Posted by
Kimberly Swick Slover on Nov 18th, 2011
Mon, Nov 14 – by Ruth Graham.
Last Saturday, I left home at 7:30 in the morning to spend the day contemplating the future of women’s issues in my state, the nation, and the world. Luckily there was coffee. The occasion was the New Hampshire Women’s Caucus, a daylong conference on women’s issues and policy priorities. Since New Hampshire hosts the country’s first presidential primary, it receives tons...
Posted by
Kimberly Swick Slover on Nov 18th, 2011
Learn more at www.girleffect.org and join the movement at www.facebook.com/girleffect.
Posted by
Kimberly Swick Slover on Nov 18th, 2011
Tools for Change from the 2011 New Hampshire Women’s Caucus
The New Hampshire Women’s Caucus featured a panel that discussed strategies and resources for bringing about social change. The panel included Editor Jeff Feingold and Southern New Hampshire University Social Media Director Karlyn Morissette on traditional and new media; Executive Director of the Albert Einstein Institution Jamila Raqib and...
Posted by
Kimberly Swick Slover on Nov 18th, 2011
Leading Issues at the 2011 New HampshireWomen’s Caucus
The New Hampshire Women’s Caucus, which took place on Nov. 12, 2011, at Colby-Sawyer College, began with opening remarks by Ann McLane Kuster, a public policy advocate and community activist, who called for more women in leadership roles in the U.S. Congress and on Wall Street. “Women bring a special sensibility to these areas; we’ve held...
Posted by
Kimberly Swick Slover on Nov 17th, 2011
NEW LONDON, N.H., Nov. 17, 2011 – Affordable and accessible heath care, including reproductive health care, emerged as the top issue on the platform of the 2011 New Hampshire Women’s Caucus, held Saturday, Nov. 12, at Colby-Sawyer College.
Timed to precede the first-in-the-nation primary and 2012 state and national elections, the New Hampshire Women’s Caucus identified critical issues for women and families...