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Third World Women’s Alliance (1971–1980)
Sources:
<ref>http://www.encyclopedia.com/article-1G2-3444701222/third-world-women-alliance.html</ref>

<ref>http://www.davenportsharon.net/web_documents/twwa_findingaid.pdf</ref>

<ref>http://coloredgirls.live.radicaldesigns.org/article.php?id=241</ref>

<ref>http://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/scriptorium/wlm/blkmanif/</ref>

History: The Third World Women’s Alliance was founded in 1971 under the leadership of founding member Frances Beale. The alliance goes back from the 1968 Black Women’s Caucus, they developed into the Black Women’s Liberation Committee and eventually formed an organization independent of Student Non- violent Coordinating Committee. Formed an alliance with a group of revolutionary Puerto Rican women activists to become the Third World Women’s Alliance. Their main focus was to unite women of color across anti-imperialist, anti-sexist, and anti-racist political lines. Now recently the new alliance recognized the ideological links between global capitalism and oppressions experienced by women of color from subjects like race, gender, and class.

The Alliance had many strategies to attack the treats of racism, sexism, and classism. Adding that to empower and preserve the ideology of third world women, membership in the alliance was limited mainly to women of color. The first meeting was on September 25, 1971 and was followed by a series of consciousness-raising sessions, which covered political and cultural education issues such as political prisoners. While losing some lesbians of color, the TWWA’s priority concern was not on homosexuality, but building alliances and coalitions with other revolutionary organizations. To be well known in the public and political actions that take place in the organizations was key.
The common ground in the Alliance was oppression and how they faced oppression from the time they had to resist it. The thought of the Alliance was to bring out the depth of the stress on how the oppression and suffering blacks have experienced. If there is anything to learn from the Alliance is that were a revolutionary feminist groups, which roles are not made from the incompatibility of white role models but to be with the goal of black liberation.

==References==
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Revision as of 08:17, 16 December 2012