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F-words: Emojis can be feminist too | Engender blog | Engender
in the world of emojis. The Pride flag - 🏳️‍🌈 -, for example, only entered Emojipedia in 2016. Couples representing women who love women and men who love men have been around for several years too. This year, the trans pride flag emoji

F-words: Emojis can be feminist too | Engender blog | Engender
in the world of emojis. The Pride flag - 🏳️‍🌈 -, for example, only entered Emojipedia in 2016. Couples representing women who love women and men who love men have been around for several years too. This year, the trans pride flag emoji

Guest blog: Women Saying No (Indyref Thursday #8) | Engender blog | Engender
In particular I take pride in Mary Barbour, a working class woman who led Glasgow tenants to victory against the private landlords and secured a change in the law that benefited tenants throughout the UK, not in Scotland alone. So, it

Guest blog: Indyref, women and politics (Indyref Thursday #5) | Engender blo...
was overwhelmed - both with pride that our movement has provided the opportunities for girls to pursue these careers, but with anger too, as our society fails again to invest in manufacturing, engineering, and secure employment. I see women and

GUEST POST: On Faith and Feminism | Engender blog | Engender
citizen. That hurt my pride. After all, I still have my fancy 2:1 degree in criminology/sociology, including a dissertation on feminism, my bookshelves are still full of feminist books and I’m still fighting the good fight against the

Scottish women and the vote | Engender blog | Engender
rights movement, the first pride march. These campaigns seemed so clear-cut, so obviously the right course of action, so inevitable. But of course they didn’t seem that way at the time. There were all the same concerns and disagreements,

Visibly Invisible: Cultural representations of women with disabilites in con...
MORRIS, J (1993) Pride Against Prejudice , London: Women’s Press OLIVER, M (1990) The Politics of Disablement , Macmillan UK RIDDELL, S and WATSON, N (2003) Introduction, Disability, Culture and Identity , Pearson

Visibly Invisible: Our bodies, our voices, our rights | Engender blog | Engender
though many talked with pride of their roles as step-grans, great-aunts and aunties. Here are some of my key findings from the interview: Nearly all of the women thought that things were definitely improving in terms of

Visibly Invisible: We are not all the same | Engender blog | Engender
p69-90 MORRIS, J (1993) Pride Against Prejudice , London: Women’s Press VERNON, A (1998) Multiple Oppression and the Disabled People’s Movement in The Disability Reader: Social Science Perspectives , ed. Shakespeare, T,

Women and equality: 100 days until indyref | Engender blog | Engender
Scotland can take pride in the fact that women occupy 40 per cent of the seats around the cabinet table in Bute House, and in the individual commitment of the female cabinet secretaries to seeing other women flourish. They will be hoping

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