National Council of Women (Romania)
The National Council of Women (Consiliul Național al Femeilor, CNF) was a Romanian women's organization. Active from 1958 to 1989, it was the longest-running women's organization in the Socialist Republic of Romania.[1]
History
editThe Union of Antifascist Women of Romania (Uniunea Femeilor Antifasciste din România), also known as the Union of Democratic Women of Romania (Uniunea Femeilor Democrate din România), was founded in 1944 a state women's organization in Communist Romania.[2] It was a state organization and a branch of the Romanian Communist Party (PCR). Its purpose was to mobilise women in the political ideology of the state, as well as to enforce the party's policy within gender roles and women's rights. It played an important role in the life of women in the state during its existence. From 1958 its role was replaced by the CNF.
References
edit- ^ Raluca Maria Popa (2016). Francisca de Haan (ed.). ""We Opposed It": The National Council of Women and the Ban on Abortion in Romania (1966)" (PDF). Aspasia. 10: 152–160.
- ^ Luciana M. Jinga, Gen şi reprezentare în România comunistă: femeile în cadrul Partidului Comunist Român: 1944‑1989, Editura Polirom, Iaşi, 2015. Luciana M. Jinga, Gender and Representation in Communist Romania: Women within the Romanian Communist Party: 1944-1989, Polirom Publishing House, Iasi, 2015
Further reading
edit- Marilyn Rueschemeyer, Women in the Politics of Postcommunist Eastern Europe
- Claudia-Florentina Dobre, Cristian Emilian Ghi: Quest for a Suitable Past: Myths and Memory in Central and Eastern Europe