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         Balch Emily Greene:     more books (39)
  1. Our Slavic Fellow Citizens by Emily Greene Balch, 2010-09-10
  2. Occupied Haiti: Being the Report of a Committee of Six Disinterested Americans Representing Organizations Exclusively American, Who, Having Personally ... of the Independence of the Negro Republic by Emily Greene Balch, 1970-05-13
  3. Innocence Abroad by Emily Greene Balch, 1975
  4. A study of conditions of city life: with special reference to Boston. Bibliography by Emily Greene Balch, 1903-01-01
  5. Women at the Hague; the International Congress of Women and its results by Jane Addams, Emily Greene Balch, et all 2010-08-31
  6. Approaches to the Great Settlement by Emily Greene Balch, Pauline Knickerbocker Angell, 2010-04-02
  7. Women at the Hague: The International Peace Congress of 1915 (Classics in Women's Studies) by Jane Addams, Emily Greene Balch, et all 2002-12
  8. Beyond nationalism: the social thought of Emily Greene Balch. Edited by Mercedes M. Randall by Emily Greene Balch, 1972-01-01
  9. Beyond nationalism: The social thought of Emily Greene Balch by Emily Greene Balch, 1972
  10. The miracle of living by Emily Greene Balch, 1941
  11. Approaches To The Great Settlement - With A Bibliography Of Some Of The More Recent Books And Articals Dealing With International Problems by Emily Greene Balch, 2009-12-09
  12. Suggestions for a study of conditions of city life by Emily Greene Balch, 1904-01-01
  13. Outline Of Economics
  14. Slavische Einwanderung in den Vereinigten Staaten (German Edition) by Emily Greene Balch, 2010-09-13

1. Emily Greene Balch Winner Of The 1946 Nobel Prize In Peace
emily greene balch, a nobel Peace Laureate, at the nobel Prize InternetArchive. emily greene balch. 1946 nobel Peace Prize Laureate
http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/1946a.html
E MILY G REENE B ALCH
1946 Nobel Peace Prize Laureate
    Formerly Professor of History and Sociology
    Honorary International PresidentWomen's International League for Peace and Freedom.
Background

    Residence: U.S.A.
Featured Internet Links Links added by Nobel Internet Archive visitors Back to The Nobel Prize Internet Archive
Literature
Peace ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

2. Index Of Nobel Peace Prize Laureates
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF nobel PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES. Name, Year Awarded.Addams, Jane, 1931. Bajer, Fredrik, 1908. balch, emily greene, 1946.
http://almaz.com/nobel/peace/alpha.html
ALPHABETICAL LISTING OF NOBEL PEACE PRIZE LAUREATES
Name Year Awarded Addams, Jane The American Friends Service Committee Amnesty International Annan, Kofi ... Medicine We always welcome your feedback and comments

3. Emily Greene Balch - Biography
emily greene balch (January 8, 1867January 9, 1961) was born in Although Miss balchwas not a member of Henry Ford by Norman Angell, a future nobel Peace Prize
http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1946/balch-bio.html
Emily Greene Balch (January 8, 1867-January 9, 1961) was born in Boston, the daughter of Francis V. and Ellen (Noyes) Balch. Hers was a prosperous family, her father being a successful lawyer, at one time secretary to United States Senator Charles Sumner. She went to private schools as a young girl; was graduated from Bryn Mawr College Public Assistance of the Poor in France , published in 1893; completed her formal studies with scattered courses at Harvard and the University of Chicago and with a full year of work in economics in 1895-1896 in Berlin.
In 1896 she joined the faculty of Wellesley College , rising to the rank of professor of economics and sociology in 1913. An outstanding teacher, she impressed students by the clarity of her thought, by the breadth of her experience, by her compassion for the underprivileged, by her strong-mindedness, and by her insistence that students could formulate independent judgments only if they combined on-the-spot investigation with their research in the library. During these years she was a member of two municipal boards (one on children and one on urban planning) and of two state commissions (one on industrial education, the other on immigration); she participated in movements for women's suffrage, for racial justice, for control of child labor, for better wages and conditions of labor; she contributed to knowledge with her research, notably

4. Emily Greene Balch - Nobel Lecture
emily greene balch – nobel Lecture. nobel Lecture*, April 7, 1948.Toward Human Unity or Beyond Nationalism. It is natural to try
http://www.nobel.se/peace/laureates/1946/balch-lecture.html
Nobel Lecture , April 7, 1948
Toward Human Unity or Beyond Nationalism
It is natural to try to understand one's own time and to seek to analyse the forces that move it. The future will be determined in part by happenings that it is impossible to foresee; it will also be influenced by trends that are now existent and observable. We speculate as to what is in store for us. But we not only undergo events, we in part cause them or at least influence their course. We have not only to study them but to act. Especially is this true as regards peace in the future. The question whether the long effort to put an end to war can succeed without another major convulsion challenges not only our minds but our sense of responsibility. As to judging our own time, and thereby gaining some basis for a judgment of future possibilities, we are doubtless not only too close to it to appraise it but too much formed by it and enclosed within it to do so. Nevertheless, while we wait for the future social historian, we can make some provisional observations.
I. Characteristics of the Present Period

5. Irwin Abrams: Emily Greene Balch - The First Quaker Nobel Peace Prize Winner
Such was emily greene balch, the first Quaker nobel Peace Prize winner, a remarkablewoman with a brilliant mind, a caring and selfless spirit, a sense of humor
http://www.irwinabrams.com/articles/balch.html
EMILY GREENE BALCH:
THE FIRST QUAKER NOBEL PEACE PRIZE WINNER
By Irwin Abrams This essay appeared in the December 1996 issue of Friends Journal As Friends begin to think about how to commemorate in 1997 the 50th anniversary of the Nobel Peace Prize that was shared by the AFSC and the British Friends Service Council in 1947, it is well to be reminded that 1996 is the 50th anniversary of the prize which the Quaker Emily Greene Balch, the leader of the Womens's International League for Peace and Freedom, shared with John Mott of the YMCA in 1946. She was only the third woman to win the prize, after Baroness Bertha von Suttner in 1901 and Jane Addams in 1931. Emily Balch (1867-1961), raised as a Unitarian, joined Friends in 1920 when she was in Geneva establishing the international headquarters of the WILPF. She applied to London Yearly Meeting, preferring to avoid the divisions of American Quakerism. What attracted her to Friends was not only "their testimony against war, their creedless faith, nor their openness to suggestions for far-reaching social reform," It was "the dynamic force of the active love through which their religion was expressing itself in multifarious ways, both during and after the war." When she returned to live in Wellesley in her last years, she transferred her membership to Cambridge (Massachusetts) Meeting. In 1915 Emily Balch was already a distinguished social scientist when she joined Jane Addams and the intrepid international band of women who vainly attempted to stop World War I by persuading statesmen of both neutral and belligerent states to agree to a mediation process.. She then tried to prevent American intervention in the conflict and continued her opposition after the United States entered the war. This brought about her dismissal from Wellesley College, ending a teaching career of twenty years. She continued to work for peace for the rest of her life, both through WILPF and individually, She was granted the Nobel prize as the acknowledged dean and intellectual leader of the United States peace movement.

6. Emily Greene Balch: Nobel Peace Laureate
emily greene balch nobel PEACE LAUREATE 18671961. by Heather Miller,Writer and Editor. balch at Bryn Mawr It was not an apple
http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/balch.html
Citation Awarded to Balch Acceptance Speech Christian Register Article Recommended Reading ... Harvard Square Library Home
EMILY GREENE BALCH: NOBEL PEACE LAUREATE
by Heather Miller, Writer and Editor Balch at Bryn Mawr: "It was not an apple but a book that did the mischief" Emily Greene Balch, a member of the first generation of American women to attend college in significant numbers, had three ground-breaking careers: social reform, the teaching of economics at Wellesley College, and international political activity. O f Old New England stock, she would devote her life's work to the coming of "an age in which the unlikeness of other races will be conceived as much of an asset as the unlikeness of wind and string instruments in a symphony." Born in 1867 to a prosperous family of liberal Unitarian persuasion, Balch grew up in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts with a belief in dynamic good will, hard work, and hope as a discipline as well as a theological virtue. She recalled late in life: "When I was about ten, a prosy old Unitarian divine was followed at the Unitarian Church by Charles Fletcher Dole. His warm faith in the force that makes for righteousness became the chief of all the influences that played upon my life. He asked us to enlist in the service of goodness whatever its cost. In accepting this pledge, I never abandoned in any degree my desire to live up to it."

7. Notable American Unitarians
Features an evergrowing library of illustrated biographies of prominent American Unitarians.Category Society Religion and Spirituality History...... Ben H. Bagdikian Journalist for Social Justice • Sara Josephine Baker Physicianand Public Health Worker • emily greene balch nobel Peace Laureate
http://www.harvardsquarelibrary.org/unitarians/
This online project of the First Parish and the First Church in Cambridge (Unitarian Universalist) is based on research concerning some representative women and men who made significant contributions to life in the quarter-century 1936-1961. This period runs from the time of a report, Unitarians Face a New Age , to the beginning of the Unitarian Universalist Association. This project is funded in part by the Fund for Unitarian Universalism.
Cosponsors are: Unitarian Church of All Souls, New York, N.Y.; First Unitarian Society, Madison, WI; The First and Second Church of Boston; The First Parish in Cambridge; Unity Church - Unitarian in St. Paul, MN; The First Unitarian Universalist Church of Austin, TX.; The Evangelical Missionary Society in Massachusetts, Weston; The Follen Church Society, Lexington, MA; the James Luther Adams Foundation; The Main Line Unitarian Church, Devon, PA; Freda Carnes, Anonymous, Jan and Lowell Steinbrenner, and the A. Powell Davies Memorial Fund of All Souls Church, Washington, D.C. Project advisors are Gloria Korsman, Andover-Harvard Theological Library; Conrad Edick Wright, Massachusetts Historical Society; and Conrad Wright, Harvard Divinity School.

8. PEACEMAKER HERO: EMILY GREENE BALCH
emily greene balch received the nobel Peace Prize in 1946. Gandhi freedIndia from British oppression through nonviolent protest.
http://myhero.com/hero.asp?hero=emilybalch

9. Balch, Emily Greene
By courtesy of the emily greene balch Papers, Swarthmore College Peace Collection. forpeace during and after World War I. She received the nobel Prize for
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/micro/47_76.html
Balch, Emily Greene
Emily Greene Balch By courtesy of the Emily Greene Balch Papers,
Swarthmore College Peace Collection (b. Jan. 8, 1867, Jamaica Plain, now part of Boston, Mass., U.S.d. Jan. 9, 1961, Cambridge, Mass.), American sociologist, political scientist, economist, and pacifist, a leader of the women's movement for peace during and after World War I. She received the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1946 jointly with John Raleigh Mott . She was also noted for her sympathetic and thorough study of Slavic immigrants in the United States. A member of the first graduating class at Bryn Mawr College (Pennsylvania), Balch taught at Wellesley College (Massachusetts) from 1897. She founded a settlement house in Boston and served on the Massachusetts commissions on industrial relations (1908-09) and immigration (1913-14) and the Boston city planning board (1914-17). She researched Our Slavic Fellow Citizens (1910) by living in Slavic-American neighbourhoods in various cities and traveling to eastern Europe for firsthand knowledge of the Slavic homelands. A member of the Society of Friends (Quakers), Balch was a delegate to the International Congress of Women, The Hague (1915), and she helped found the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, of which she was secretary-treasurer (1919-22, 1934-35). For opposing the United States' entry into World War I, she was dismissed from her professorship at Wellesley in 1918. Realizing the intractability of Nazi Germany and Japan, she approved U.S. participation in World War II. Her writings on peace include

10. Nobel Prize Winners For Peace
1944, International Committee of the Red Cross, (founded 1863). 1945,Hull, Cordell, US. 1946, balch, emily greene, US. Mott, John R. US.
http://www.britannica.com/nobel/table/peace.html
Year Article Country* Dunant, Henri Switzerland France Switzerland Gobat, Charles-Albert Switzerland Cremer, Sir Randal U.K. Institute of International Law (founded 1873) Suttner, Bertha, Freifrau von Austria-Hungary Roosevelt, Theodore U.S Moneta, Ernesto Teodoro Italy Renault, Louis France Arnoldson, Klas Pontus Sweden Bajer, Fredrik Denmark Belgium Estournelles de Constant, Paul-H.-B. d' France International Peace Bureau (founded 1891) Asser, Tobias Michael Carel The Netherlands Fried, Alfred Hermann Austria-Hungary Root, Elihu U.S. Lafontaine, Henri-Marie Belgium International Committee of the Red Cross (founded 1863) Wilson, Woodrow U.S. France Branting, Karl Hjalmar Sweden Lange, Christian Lous Norway Nansen, Fridtjof Norway Chamberlain, Sir Austen U.K. Dawes, Charles G. U.S. Briand, Aristide France Stresemann, Gustav Germany France Quidde, Ludwig Germany Kellogg, Frank B. U.S. Sweden Addams, Jane U.S. Butler, Nicholas Murray U.S. Angell, Sir Norman U.K. Henderson, Arthur U.K. Ossietzky, Carl von Germany Saavedra Lamas, Carlos Argentina Cecil (of Chelwood), Robert Gascoyne-Cecil, 1st Viscount

11. Balch, Emily Greene. The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. 2001
balch, emily greene. and Freedom with Jane Addams and its international secretaryfrom 1919 to 1922, she shared with John R. Mott the 1946 nobel Peace Prize.
http://www.bartleby.com/65/ba/Balch-Em.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference Columbia Encyclopedia PREVIOUS NEXT ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Balch, Emily Greene

12. Balch, Emily Greene. The American Heritage® Dictionary Of The English Language:
2000. balch, emily greene. A founder of the Women's International Leaguefor Peace and Freedom (1919), she shared the 1946 nobel Peace Prize.
http://www.bartleby.com/61/75/B0037500.html
Select Search All Bartleby.com All Reference Columbia Encyclopedia World History Encyclopedia World Factbook Columbia Gazetteer American Heritage Coll. Dictionary Roget's Thesauri Roget's II: Thesaurus Roget's Int'l Thesaurus Quotations Bartlett's Quotations Columbia Quotations Simpson's Quotations English Usage Modern Usage American English Fowler's King's English Strunk's Style Mencken's Language Cambridge History The King James Bible Oxford Shakespeare Gray's Anatomy Farmer's Cookbook Post's Etiquette Bulfinch's Mythology Frazer's Golden Bough All Verse Anthologies Dickinson, E. Eliot, T.S. Frost, R. Hopkins, G.M. Keats, J. Lawrence, D.H. Masters, E.L. Sandburg, C. Sassoon, S. Whitman, W. Wordsworth, W. Yeats, W.B. All Nonfiction Harvard Classics American Essays Einstein's Relativity Grant, U.S. Roosevelt, T. Wells's History Presidential Inaugurals All Fiction Shelf of Fiction Ghost Stories Short Stories Shaw, G.B. Stein, G. Stevenson, R.L. Wells, H.G. Reference American Heritage Dictionary balbriggan ... BIBLIOGRAPHIC RECORD The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language: Fourth Edition. Balch, Emily Greene

13. Person Of The Week: Emily Greene Balch
emily greene balch, noted sociologist, political scientist, economistand pacifist, was awarded the nobel Peace Prize in 1946. balch
http://www.wellesley.edu/Anniversary/balch.html
Emily Greene Balch
Week of August 1, 2000 Emily Greene Balch, noted sociologist, political scientist, economist and pacifist, was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize in 1946.
Balch was born in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, in 1867. She was a member of the first graduating class (1889) at Bryn Mawr. She did further study in Paris, Berlin and at the University of Chicago, and served at Denison House, a social settlement in Boston. Balch joined the Wellesley College faculty in 1896. The biography Balch, a member of the Society of Friends, had become increasingly committed to the cause of peace. She attended the International Congress of Women at the Hague in 1915, and - on leave from Wellesley College traveled to Russia and Scandinavian countries to persuade their governments to initiate mediation efforts to stop World War I. On her return to the U.S. she campaigned against U.S. participation in the conflict. She asked for an extension of her leave to continue this work; the Trustees decided instead not to renew her contract. In 1915 she had helped Jane Addams of Hull House found the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom . She served as its secretary 1919-22, and 1934-35. In 1936 the WILPF elected her their honorary international president.

14. Emily Greene Balch: Nobel Peace Laureate
The chairman of the nobel Committee, Gunnar Jahn, in awarding emily greene Balchthe nobel Peace Prize, stated, She has shown that the reality we seek must be
http://members.fortunecity.com/hobeika/unitarians/balch.html
web hosting domain names email addresses related sites ... Harvard Square Library Home
EMILY GREENE BALCH
NOBEL PEACE LAUREATE, by Heather Miller, Writer and Editor Balch at Bryn Mawr: "It was not an apple but a book that did the mischief" Emily Greene Balch, a member of the first generation of American women to attend college in significant numbers, had three ground-breaking careers: social reform, the teaching of economics at Wellesley College, and international political activity. O f Old New England stock, she would devote her life's work to the coming of "an age in which the unlikeness of other races will be conceived as much of an asset as the unlikeness of wind and string instruments in a symphony." Born in 1867 to a prosperous family of liberal Unitarian persuasion, Balch grew up in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts with a belief in dynamic good will, hard work, and hope as a discipline as well as a theological virtue. She recalled late in life: "When I was about ten, a prosy old Unitarian divine was followed at the Unitarian Church by Charles Fletcher Dole. His warm faith in the force that makes for righteousness became the chief of all the influences that played upon my life. He asked us to enlist in the service of goodness whatever its cost. In accepting this pledge, I never abandoned in any degree my desire to live up to it."

15. UU World Mar/Apr 2002: Looking Back: Emily Greene Balch
When emily greene balch received the nobel Peace Prize in 1946 at the age of 79— only the third woman to receive the award — many of her onceradical
http://www.uua.org/world/2002/02/lookingback.html
looking back
Contents: March/April 2002
The intellectual leader of the women's peace movement
Emily Greene Balch was born to a prosperous Unitarian family in 1867. She grew up in Jamaica Plain, Massachusetts, where her Unitarian minister, the Rev. Charles Fletcher Dole, profoundly influenced her. "His warm faith in the force that makes for righteousness became the chief of all the influences that played upon my life," she wrote. "He asked us to enlist in the service of goodness whatever its cost. In accepting this pledge, I never abandoned in any degree my desire to live up to it." She was a member of Bryn Mawr's first graduating class in 1889, and joined the emerging female social reform movement in Boston. She helped found a settlement house for immigrants in 1892 and began a lifelong friendship and working relationship with Jane Addams, who had founded Hull House in Chicago in 1889. After graduate studies, Balch began teaching economics at Wellesley College in 1900. Her research into the conditions of Slavs in Austria-Hungary and in U.S. immigrant neighborhoods resulted in her major work, Our Slavic Fellow Citizens (1910), which countered widespread anti-immigrant views in the U.S. She was chair of Wellesley's Department of Economics and Sociology when college trustees voted not to renew her contract in 1918 due to her peace work during World War I.

16. DG006EGBtoc
Historical Introduction emily greene balch (18671961) was one of onlytwo American women who have won the nobel Peace Prize. (The
http://www.swarthmore.edu/Library/peace/DG001-025/DG006/DG006EGBintro.html
Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, PA 19081 U.S.A.
Emily Greene Balch
Papers 1875-l961
Document Group : DG 006
Size: 25.75 linear feet (9.42 meters) Microfilm: Yes
Restrictions : None
Finding aid : Checklist prepared by Martha P. Shane, 1988, revised 1996 by Wendy E. Chmielewski
Table of Contents Historical Introduction
Scope and Contents Arrangement
Photograph exhibit
... *Additional Accessions
* These Series are not available on microfilm.
Historical Introduction

Scope and Contents
The papers of Emily Greene Balch contain her diaries (l876-l955, scattered), journals (c. 1894-1948, scattered) and notebooks, all of which provide autobiographical background. There is a draft of an autobiography (c. 1952) with corrections and also transcripts from interviews (1950) with Mercedes M. Randall, her literary executor and biographer. Genealogical information is provided by early correspondence to and from members of her family (1840s-1890s), her mother's diary (1849), and publications about Balch family history. A small collection of material deals with friends and other people who were important in Balch's life, while another collection of articles, booklets, and releases describes Balch as others knew her. There are tributes to her by her alma mater Bryn Mawr College, the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), Wellesley College, and John R. Randall, Jr., who wrote a pamphlet, Emily Greene Balch of New England: Citizen of the World (1946). Material is included about the Nobel Peace Prize awarded to her in 1946, with lists of the sponsors and the Nobel lecture she delivered in Oslo in 1948. The Nobel scroll she was awarded is kept at Swarthmore College, while the gold medal is housed at Bryn Mawr College.

17. DG006EGBPh
emily greene balch, nd Soon after she won the nobel Peace Prize in 1946Photographer E. Romer, Wellesley, Massachusetts Photograph 09.
http://www.swarthmore.edu/Library/peace/Exhibits/EGBphotos/dg006egbph.htm
Swarthmore College Peace Collection, 500 College Avenue, Swarthmore, Pennsylvania 19081, U.S.A.
Photographs from the Papers of Emily Greene Balch Ellen M. Noyes Balch, 1857
Mother of Emily Greene Balch

Photograph 01 Emily Greene Balch, n.d.
age about 10 years

Photographer: J. Notman, Boston, Massachusetts
Photograph 02 Balch Family, n.d.
(l-r) Alice, Bessie, Father, Annie, Maidie, Emily, and Francis

Photograph 03 Emily Greene Balch, August 1887
Reading in the garden at Bryn Mawr College, Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania

Photograph 04 Emily Greene Balch (second from left) With friends on a research trip to Hungry, 1905 Photograph 05 U.S. delegation to the International Conference of Women for a Permanent Peace, held at The Hague, The Netherlands, 1915 here Photograph 06 Emily Greene Balch, n.d. circa 1917 Photograph 07 Emily Greene Balch and Sidney Buschel Probably at Maison Internationale, Geneva headquarters of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom, circa late 1920s

18. Balch, Emily Greene
balch, emily greene , 1867–1961, American economist and sociologist, b. JamaicaPlain, Mass., grad 22), she shared with John R. Mott the 1946 nobel Peace Prize
http://www.factmonster.com/cgi-bin/id/CE004235

19. Emily Greene Balch
Translate this page emily greene balch (Boston, 1867-Cambridge, 1961) Socióloga, economista y pacifistaestadounidense Paz y la Libertad, fue galardonada con el premio nobel de la
http://www.webmujeractual.com/biografias/nombres/emilybalch.htm

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Emily Greene Balch Premio nobel paz 1946 Emily Greene Balch (Boston, 1867-Cambridge, 1961) Socióloga, economista y pacifista estadounidense. Profesora de economía, en 1915 fue delegada en el Congreso Femenino Internacional de La Haya. Secretaria y, en 1936, presidenta de la Liga Femenina Internacional por la Paz y la Libertad, fue galardonada con el premio Nobel de la paz en 1946. http://caminantes.metropoli2000.com/web/nobel/paz.htm http://www.nodo50.org/mujeresred/historia-1.html Recomendar esta página
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20. Mujeres Premios Nobel
emily greene balch 1946;
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