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In: Collection idées 118
In: Cahiers de la Fondation Nationale des Sciences Politiques 121
World Affairs Online
In: Res publica: politiek-wetenschappelijk tijdschrift van de Lage Landen ; driemaandelijks tijdschrift, Band 9, Heft 1, S. 111-121
ISSN: 0486-4700
A paper presented at a Conference at Liege, on Mar 10, 1966, dealing with the professional employment & remuneration of F's & the profound changes in the behavior & the mentality of F's in the contemporary world. The % of working F's in Western countries is estimated at around 30-50%. In Germany & Finland, 15% of the Parliament representatives are F's & feminine participation in pol is extensive. In the USSR, the % of F's in leading positions is appropriate to the % of F's in the LF. Russia in 1959 had 20 million more F's than M's among 84 million militant Communist Party members, as revealed at the 21st Party Congress. The N of F delegates to this Congress amounted to 17% of the E. France is, with 1.2%, observed to be at the bottom of a list of %'s of F gov members, as against 4% in the UK, 8% in the Federal Republic of Germany, 9.3 in the Netherlands, 10% each in Denmark & Ireland, & 12% in Poland. The influence of F's in US pol is noted. Pol'ly active women in France come mostly from admin'ive & liberal professions. Of F's without occup's, only 4% exercised any pol'al functions in 1951. Many of these used soc & pol'al participation as an escape from the monotony of their existence & from fam conflicts. It is concluded that women's econ & pol'al position in the modern world depends upon their participation in pol. M. Maxfield.
In: Res publica: politiek-wetenschappelijk tijdschrift van de Lage Landen ; driemaandelijks tijdschrift, Band 10, Heft 3, S. 465-492
ISSN: 0486-4700
An account is given of movements of the extreme right in Europe after WWII. These movements tend to be irrational, anti-Semitic & nat'list. Several attempts have been made to unite them within a European framework: the Malmoe Internationals (1950), which became the European Soc Movement led by Sir O. Mosley & M. Bardeche; the racist New European Order led by R. Binet & G. Armandruz (1951); the Nat'l European Party, founded in 1962 to reject the UN; & the World Union of Nat'l Socialists created in 1962 by the English Nazi Colin Jordan. A country-by-country survey covers the following: Germany (org's of war veterans); Austria (the Tyrolean irredentists); Italy (the neo-Fascists); France (Poujadists, Secret Army Org); Belgium (L. Degrelle; F. Thiriart & his Action & Defense Committee for African Belgians); the UK (Mosley & Jordan); Greece (the army coup); Portugal (Salazar); & Spain (the Falange). I. Langnas.