Site Navigation
Categories:
Peace organizations
Human rights
International relations
Feminist organizations
Nonviolence
Rights
Articles lacking in-text citations
Summary Of: Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
Encyclodia Page On: Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
These Are Links To Other Documents
|
list of references
|
external links
|
inline citations
|
improve
|
where appropriate
|
peace
|
non-profit
|
non-governmental organization
|
war
|
oppression
|
exploitation
|
Geneva
|
Switzerland
|
United Nations
|
New York City
|
violence
|
poverty
|
pollution
|
equality
|
racism
|
sexism
|
homophobia
|
disarmament
|
Washington, D.C.
|
Jane Addams
|
Carrie Chapman Catt
|
neutral countries
|
mediation
|
The Hague
|
April 28
|
April 30
|
1915
|
German
|
feminist
|
jurist
|
Dutch
|
pacifist
|
suffragist
|
Aletta Jacobs
|
war
|
Europe
|
belligerent
|
nations
|
Woodrow Wilson
|
Zürich
|
peace treaty
|
revenge
|
world war
|
Geneva
|
League of Nations
|
Nobel Peace Prize
|
Emily Greene Balch
|
Consultative Status
|
UN Economic and Social Council
|
United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
|
United Nations Conference on Trade and Development
|
International Labour Organization
|
Food and Agriculture Organization
|
United Nations Children's Fund
|
democratization
|
Security Council
|
General Assembly
|
veto
|
Jeannette Rankin
|
Jane Addams
|
Raging Grannies
|
A Single Woman (play)
|
A Single Woman (movie)
|
Jeanmarie Simpson
|
ISBN 0-8156-0269-3
|
ISBN 0-9506968-0-3
|
ISBN 0-8156-2662-2
|
ISBN 0-8203-1147-2
|
London School of Economics
|
Categories
|
Peace organizations
|
Human rights
|
International relations
|
Feminist organizations
|
Nonviolence
|
Rights
|
Articles lacking in-text citations
|
This article is licensed under the
GNU Free Documentation License
. It uses material from the
Wikipedia article "Women's International League for Peace and Freedom"
.