Social Context / Legislation
|
| • |
The Labour government National
Plan:
"Saw a rise
in Women's employment as the answer to labour
shortages. Further immigration was a politically
unacceptable alternative. By 1967 the Confederation
of British Industry were writing that women
should not be prejudiced against in employment."
(Big Flame
Women's Commission 1976) |
| • |
ABORTION
ACT 1967 passed: A woman can now get
an abortion if continuing the pregnancy
would involve a greater risk to her life,
to her physical or mental health, or to
her existing children; the child would mostly
likely be born seriously handicapped; the
abortion is carried out within the first
28 weeks of pregnancy; or the woman's environment,
or foreseeable environment makes the pregnancy
impossible. This last condition is the 'social
clause' which gives many women access to
abortion. |
| • |
HOMOSEXUAL LAW REFORM
ACT (Sexual Offences Act 1967)
This act makes homosexual acts between consenting
adults legal in private, in England, Scotland
and Wales. This makes the start of Gay Liberation
possible and is very important to lesbians
and the WLM despite the fact that lesbian
acts had never been subject to criminal
laws as such in the UK. |
| • |
The government opens homeless family
accommodation to husbands for the first
time:
"Battered
women lost their refuges and remained without
until Women's
Aid began [in 1974]." (Hanmer
1976) |
|
Organisations / Campaigns
|
| • |
MOTHERS
IN ACTION forms in London in 1967
|
| • |
KING HILL HOSTEL CAMPAIGN, London,
against the government's decision to open
homeless family accommodation to husbands
(see below). |
| • |
THE NATIONAL JOINT
ACTION COMMITTEE ON WOMEN'S EQUAL RIGHTS,
a trade union organisation for equal pay
and rights, forms out of the Ford
strike. They organise a demonstration
in May 1969. |
| • |
Women's rights groups formed in Hull,
around the campaigns by fishermen's wives
for safety improvements on fishing boats:
"Out of this opposition and the
connections it had also for left middle
class women, came the equal rights group
in Hull. Though the working class women
drifted off, it continued as a group and
later organised a meeting for all the
sixth-formers in the town on Women's liberation."
(Rowbotham
1972: 92)
|
| • |
OPEN
DOOR COUNCIL - An umbrella organisation
with an emphasis on women's right to work
and equal pay, in existence from 1918 -
1965. |
| • |
SIX
POINT GROUP - Begun in 1921, this group
had an agenda of 'six points of equality'
for women, hence the name. From the late
60s till their dissolution in 1983, they
were active in co-ordinating other women's
groups on issues of social, economic and
political equality. |
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