League of Polish Women: Difference between revisions

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== References==

== References==

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{{reflist}}

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* Marilyn Rueschemeyer, ”[https://books.google.com/books?id=O58YDQAAQBAJ&dq=women+bulgaria+communist+union&pg=PT338 Women in the Politics of Postcommunist Eastern Europe]”

{{DEFAULTSORT:League of Polish Women}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:League of Polish Women}}

[[Category:Social history of Poland]]

[[Category:Social history of Poland]]


Latest revision as of 01:52, 3 December 2025

Liga Kobiet (LK; League of Women) was a state women’s organization in Communist Poland between 1945 and 1989.[1] It was originally registered under the name SpoÅ‚eczno-Obywatelskiej Ligi Kobiet (SOLK; Social and Civic League of Women, SCLW) after its founding in 1945 and until 1949.[2] It was called Liga Kobiet between 1949 and 1982, and following 1982, it was henceforth known as Liga Kobiet Polskich (LKP; League of Polish Women).[2]

The LK was founded when the Soviet Union installed a communist government in Poland following the end of World War II in 1945. As such, it was a state organization and branch of the Communist Party, the Polish United Workers’ Party. It succeeded a pre-war organization founded in 1913 with a similar name, called the Liga Kobiet Polskich (Polish Women’s League).

Its initial goals included “helping women cope in the difficult post-war reality” and organizing trainings on employment readiness as women entered the workforce.[3] Over time, however, the goals of the organization evolved. As noted by Polish historian MaÅ‚gorzata Dajnowicz, who has written many articles focusing specifically on the League, the organization began to emphasize their work on educational and propaganda incentives starting 1949.[3] In line with the various different groups present in post-war Poland, the League’s executive board consisted of members from “trade unions, the Peasant Self-Help Union, military families, youth and social organizations, and cooperatives.”[3]

Its purpose was to mobilize women in the political ideology of the state, as well as to enforce the party’s policy within gender roles and women’s rights. It played an important role in the life of women in the state during its existence. The policy of women’s rights was progressive, and full legal gender equality was introduced.

In 1989, it was dissolved and transformed into a new organization under the name Democratic Union of Women (LK). [4]

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