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Gender and the Conservative Party, 1880s to the present

Historians and political scientists have deemed the twentieth century 'the Conservative Century', owing to the electoral and cultural dominance of the Conservative Party in Britain. This book traces the relationship among women, gender and the Conservative Party from the 1880s to the present, and thereby seeks to fill that gap. A gender inclusive approach allows for a more nuanced understanding of political machinations, power and the unprecedented popularity of both conservatism and unionism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The suffragette Christabel Pankhurst, was regarded as a charismatic, radical figure, who was the co-leader of the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU), a notorious suffrage organization campaigning for the parliamentary vote for women in Edwardian Britain. In 1928 Lady Iveagh, Vice-Chairman of the National Union of Conservative Associations (NUCA), claimed that one million women were members of the Conservative Party. The book focuses on how the Primrose League re-made itself for its female members between 1914 and 1932. It shows that the Conservative Party leadership and male candidates were keen to present themselves as the champions of home interests, playing up their family-man credentials against their rowdy electoral culture of Labour. The book also examines inquires how the deliberate choice of middlebrow rhetoric as well as the language of citizenship enabled Conservative women to construct a cross-class language of democracy. It explores British conservatism, highlighting the history of the Tory Party as part of the study of women and their sectional interest in 'the politics of gender'.

Catherine Akurut

support. Instead, these entities have tended to adopt, what I term, a gender-inclusive approach which presumes that men can simply be included in already existing sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) services, which are designed for women. The OSRSG-SVC report (2013 : 20) suggests it is crucial to treat men in the same manner as women through gender-inclusive programming. However, this manifests as a system in which the same intervention services are offered

Journal of Humanitarian Affairs
Female unionism and conservatism, 1886–1914
Diane Urquhart

inclusive approach also allows for a more nuanced understanding of political machinations, power and the unprecedented popularity of both conservatism and unionism in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Women were drawn into more formal political associations not by any evolutionary process from their early political activism, but by a combination of party self-­interest and the impending political crisis over Irish home rule. Conservatives were conscious of the need to widen their support base beyond the traditional 12 Rethinking right-­wing women rural

in Rethinking right-wing women
Lesley Pruitt
and
Erica Rose Jeffrey

primarily makes a contribution to understanding intersections between gender and age. Examining youth peacebuilders’ experiences across these different communities helps enhance understanding of the diverse ways gender may be represented and negotiated in a variety of settings, and how that might influence young people's experiences of and participation in violence and/or peacebuilding. Integrating intersectionality: a plural, gender-inclusive approach to peace Reflecting on gender or age alone is inadequate for understanding young

in Dancing through the dissonance