Abstract

ABSTRACT With its proclamation of universal suffrage in 1952, Bolivia fits into Samuel Huntington’s “second short wave of democratization” (1943–1963). In 1952, all women and men gained the right to vote, marking a significant step towards democratization by including previously excluded groups. Literate women had already obtained municipal voting rights in 1945 under a populist government aiming for broader political participation. However, women first voted in 1947, after the oligarchy overthrew this government in 1946 and sought to regain power by repressing the opposition parties and previously marginalized sectors. Unexpectedly, it supported women’s suffrage for national elections by the late 1940s. What prompted various political parties to support women’s suffrage in the late 1940s? This paper explores how women in Bolivia gained the right to vote and what role the feminist movement and power struggles played in obtaining women’s suffrage. Beginning in the 1920s with a study of the emergence of the feminist movement and its evolution during the decades of the 1930s (the Chaco War) and 1940s, the paper culminates with an assessment of feminism’s impact on public opinion as well as the importance of the growing politicization of women in the 1940s.

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