Feminist Activist Resources on the Net


This guide is particularly oriented toward connecting Feminists who are Activists to resources on the Internet which could be useful. I have tried, where available, to connect people to other indexes about a particular topic or on a particular Internet resource.

Index


hide random home screenshot http://www.igc.apc.org/women/feminist.html (World Wide Web Directory, 06/1995)


Communicating with other Feminists

Communicating through electronic mail

Joan Korenman's Gender-Related Electronic Forums from the WMST-L list was recently revised.

Another good guide, which lists many of the mailing lists in addition to some explanations of Internet resources is Laura Hunt's Guide (about 73K)


Usenet News Groups:

Note: not all of these groups will be accessible from this home page. Your system will need to 1) carry Usenet newsgroups, 2) carry these particular groups, and 3) have the World Wide Web client configured to access news.

Soc.feminism is a moderated Usenet group with a lot of good information and discussion.

Sources for soc.feminism (sometimes this site is busy--retry later)

Search the sources for soc.feminism for keywords.

Alt.feminism was created in 1992, by people who do not want to use a moderated group. It has many more articles at a time than soc.feminism, and can be more contentious.

FAQ for alt.feminism is posted monthly.

Other newsgroups worth noting:

Soc.women is not specifically feminist, but is worth mentioning.

Talk.abortion is the place to go if you want to argue about abortion.

The FAQs for talk.abortion includes FACE information.


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Some Current Feminist Issues

Reproductive Rights

Laurie Mann has an Abortion Rights Web page, which has links about abortion rights and about feminism.

The Women's Studies collection at the University of Maryland has a number of the laws and court cases involving reproductive rights.

The National Organization for Women has information about current actions and the historical fight for reproductive rights.

There is a good repository of Pro-Choice information, including the Electronic newsletter Choice-Net , from the NARAL affiliate California Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League (CARAL), although now it is dated to November 1994. You can view the CARAL Web Page, access their menu-based listing, or do a full-text search on the information. The Web Page includes clinic violence information, and links to anti-choice pages.

Body Politic is a monthly pro-choice news magazine "focusing on people and events involved in the continuing struggle over reproductive freedom." Its table of contents and some articles are available on-line, as well as information about subscribing.

The Pro-Choice page at Carnegie-Mellon University has an interesting collection of pro-choice documents.

This explanation of the Freedom of Access to Clinic Entrances Act (FACE) of 1994 explains the act and provides the full text of the Act along with current information on legal challenges. (60K).

Connect to Specific Organizations on this page for more reproductive rights groups.

The text of the 1973 Roe v. Wade decision is available in hypertext form.

There is a thorough repository of information on the United Nations International Conference on Population and Development in September 1994 at the International Institute of Sustainable Development in Canada.



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Sexual Harassment and Rape

The EEOC list of sexual harassment resources (publications, books, and videos) is available.

Preventing Sexual Harassment in the Workplace mainly defines "sexual harassment".

The Women's Studies' collection at the University of Maryland has sexual harassment information, including EEOC information, the testimony of Anita Hill, and the Merit Systems Protection Board Report.

Judith Weiss has a complete set of information on her Assault Prevention Information Network.


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Domestic Violence

Aliza Sherman's SafetyNet Domestic Violence Resources contains a domestic violence handbook; bibliographies and book catalogs; lists of numbers for State Coalitions and help resources; and statistics.

Domestic Violence Training Materials information is available at the archive of the "Family-L" mailing list.

Boston University has information on domestic violence, particularly related to Massachusetts laws and dating violence.

The University of Minnesota lists diverse resources for domestic violence survivors and others in the Twin Cities area.


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Women of Color

The Women of Color Resource Center has a Speaker's Bureau and a newsletter.

Information about the Chicana-Latina Research Center is available at UCLA's Chicano/LatinoNet.

The Native American Women's Health Education Resource Center works on education, health, leadership, and other issues.


Global Issues

The Fourth World Conference on Women WWW site from Linkages points to the resources on the Internet for this conference.

Women for Women in Bosnia, a part of the Electronic Embassy project, link women to women in the former Yugoslavia through financial support and correspondence.

Information Bank on African Development Studies (IBADS) has a gopher site with documents on development for the women of Africa.

WEDO, the Women's Environment and Development Organization, seeks "...to transform women's concerns about the environment, development, population and gender equity into actions, programs and policies...". They also have information about the Fourth World Conference on Women.

The United Nations' gopher includes material about the Fourth World Conference on Women, the Commission on the Status of Women, and the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women.


Women and Health
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Women and Work

The Glass Ceiling Commission has research papers and a fact-finding report.

Equal Pay information from the US Department of Labor was written in 1992.

The Women's Bean Project of Colorado was "created to provide an environment in which women who are homeless or living in poverty can choose to maximize their personal economic and/ or social potential."

A list of women's professional organizations is found at CMU.

A fact sheet on Women and Work was gathered by the Ms. Foundation for Women.

Dataline is an organization which works on glass-ceiling cases.


Other Topics

The Equal Rights Amendment text is available.

A good starting place for women's health is another one of those good guides from the University of Michigan, Tricia A. Segal and Julie J. Lea's Women's Health Resources on the Internet.


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Feminist and Women's Organizations

Lists

The English-Server at CMU has a List of Women's Organizations.

The resources file for soc.feminism lists many feminist organizations. The file is approximately 67 K. You can search this and other soc.feminism files for text.

IGC has a list of the international women's groups on the IGC system. E-mail addresses are included, and some have gophers.


Specific Organizations

CARAL North (California Abortion and Reproductive Rights Action League) has a lot of useful information.

Global Fund for Women is an international grantmaking organization.

You can connect to Yahoo's list of League of Women Voters chapters online.

Betsy Shore's page on Mass Choice

The Ms. Foundation for Women sponsors "Take Our Daughters to Work", among other projects.

The National Organization for Women (NOW) has a home page with a lot of information, including their newsletter.

Rock for Choice is raising money for pro-choice organizations at Lollopalooza.

WEDO is the Women's Environment and Development Organization.

WHAM!, the Women's Health and Action Mobilization group, is a direct action group committed to demanding, securing and defending absolute reproductive freedom and quality health care for all women.

The Women Leaders Online (formerly the Women's Leadership Network) is a new group dedicated to stopping the Radical Right agenda.

Zero Population Growth advocates population stabilization, both in the United States and worldwide.


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Feminist Resources

Specific Topics

The University of Maryland at College Park Inform System has a particularly complete selection of resources, with an emphasis on women's studies.

Carnegie Mellon's "English-Server" has two good home pages, concentrating on feminism and on gender and sexuality.

Internet Resources for Women's Legal and Public Policy Information is well-organized, and descriptive.

The Queer Resources Directory is a complete archive of lesbian, bisexual, and gay information.

CPSR's Gender Issues page particularily specializes in women and computer networks .


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Resources for Women in General

An index of women's resources on the Net is found at MIT, maintained by Jessie Stickgold-Sarah.

The Institute for Global Communications has an international focus in its information for women.

Virtual Sisterhood is dedicated to increasing women's access to and effective use of electronic communications.

Martin Ramsch's Frauen in Gesellschaft und Studium is helpful even if you don't speak German.

Women's Resources on the Internet is found at the University of North Carolina, and has links to many women's colleges.

Check out Jim Mansfield's list of Feminist Resources.

Laurie Mann's Abortion Rights and Other Feminist Issues Web links to numerous online feminist publications.


Women's News

News on Women from IGC has a progressive, international angle.

The Political Woman Hotline is a new online briefing from the Women's Leadership Network, with an activist bent.

ON THE ISSUES The Progressive Women's Quarterly , a "a feminist, humanist magazine of critical thinking, dedicated to fostering collective responsibility for positive social change," puts sample articles on their web site.

The San Francisco Examiner has a page called Women's Web, which includes news about women's issues, but hasn't been updated in a while.

If your system carries them, the ClariNet news groups has the AP and Reuters stories about women's issues in clari.news.women.

The National NOW Times is available at the National Organization for Women's Web site, and contains many articles about feminist actions and issues.

Subscription information for the Women's Feature Service, a daily women's news feature service written by women in all regions of the world, with a particular emphasis on developing countries can be found here. You can subscribe for a fee through your Internet account or read it on IGC.


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General Resources for Political Activists


Government Resources

Federal

Executive Branch
The White House Web page looks great in graphic format, but is still helpful in text format.

Executive Branch information is available at the Library of Congress, and Fedworld, maintained by NTIS.

Legislative Branch
Access the Web page of the House of Representatives and the gopher of the Senate

Library of Congress's home page on Congress connects you to partisan and non-partisan sources.

The Congressional Quarterly has a Gopher with some of the information from their publications.

Look up Congressional bills using Congress's service Thomas or Will T. Bill from Unipress.

Look up the Congressional committee assignments.

Judicial
Legal Information Institute's Supreme Court decisions are arranged by topic and by date and are searchable.

Menu-based Supreme Court Decisions are available at Project Hermes in a number of file formats.


State and Local

The Library of Congress maintains information about state and local governments.


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Activism in General

The Progressive Directory at IGC has a lot of helpful information, including headline news for the week with a progressive, international angle.

Misc.activism.progressive is a Usenet news group which has information from many progressive groups with an activist focus. There is some overlap with IGC's news.

GNN has a page on Government page and one on Politics.

The EINet page on Politics is very extensive.

There is a list of non-profits on the Internet maintained by Ellen Spertus. If your network connection is slow, you can get a icon-free version here.

The Internet Non-Profit Center.has lists of non-profits, with donation and volunteer information.

Connect to Kathy Watkins' Activist's Oasis for other great Internet tools for activists, especially media ones.

Check out Mother Jones's Internet site, with articles like "The Choices" (alternatives to surgical abortions) or Woman Warrior, on Karen Nussbaum's fight for working women's rights.

Finally, don't forget you can search the rest of the Web with Yahoo or the AliWeb database.


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Feminist Activist Calendar


September 4-15 1995
UN Fourth World Conference on Women: Action for Equality, Development and Peace in Beijing, China. Information about NGOs and the conference is available at IGC.
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TAKE ACTION


Suggestion for Current Feminist Activity


Surgeon General Nomination

Let your senators know whether you think having performed abortions as a gynecologist should be a disqualifer for a Surgeon General. You can look up their phone and fax numbers by name or state abbreviation..

Extensive information about Dr. Henry Foster has been prepared by the People for the American Way Action Fund and Planned Parenthood.


Welfare "Reform":

The "Personal Responsibility Act" attacks the reproductive rights and lives of poor women.

WHAM! has put together a good page of information, actions, and local contacts for getting involved in this issue.


Other suggestions given.

Send action suggestions


Feminist Fun and Games

A Cartoon for Feminist Activists by Cath Jackson .

Ellen Spertus has a page about the sometimes humorous side of being a woman in computing.

Laura Marie Doyle has collected information about Feminist Science Fiction.

Feminist Film Reviews are available at the University of Maryland.


Created and maintained by Sarah Stapleton-Gray, sarahg@netcom.com. Copyright Sarah Stapleton-Gray, 1994.

WWW space provided by the Institute for Global Communications.

Last updated on June 10th, 1995.

Please send comments, additions, suggestions.


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