In 1913, partly in reaction to what she perceived as the too moderate views of other Catholic suffragists like
Margaret Fletcher, Alberti published a pamphlet,
Woman Suffrage and Pious Opponents, arguing that Catholic women did not need to oppose women’s suffrage on pious grounds. From 1915, while working part-time at the
Public Record Office, Alberti belonged to the Catholic Women’s Suffrage Society and was the inaugural editor of its journal
The Catholic Suffragist. Women’s suffrage was the main focus of the journal, but Leonora also wrote articles against laws which discriminated against women and reactions to sexist publications. In the 1920s, Alberti served as honorary secretary for the Council for the Representation of Women in the
League of Nations. == References ==