement in all aspects of political life. They were led by trailblazing leaders (including Gloria Steinem, Shirley Chisholm, and Bella Abzug) who believed that political …

At the Intersection of 2020: A Lens Into Candidate Complexities

  As many Americans wait (not so) patiently for the election of the country’s first woman president, I am struck by how little discussion there is about intersectionality and the current field of candidates. As of today, there are six women and 18 men contending for the Democratic nomination, but the simple sorting of candidates …

100 years later, what we can learn from the Suffrage movement?

This post is adapted from remarks I gave at the Suffrage Centennial Kick-Off Celebration on June 25, 2019, through the Greater Boston Women’s Vote Centennial project.   So many of my heroes come from the women’s suffrage era, starting with my own Gramma Minnie, who used to tell me about growing up in the time …

4th of July: a celebration and a reminder

  4th of July is a day of celebration, but it’s also an important reminder of the service and sacrifice of those who have served in the armed forces. We’re here to remind you of all of the brave women who served and continued their careers of public service in Congress. Spoiler alert: they’re all …

So you lost an election? Here’s what to do next.

You can read the complete Barbara Lee Family Foundation research memo, Relaunch: Resilience and Rebuilding for Women Candidates After an Electoral Loss here.  The 2018 midterm elections saw more women run for elected office than any other time in U.S. history. While that meant that a record number of women would win their elections, it …

Chisholm 50 #BlackWomenLead Summer Reading list

This post originally appeared on the Higher Heights website. In time for summer reading, Higher Heights is proud to present our Chisholm 50 #BlackWomenLead Summer Reading list. We are honored and excited to highlight dynamic Black women authors, who in the spirit of Shirley Chisholm– are truth tellers and have written stories to illuminate larger …

The Civil Rights Act of 1964: The Women Who Helped Make It Happen

Photograph: Pauli Murray, Florence Price Dwyer On July 2, 1964, President Lyndon Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act, prohibiting discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, and national origin and changing the lives of millions of Americans. When reading about the passage of the Civil Rights Act, you’ll see a lot about the men …

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