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A publicação pode ser exportada nos seguintes formatos: referência da APA (American Psychological Association), referência do IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers), BibTeX e RIS.

Exportar Referência (APA)
Baptista, V. & Alves, P. M. (2022). Women in the mutual societies of Portugal from the end of the nineteenth century to the 1930s . In   Eloisa Betti, Leda Papastefanaki, Marica Tolomelli, Susan Zimmermann (Ed.), Women, work, and activism: Chapters of an inclusive history of labor in the long twentieth century. Budapeste: CEU Press.
Exportar Referência (IEEE)
V. Baptista and P. J. Alves,  "Women in the mutual societies of Portugal from the end of the nineteenth century to the 1930s ", in Women, work, and activism: Chapters of an inclusive history of labor in the long twentieth century,   Eloisa Betti, Leda Papastefanaki, Marica Tolomelli, Susan Zimmermann, Ed., Budapeste, CEU Press, 2022
Exportar BibTeX
@incollection{baptista2022_1732211702989,
	author = "Baptista, V. and Alves, P. M.",
	title = "Women in the mutual societies of Portugal from the end of the nineteenth century to the 1930s ",
	chapter = "",
	booktitle = "Women, work, and activism: Chapters of an inclusive history of labor in the long twentieth century",
	year = "2022",
	volume = "",
	series = "",
	edition = "",
	publisher = "CEU Press",
	address = "Budapeste",
	url = "https://ceupress.com/book/women-work-and-activism"
}
Exportar RIS
TY  - CHAP
TI  - Women in the mutual societies of Portugal from the end of the nineteenth century to the 1930s 
T2  - Women, work, and activism: Chapters of an inclusive history of labor in the long twentieth century
AU  - Baptista, V.
AU  - Alves, P. M.
PY  - 2022
CY  - Budapeste
UR  - https://ceupress.com/book/women-work-and-activism
AB  - This chapter aims to express recent research on the history of women’s work and activism by focusing on women in the mutual societies of Portugal from a gender perspective. The main objective is thus analysing women’s rights and the discrimination prevailing in mixed associations (including women and men as members). Another central purpose involves recognising women-only associations as a space for meeting and collaboration amongst working-class women and feminists that attained a voice in the mutualism movement in which their claims on welfare issues targeted both themselves and their children. Furthermore, we seek to demonstrate that only in women’s mutual associations did the ideals of democracy and equality, advocated by mutualism, become fulfilled for women. However, in fact, only a few women participated in the mutualism congresses during the First Republic, with some women gaining prominent places in the Assemblies but without any known public interventions according to the sources.  
ER  -