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Fonds

Records of the Equal Rights International Group

Catalogue reference: 5/ERI

What’s it about?

This record is about the Records of the Equal Rights International Group dating from 1926-1934.

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Full description and record details

Reference
5/ERI
Title
Records of the Equal Rights International Group
Date
1926-1934
Description

Correspondence (1929-1934) with members, affiliated branches and other groups, annual reports (1929-1934), minutes and correspondence of the Equal Political Rights Campaign Committee (1927-1930), papers relating to the foundation of ERI (1926-1930) and to their work with the League of Nations (1930-1934), financial papers including the accounts of the ERI and the National Women's Party (1932-3).

Related material

<p>The Women's Library also holds the papers of the Open Door International Group (5/ODI) and the Six Point Group (5/SPG).</p>

Held by
London University: London School of Economics, The Women's Library
Language
English, French, German, Italian, Spanish
Creator(s)
<corpname>Equal Rights International, 1930-[c1939]</corpname>
Physical description
7 boxes
Access conditions

This collection is open for consultation. Intending readers are advised to contact The Women's Library in advance of their first visit.

Administrative / biographical background

In the period after the First World War, when the franchise was granted to women in a growing number of countries, the focus of activity for women's groups in the West changed from campaigning for female suffrage to campaigning for equality of rights with men. When progress was impeded at a national level, many began to look to international change. Campaigning was undertaken to press the League of Nations to pass an Equal Rights treaty. In 1929 the British Six Point Group and Open Door Council had worked together to form Open Door International to secure this and equal pay for female workers and at first the League appeared to support this work. However, when plans for an equal rights treaty emerged, Open Door International opposed it as too vague to repeal contemporary discriminatory laws. In response to this situation, Equal Rights International was founded in 1930 by members of the Six Point Group with the support of the National Women's Party to continue the process, aiming to 'work for the adoption of the Equal Rights Treaty by all nations'. Members of the Geneva-based group included Vera Brittain, who was active in the promotion of the Equal Rights Treaty from 1929, Jessie Street, who became vice-president in 1930 and the journalist Linda Littlejohn who became president in 1935. Member countries of the League of Nations were lobbied to back the treaty, but no member country could be found to place the item on the Assembly's agenda. Despite this, work continued and the ERI became affiliated to the Liaison Committee of International Women's Organisations in order to gain increased access to members of the League of Nations secretariat. An initial lack of success was followed by hope in the late 1930s, when a committee of inquiry into women's legal status across the world was created. However, this work also came to nothing as the Second World War began. The organisation appears to have been wound up some time after this.

Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/d1210abc-2d93-421f-85e0-d517f114ea8d/

Catalogue hierarchy

You are currently looking at the fonds: 5/ERI

Records of the Equal Rights International Group