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    Women Movement in India

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    Foundation Course 1 Human Rights‚ Gender and Environment Indian Women’s Movement Aparna Basu∗ The roots of the Indian women’s movement go back to the nineteenth century male social reformers who took up issues concerning women and started women’s organizations. Women started forming their own organization from the end of the nineteenth century first at the local and then at the national level. In the years before independence‚ the two main issues they took up were political rights and

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    Anti Arrack Movement

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    Anti +arrack movement Anti +arrack movement means movement against alcoholism. An anti- arrack movement was created in a remote village in Dubagunta‚ in Andhra Pradesh in 1972. It began as a spontaneous movement of women against alcoholism and agitated to force the closure of the arrack (liquor) shop in the village in Nellore district and adopted by the other districts of Andhra Pradesh. There was no organized leadership to start with in the anti-arrack movement. Most of the groundwork

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    Quit India Movement

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    Quit India Movement From Wikipedia‚ the free encyclopedia (Redirected from Quit india movement) Jump to: navigation‚ search The Quit India Movement (Hindi: ???? ????? ??????? Bharat Chodo Andolan)‚ or the August Movement (August Kranti) was a civil disobedience movement launched in India in August 1942 in response to Mohandas Gandhi’s call for immediate independence. The All-India Congress Committee proclaimed a mass protest demanding what Gandhi called "an orderly British

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    The Roots of the Independence Movement There were many factors that led the colonists to push for Independence. Early on‚ the colonies became accustomed to representational government‚ and Parliament’s interference with this right is one major factor that sparked the independence movement. In Virginia‚ the House of Burgesses‚ the first form of representational government in the New World‚ was established in 1619. Moreover‚ the Mayflower Compact was signed as a covenant between God and the people

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    Word Count: The Abolitionist Movement The Abolitionist Movement was the biggest problem in the nineteenth century. This movement was necessary to create a more just and fair society for all Americans for two reasons. One is why should people have to work all day‚ have terrible living conditions‚ be other people’s property for no pay what so ever? Also‚ its discrimination to only have blacks be enslaved. There are many people that helped make this movement possible‚ but three of these people stood

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    Black Power Movement

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    The movement formally arrived in Jackson‚ Mississippi‚ at the capitol‚ but grew out of six years of cumulative anger on the part of members of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC). The Black Power Movement also known as the 1970’s Revolution was an attempt by people with varied interests to make plain the issues which the leaders of the day failed to address. It all started in October of 1968 when hundreds of university students and supporters led by the National Joint Action Commission

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    Anti Bullying Movement

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    English 10 10 October 2014 Anti-Bullying Movement “You’re fat and ugly!” “You’re such a loser!” “Loner!” “Brace face!” “What a freak!” These are the comments that deeply penetrate a child or teenager’s mentality. Psychological problems have occurred that could drive a person to suicidal actions‚ and to think it is suicidal actions over words. With that‚ a social movement has developed to bring awareness on bullying and its wrongness. The anti-bullying movement exists today and is rapidly spreading

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    and more Americans were moving out west. There was much controversy about what the right action plan for slavery was. This resulted in three different Anti-Slavery movements including Gradualism‚ Colonization‚ and Abolition. Gradualism is defined as a policy of gradual reform rather than sudden revolution. The Gradualism Movement was the first attempt by parts of the U.S (mostly northern states) to abolish slavery. The act was passed by the Pennsylvania legislator in March 1780. This plan for

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    The Arts and Craft movement was a social and artistic movement‚ which began in Britain in the second half of the nineteenth century and continued into the twentieth spreading to continental Europe and the USA. Its adherents-artists‚ architects‚ designers and Craftsmen sought to reassert the importance of and craftsmanship in all arts in the face of increasing industrialization‚ which they felt was sacrificing quality in the pursuit of quantity. Its supporters and practioners were united not so much

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    the more significant human rights struggles of the 20th century‚ the Holocaust in the 1940’s and the civil rights movement in the 1960’s‚ one finds many similarities between the struggles of both oppressed peoples. In both societies‚ laws inhibited and prohibited many actions and freedoms of Jewish and African Americans‚ respectively. The proactive actions of individuals in the American civil rights movement succeeded in changing laws because of their willingness to disobey unjust laws. Unfortunately

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