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  1. O projeto de lei foi resultado de anos de movimentos femininos liderados por Kate Sheppard. Tais movimentos surgiram no ano de 1880, adquirindo força em 1891 com um documento reunindo mais de 9 mil assinaturas, passando a quase 20 mil no ano seguinte e, por fim, em 1893, aproximando-se de 32 mil assinaturas (das quais apenas 21 eram homens).

  2. Katherine Wilson Sheppard ( née Catherine Wilson Malcolm; 10 March 1848 – 13 July 1934) was the most prominent member of the women's suffrage movement in New Zealand and the country's most famous suffragist. Born in Liverpool, England, she emigrated to New Zealand with her family in 1868.

  3. It gives an overview of the women's movement in New Zealand from the 1880s to the end of the First World War from the perspective of its key participant, and fleshes out, as much as was possible, one of New Zealand's more attractive public figures. Massey. University.

  4. Experienced non-fiction author Maria Gill has written what appears to be the first picture book biography of Kate Sheppard, the woman who led the campaign in New Zealand to make us the first country in the world to allow women – including Māori women – to vote.

  5. Kate Sheppard: Leading the way for women is a creative non-fiction sophisticated picture book; telling a real story in story-format. It is written in third person and chronologically tells Kate Sheppard’s life, focusing on the lead up to women getting the vote.

    • 508KB
    • 5
  6. Kate Sheppard - Free download as PDF File (.pdf) or read online for free.

  7. Kate Sheppard, English-born activist, who was a leader in the woman suffrage movement in New Zealand. She was instrumental in making New Zealand the first country in the world to grant women the right to vote (1893).