North America In Canada and the United States, the movement developed out of the
Civil Rights Movement,
Anti-War sentiment toward the Vietnam War, the
Native Rights Movement and the
New Left student movement of the 1960s. Between 1965 and 1966, papers presented at meetings of the
Students for a Democratic Society and articles published in journals, such as the Canadian
Random began advocating for women to embark on a path of self-discovery free from male scrutiny. In 1967, the first Women's Liberation organizations formed in major cities like Berkeley, Boston, Chicago, New York City and Toronto. Quickly organizations spread across both countries. In Mexico, the first group of liberationists formed in 1970, inspired by the
student movement and US women's liberationists. Organizations were loosely organized, without a hierarchical power structure and favored all-women participation to eliminate defining women or their autonomy by their association with men. Groups featured consciousness-raising discussions on a wide variety of issues, the importance of having freedom to make choices, and the importance of changing societal attitudes and perceptions of women's roles. Canadian women's lib groups typically incorporated a class-based component into their theory of oppression which was mostly missing from US liberation theory, which focused almost exclusively on sexism and a belief that women's oppression stemmed from their gender and not as a result of their economic or social class. In Quebec, women's and Quebec's autonomy were entwined issues with women struggling for the right to serve as jurors. Advocating public self-expression by participating in protests and sit-ins, liberationists demonstrated against discriminatory hiring and wage practices in Canada, while in the US liberationists protested the
Miss America Beauty Pageant for objectifying women. In both countries women's liberation groups were involved protesting their legislators for abortion rights for women. In Mexico liberationists protested at the Monument to the Mother on
Mother's Day to challenge the idea that all women were destined to be mothers. Challenging gender definitions and the sexual relationship to power drew lesbians into the movement in both the United States and Canada. Because liberationists believed that sisterhood was a uniting component to women's oppression, lesbians were not seen as a threat to other women. Another important aspect for North American women was developing spaces for women to meet with other women, offer counseling and referral services, provide access to feminist materials, and establish
women's shelters for women who were in abusive relationships. Increasingly mainstream media portrayed liberationists as man-haters or deranged outcasts. To gain legitimacy for the recognition of sexual discrimination, the media discourse on women's issues was increasingly shaped by the
liberal feminist's reformist aims. As liberationists were marginalized, they increasingly became involved in single focus issues, such as violence against women. By the mid-1970s, the women's liberation movement had been effective in changing the worldwide perception of women, bringing sexism to light and moving reformists far to the left in their policy aims for women, but in the haste to distance themselves from the more radical elements, liberal feminists attempted to erase their success and rebrand the movement as the Women's Movement.
Asia By the 1970s, the movement had spread to Asia with women's liberation organizations forming in Japan in 1970. The
Yom Kippur War raised awareness of the subordinate status of Israeli women, fostering the growth of the WLM. In India, 1974 was a pivotal year when activists from the
Navnirman Movement against corruption and the economic crisis, encouraged women to organize direct actions to challenge traditional leadership. In 1975, liberationist ideas in South Korea were introduced by
Lee Hyo-jae a professor at
Ewha Woman's University after she had read western texts on the movement which were first translated into Korean in 1973. Similarly,
Hsiu-lien Annette Lu, who had completed her graduate courses in the United States, brought liberationist ideas to Taiwan, when she returned and began publishing in the mid-1970s. In Singapore and other Asian countries, conscious effort was made to distinguish their movement from decadent, "
free sex"
Western feminist ideals, while simultaneously addressing issues that were experienced worldwide by women. In India, the struggle for women's autonomy was rarely separated from the struggle against the
caste system and in Israel, though their movement more closely resembled the WLM in the US and Europe, the oppression of
Palestinian women was a focal area. In Japan, the movement focused on freeing women from societal perceptions of limitations because of their sex, rather than on a stand for equality. In South Korea, women workers' concerns merged with liberationist ideas within the broader fight against dictatorship, whereas in Taiwan, theories of respect for women and eliminating double standards were promoted by weaving in
Confucianist philosophy.
Europe In Europe, the women's liberation movement started in the late 1960s and continued through the 1980s. Inspired by events in North America and triggered by the growing presence of women in the labor market, the movement soon gained momentum in Britain and the Scandinavian countries. Though influenced by leftist politics, liberationists in general were resistant to any political order which ignored women entirely or relegated their issues to the sidelines. Women's liberation groups in Europe were distinguished from other feminist activists by their focus on women's rights to control their own bodies and sexuality, as well as their direct actions aimed at provoking the public and making society aware of the issues faced by women. There were robust women's liberation movements in Western European countries, including developments in Greece, Portugal and Spain, which in the period were emerging from dictatorships. Many different types of actions were held throughout Europe. To increase public awareness of the problems of equal pay, liberationists in Denmark staged a bus sit-in, where they demanded lower fares than male passengers to demonstrate their wage gap. Swedish members of
Grupp 8 heckled politicians at campaign rallies, demanding to know why women were only allowed part-time jobs and thus were ineligible for pensions. To address the objectification of women, Belgian liberationists protested at beauty pageants,
Dolle Minas in the Netherlands and
Nyfeministene of Norway invaded male-only bars,
Irish Women United demonstrated against male-only bathing at
Forty Foot promontory and Portuguese women dressed as a bride, a housewife and a sex symbol, marching in
Edward VII Park. Reacting on two killings of women in the streets, on 1 March 1977 women in West Berlin started demonstrating at night – later to be repeated as
Walpurgis Night every year on May Day eve. Women in England, Scotland and Wales took up the idea of
Reclaim the Night marches to challenge the notion that women's behavior caused the violence perpetrated against them. Spanish liberationists from the
Colectivo Feminista Pelvis (Pelvis Feminist Collective), ''Grup per l'Alliberament de la Dona'' (Group for Women's Liberation) and
Mujeres Independientes (Independent Women) carried funeral wreaths through the streets of
Mallorca calling for an end to sexual abuse and a judicial system which allowed men to use alcohol or
passion as mitigating factors for sexual violence. In Iceland, women virtually shut down the country; when spurred by liberationists, 90% of them took ''
Women's Day Off'' and refused to participate in household duties or work, instead of attending a protest rally. In almost all Western European countries liberationists fought for elimination of barriers to free and unrestricted access to contraception and abortion. In Austria, to advocate for the abolition of section 144 of their criminal code, activists used street theater performance. Prominent French activists declared their criminal actions signing the
Manifesto of the 343, admitting to having had abortions, as did German activists who signed the
Manifesto of the 374. Irish activists
took the train and crossed into Northern Ireland to secure prohibited contraception devices and upon their return flouted authorities bypassing the contraband to the public. In the UK, an uneasy alliance formed between liberationists, the
National Abortion Campaign and trade unionists to fight a series of bills designed to restrict abortion rights. In Italy, 50,000 women marched through the streets of Rome demanding their right to control their own bodies, but as was typically the result throughout Europe, compromise reform to existing law was passed by the government, limiting the decision by gestation or requiring preliminary medical authorization. Throughout the period, publishing was crucial for disseminating the theory and ideas of liberation and other feminist schools of thought. Initially many activists relied on translations of material from the US, but increasingly the focus was on producing country-specific editions, or local journals to allow activists to adapt the movement slogan the "personal is political" to reflect their own experiences. Journals and newspapers founded by liberationists included Belgium's
Le Petit livre rouge des femmes (The Little Red Book of Women), France's '''' (Waging the Battle), Greece's
Gia tin Apeleftherosi ton Gynaikon (For the Liberation of Women), Italy's
Sottosopra (Upside Down), the Scottish ''The Tayside Women's Liberation Newsletter
or the British Spare Rib'', among many others. In the UK, a
news service called the
Women's Information and Referral Service (WIRES) distributed news of WLM groups throughout the nation. In
West Germany a book distribution run by lesbians snowballed feminist knowledge from 1974 on. Two feminist monthlies -
Courage and
EMMA - spread the new ideas. The women's camp on
Femø organized by the
Red Stocking Movement (Denmark) facilitated international exchange too. In 1974 this gathering in the sun gave birth to the first
International Tribunal on Crimes against Women held in
Brussels 1976. Books like
Die Klosterschule (The Convent School, 1968) by
Barbara Frischmuth, which evaluated patriarchy in the
parochial schools of Austria,
The Female Eunuch (Paladin, 1970) by
Germaine Greer and
The Descent of Woman (1972) by Welsh author and feminist
Elaine Morgan, brought women into the movement who thought that their lives differed from those of women in large urban settings where the movement originated. Other influential publications included the British edition of
Our Bodies, Ourselves (1971) edited by
Angela Phillips and
Jill Rakusen;
Frauenhandbuch Nr. 1: Abtreibung und Verhütungsmittel (Women's Guide # 1: Abortion and Contraceptives, 1971) produced in Germany by
Helke Sander and
Verena Stefan and
Skylla sig själv (Self-blame, 1976) by Swede
Maria-Pia Boëthius, which evaluated
rape culture applied analysis and solutions to local areas. In some cases, books themselves became the focus of liberationists' protests over censorship, as in the case of the Norwegian demonstration at the publishing house
Aschehoug, which was forced to publish a translation of the Swedish text ''
(Freedom, Equality and Sisterhood, 1970), or the international outcry which resulted from the ban and arrest of Portuguese authors Maria Teresa Horta, Maria Isabel Barreno and Maria Velho da Costa over their book Novas Cartas Portuguesas'' (
New Portuguese Letters, 1972). As the idea of women's freedom gained mainstream approval, governments and more reformist minded women's groups adopted liberationists' ideas and began incorporating them into compromise solutions. By the early 1980s, most activists in the Women's Liberation Movements in Europe moved on to other single focus causes or transitioned into organizations which were political.
Oceania The
Regatta Hotel protest in 1965, which challenged the ban on serving women drinks in public bars in
Queensland, is recognised as a defining moment in the women's liberation movement in Australia. The first women’s liberation organizations in Australia were formed in
Sydney in 1969, and by 1970 such organizations had reached
Adelaide and
Melbourne, as well as
Wellington and
Auckland. The following year, organizations were formed at the
University of the South Pacific in
Fiji and in
Guam. As in the US and other places where the movement flourished, small consciousness-raising groups with a limited organizational structure were the norm and the focus was on changing societal perception rather than legislation. Involved in public protests, liberationists demonstrated at beauty pageants to protest women's objectification, and invaded male-only pubs. In Australia they ran petition drives and protests in favor of legalizing abortion and in Auckland led a funeral procession through
Albert Park to demonstrate lack of progress on issues which were of concern to women. Liberationists developed multiple publications such as
Broadsheet,
Liberaction,
MeJane,
The Circle and ''Women's Liberation Newsletter'' to address issues and concerns;. They founded women's shelters and women's centers for meetings and child care services, which were open to all women, be they socialists, lesbians, indigenous women, students, workers or homemakers. The diversity of adherents fractured the movement by the early 1980s, as groups began focusing on specific interests rather than solely on sexism. == United Kingdom ==