Search the Library:

Search within Results
Put exact phrases in double quotes
Search in:
  • Books
  • Journals
  • Magazines
  • Newspapers
  • Encyclopedia
  • Research Topics
  • Uncheck All
Collection(s):
Lexile:
 (Optional)   What is Lexile?
Minimum:
Maximum:
Exact:
Please select at least one (1) media type and then click on "Search".
Please select at least one (1) content type and then click on "Search".

Your search for: subjects:"Mexican American Women Social Conditions"


Collection(s) searched :  Entire Library

 

Found 3 results:

Books:   3
  |  
Journal Articles:   0
  |  
Magazine Articles:   0

Newspaper Articles:   0
  |  
Encyclopedia Articles:   0

Books on: "MEXICAN AMERICAN WOMEN SOCIAL CONDITIONS" (Subject)

3 results

  • 1.


    Chicana Leadership: The Frontiers Reader
    Book by Yolanda Flores Niemann, Susan H. Armitage, Patricia Hart, Karen Weathermon; University of Nebraska Press, 2002
    Subjects: 
    Collections: History, Entire Library

    Chicana Leadership features fifteen essays from the notable women's journal Frontiers: A Journal of Women Studies that demonstrate the strength and diversity of Chicanas as well as their continuing struggle to have their voices heard. Noted scholars discuss issues ranging from the feminist prototype ...
     
  • 2.


    U. S. Chicanas and Latinas within a Global Context: Women of Color at the Fourth World Women's Conference
    Book by Irene I. Blea; Praeger, 1997
    Subjects: 
    Collections: History, Entire Library

    Using her observations of the United Nation's Fourth World Women's Conference held in China in 1995 as a foundation, the author examines the history and current situation of Latinas and attempts to place them in a global context. After examining the goals, objectives, and atmosphere of the ...
     
  • 3.


    From out of the Shadows: Mexican Women in Twentieth-Century America
    Book by Vicki L. Ruiz; Oxford University Press, 1999
    Subjects: 
    Collections: History, Entire Library

    For centuries, Mexican-American women have been creative, innovative forces shaping the cultural and economic development of what is now the American Southwest. Whether living in a labor camp, a boxcar settlement, or an urban barrio, Mexican women nurtured families, worked for wages, built extended ...
     


Sponsored Link