FAQs: The ACLU Women's Rights Project and Women's History Month
The ACLU's Women's Rights Project was founded in 1972 by Ruth Bader Ginsburg. Through litigation, community outreach, advocacy and public education, WRP empowers poor women, women of color and immigrant women who have been subject to gender bias and who face pervasive barriers to equality . WRP works to ensure that women and their families can enjoy the benefits of full equality and participation in every sphere of society.
What are the Women's Right's Project priority areas?
The ACLU Women's Rights Project focuses its work in four core areas of women's
rights:
EMPLOYMENT VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN CRIMINAL JUSTICE EDUCATION |
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Your support helps the ACLU defend women's rights and a broad range of civil liberties.
What is Women's History Month?
Women's History Month had humble beginnings when a single week in
March was recognized as “Women's History Week” in Sonoma County, California
in 1978. At the time an education task force in Sonoma recommended that in
order to help school principals meet Title IX regulations they celebrate a
Women's History Week. Women's History Week included school and community events
highlighting important contributions of women. The original Women's History
Week in March was chosen in part to coincide with International Women's Rights
Day (March 8th). Women's History Week went national in 1981 when Senator
Orrin Hatch, Republican of Utah, and Representative Barbara Mikulski, Democrat
of Maryland, presented a congressional resolution to recognize Women's History
Week across the country. In 1987, Congress agreed to extend Women's History
Week to include the entire month of March.
Why is Women's History Month important?
Women have made many important gains in social and economic equality in the U.S.
over the past century. Women's History Month draws attention to the women who
helped lead the way in fighting for those rights. Women's History Month also
helps draws attention to current struggles for women's equality, such as ensuring
economic and educational opportunities for all women, ending violence agains t
wo men, and addressing the harms to women and girls caught up in the criminal
justice system.

