STEWART, CIARA,ELIZABETH (2021) Irish Women and Political Petitioning, c. 1870-1918. Doctoral thesis, Durham University.
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PDFPetitioning was one of the few forms of political agitations available to the
disenfranchised of the nineteenth century. This thesis studies petitioning patterns
in order to re-examine the political experience of Irish women in the period 1870-
1918. It addresses the development of a gendered political culture in Ireland and
how petitioning allowed women to partially break the boundaries of a male
dominated political sphere. Petitioning, alongside other campaign methods,
allowed Irish women to become involved in the Irish public and political sphere,
despite going against traditional gender and social conventions. This approach
allows for an examination of the social and denominational characteristics of
Irish women’s organisations in this period and this thesis will show that those
adopting petitions were run predominantly by middle-class Protestant women.
This thesis draws on examples from a variety of women’s movements, through
case studies of the Irish Ladies’ National Association for the Repeal of the
Contagious Diseases Acts, (LNA), the Dublin Women’s Suffrage Association,
(DWSA), their successor the Irish Women’s Suffrage and Local Government
Association, (IWSLGA), the Dublin Women’s Temperance Association, (DWTA),
the Irish Women’s Franchise League, (IWFL) and the Ulster Women’s Unionist
Council, (UWUC).
This thesis places Irish women within previously Anglo-centric studies of
In order to understand the practice of petitioning, this thesis also explores themes
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