Langbahn Team – Weltmeisterschaft

Aletta Jacobs

Aletta Jacobs
Portrait by Max Büttinghausen, 1895–1905
Born
Aletta Henriëtte Jacobs

(1854-02-09)9 February 1854
Sappemeer, Netherlands
Died10 August 1929(1929-08-10) (aged 75)
Baarn, Netherlands
Alma materUniversity of Groningen
Known forFirst Dutch woman to complete a university degree (medical doctor)
Spouse
(died 1905)
Children1
Scientific career
FieldsMedicine

Aletta Henriëtte Jacobs (Dutch pronunciation: [aːˈlɛtaː ɦɑ̃ːriˈjɛtə ˈjaːkɔps]; 9 February 1854 – 10 August 1929) was a Dutch physician and women's suffrage activist. As the first woman officially to attend a Dutch university, she became one of the first female physicians in the Netherlands. In 1882, she founded the world's first birth control clinic and was a leader in both the Dutch and international women's movements. She led campaigns aimed at deregulating prostitution, improving women's working conditions, promoting peace and calling for women's right to vote.

Born in the mid-nineteenth century, Jacobs yearned to become a doctor like her father. Despite existing barriers, she fought to gain entry to higher education and graduated in 1879 with the first doctorate in medicine earned by a woman in the Netherlands. Providing medical services to women and children, she grew concerned over the health of working women, recognizing that as laws did not provide adequate protection for their health, their economic stability was compromised. She opened a free clinic to educate poor women about hygiene and child care and in 1882 expanded her services to include distribution of contraception information and devices. Though she continued to practice medicine until 1903, Jacobs increasingly turned her attention to activism with a view to improving women's lives.

From 1883, when Jacobs first challenged the authorities on women's right to vote, she strove throughout her life to change laws that limited women's access to equality. She was successful in her campaign to establish mandatory break laws in retail workers' employment and in attaining the vote for Dutch women in 1919. Involved in the international women's movement, Jacobs traveled throughout the world speaking about women's issues and documenting the socio-economic and political status of women. She was instrumental in the establishment of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom and an active participant in the peace movement. She is recognized internationally for her contributions to women's rights and status.

Early life and education (1854–1879)

Levy Ali Cohen (1807–1889)

Aletta Henriëtte Jacobs was born on 9 February 1854 in Sappemeer, the Netherlands, to Anna de Jongh and Abraham Jacobs.[1] She was the eighth of 11 children, born into a family of assimilated Jewish heritage.[2][3] Her father was a doctor from whom she developed an interest from a young age in the field of medicine.[1] She attended the village school and learned needlecraft, completing her education in 1867. At the time, there were no educational opportunities for women apart from finishing schools. She enrolled in one and attended for two weeks, but found it to be "idiotic" and a waste of time.[4] To continue her education, Jacobs worked as an apprentice dressmaker and studied at home, where her mother taught her French and German.[5] In addition, her father taught her Greek and Latin.[6]

Wanting to become a doctor like her father, Jacobs faced challenges, as higher education in 19th-century Netherlands was not open to women students.[3] A family friend, the hygienist Levy Ali Cohen, encouraged Jacobs to become a pharmacy assistant, after learning in 1869 that a woman had been allowed to take the examination. She prepared for the test, studying with her father; her brother Sam, who was a pharmacist; and Cohen, and passed in July 1870, earning a diploma.[1][2][6] She was encouraged by Cohen and Samuel Siegmund Rosenstein, rector of the University of Groningen, to continue her studies for two years in preparation for the entry examination for university.[7] She received permission from J.W.A. Renssen, the director of the Rijks Hogere Burgerschool [nl] (National Higher Secondary School) in Sappemeer to sit in on classes, becoming the first Dutch woman to attend high school.[Notes 1][8][9] Learning that a male student who had passed his pharmacy examination was admitted to the university on the basis of his diploma,[10] Jacobs wrote secretly to the chair of the Council of Ministers of the Netherlands, Johan Rudolph Thorbecke. She requested permission to begin her university studies prior to taking the entrance examination and was granted provisional approval by Thorbecke to attend as a one-year probationary student.[2][3][11]

Rijks Hogere Burgerschool of Sappemeer; later the Aletta Jacobs Lyceum

On 20 April 1871,[12] Jacobs entered university, recognizing that other women's ability to pursue education would depend on her performance.[9] When within months, news reached Jacobs' father that Thorbecke was mortally ill, Abraham insisted that his daughter be allowed to register without probation. On 30 May 1872, shortly after Thorbecke's death, Jacobs received the official notification of her admittance as a medical student. Despite periods of illness, she passed the preliminary part of her licensing examination on 12 April 1877 and the final test on 3 April 1878.[2] Obtaining her state license to operate as a general practitioner in 1878, she began work on her doctoral thesis,[11] Over localisatie van physiologische en pathologische verschijnselen in de groote hersenen (On the Localization of Physiological and Pathological Symptoms in the Cerebrum).[2][13] At the time, the brain had not been studied much and brain physiology was an unusual choice for a dissertation.[1] Graduating on 8 March 1879, Jacobs was the first woman to attend a Dutch university, as well as the first Dutch woman to receive a medical degree in the country, and the first to obtain a medical doctorate.[Notes 2][2][14][15]

Carel Victor Gerritsen, Jacobs' husband

As news of her accomplishments appeared in newspapers throughout the country, Jacobs received numerous congratulatory letters. One came from a social reformer, Carel Victor Gerritsen,[16] who encouraged her and made introductions on her behalf to other women physicians.[2] Despite her father's disapproval, Jacobs and Gerritsen began a correspondence, though they would not meet for several years.[17] After her graduation, she contributed to her education by observing women physicians at various London hospitals, including the Great Ormond Street Hospital, London School of Medicine for Women and New Hospital for Women,[11][18] where she met Elizabeth Garrett Anderson, the first woman medical practitioner in England, and her sister, Millicent Garrett Fawcett. Both women were deeply involved in the fight for women's suffrage as well as other social issues, including birth control.[2][9] She also met like-minded social reformers, including Annie Besant, Charles Bradlaugh, Charles Robert and George Drysdale, as well as Alice Vickery, who influenced her ideas on social reform.[11]

Early career (1879–1887)

Returning to the Netherlands in September 1879 to attend a medical conference in Amsterdam, Jacobs received so many requests for medical services that she decided not to return to England, but instead opened an independent practice on the Herengracht canal to treat women patients.[9][11][18] Her clinic, on the corner of Kattengat [nl] and Spuistraat [nl] was located in the Werkmansbond building. She was assisted by Cornélie Huygens[2] in treating women and children, as women were not permitted to treat men.[11] She grew increasingly concerned about the needs of working-class women and the poor conditions in which they lived and worked, realizing that impoverished women lacked knowledge of hygiene and child care. She began running biweekly clinics to advise them,[18] but demand was so great she had to expand the sessions.[19]

Jacobs, circa 1880

From her work with poor women, Jacobs recognized that repeated pregnancies, year after year, was not only impacting mothers' health, but causing high rates of infant mortality.[20] Her contact with prostitutes led her to learn about and study sexually transmitted diseases, of which she had not previously been aware.[9] In developing solutions for these women, Jacobs became convinced that reliable contraception would alleviate suffering and economic hardship resulting from too many children. Furthermore, it would improve the social welfare of society at large, preventing overpopulation.[9][20] After reading an article by Wilhelm Mensinga [de] on occlusive pessaries, Jacobs wrote to him, embarking on a lengthy correspondence. Convinced that diaphragms would help her patients, she performed a clinical trial across a mixed sampling of her clients.[21] Finding the trial was successful, she introduced the method of birth control (still widely known to English speakers as the Dutch Cap) in the Netherlands[2][22] and began counseling women on its use.[11]

In 1882, Jacobs founded the first birth control clinic in the Netherlands and the first clinic in the world devoted solely to disseminating information on the topic.[18] In her twice-weekly clinics for the poor, which were well-attended, she provided birth control information and a contraceptive device – Dutch pessary,[23] free of charge. This practice was widely criticized by other physicians, including Catharine van Tussenbroek, the second Dutch woman to earn a medical degree.[11] Physicians who argued against contraception maintained that it interfered with the "divine plan",[24] encouraged extramarital sex, and would have a negative impact on fecundity and national growth. They saw unwanted pregnancy and venereal disease as apt punishment for sin.[25]

In 1883, as the Parliamentary elections ensued,[26] Jacobs learned from the liberal politician Samuel van Houten that women were not explicitly banned from voting, and she wrote a letter to the mayor and city council of Amsterdam, questioning why she was not included on the voter registration list. She included her evidence that she met all the requirements of a voter. She received a reply that while a narrow interpretation might indicate that women were not barred, custom required that she would need to challenge whether women were entitled to civil rights and full citizenship.[2][27] Jacobs appealed the decision to the Amsterdam District Court, which replied that women were not citizens. She then appealed to the Supreme Court, which ruled that as taxes for married women and children were paid by their husbands and fathers, the law was clear that women were not citizens entitled to vote, ignoring the fact that Jacobs paid taxes as an unmarried woman.[2][28] By 1884, Jacobs' relationship with Gerritsen had turned into a romance and the couple entered into a free marriage,[2] though until 1886, Gerritsen lived in Amersfoort.[29]

Jacobs joined the Neo-Malthusian League of Holland and along with her husband, continued working to improve social conditions among the country's poor and working classes.[30][31] In addition to her work in hygiene and contraception, beginning in 1886, Jacobs campaigned for retail establishments to provide employees with benches where they could rest when they were not attending to customers.[32] At the time it was common for female employees to spend more than 10 hours standing, causing major health and gynecological problems. Two decades later the matter of breaks was regulated in a law.[33]

Advised by a member of the Supreme Court that she might win a second appeal on women's suffrage, Jacobs initially considered continuing the fight, but in 1885 an amendment to the constitution was proposed by Minister Jan Heemskerk to add the word "man" to the electoral provisions. The Constitution of 1887, when it was adopted, explicitly granted voting rights only to male residents.[2][34]

Activism (1888–1903)

In 1888, Gerritsen was involved in the founding of the progressive liberal Electoral Association Amsterdam and was elected to the City Council of Amsterdam.[2][35] He strongly supported universal suffrage, compulsory education and social reforms, such as the establishment of minimum wages and maximum working hours.[35] In 1892 he helped found the Radical League,[2] the first Dutch political party to admit women. He and Jacobs were both actively involved in the party, which besides universal suffrage advocated for separation of church and state.[36] In part because they wanted to have children, the coupled decided to formalize their marriage[2] and were legally wed on 28 April 1892.[35] On 9 September 1893, Jacobs, who retained her own name after marriage, went into labor and delivered a son;[37][38] however, the baby lived only one day because of careless treatment by the midwife during the birth.[2][9] Though she was one of the founders of the Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht (Association for Women's Suffrage) in 1894, she was unable to attend the founding meeting because of surgery following her child's birth.[2] Around the same time, she closed her free clinics to the poor.[39]

De Vrouw: Haar bouw en haar inwendige organen, (The Woman: Her physique and her internal organs), 1897

Between 1880 and during most of the 1890s, Jacobs devoted her time to her medical practice and radical politics, publishing articles and traveling with Gerritsen.[2][38][40] She published articles in the Sociaal Weekblad defending the use of contraception[38] and highlighting the problems retail workers experienced.[41] In 1894, she published a campaign in several newspapers about the health of shop workers and the following year wrote an article on prostitution and sexually transmitted disease for the newspaper Amsterdammer. Her position focused on health education rather than moral judgment.[32] In 1897, Jacobs published De Vrouw: Haar bouw en haar inwendige organen (The Woman: Her physique and her internal organs), which was an innovative text describing a woman's anatomy and complete reproductive system, with movable illustrative plates accompanied by explanatory texts.[1][38] The volume was republished six times between its initial appearance and 1921.[38]

Jacobs published Vrouwenbelangen: Drie vraagstukken van aktuelen aard (Women's interests: Three current issues) in 1899, which discussed economic independence for women, voluntary family planning and regulating prostitution.[1] In the three articles, she argued in favor of the economic and political independence of women,[38] as well as women's rights to plan their family size as a means of economic independence.[39] In the third article, she criticized state regulation of prostitution, in part because they required prostitutes to register and undergo medical examination. She believed targeting sex workers without addressing the misconduct of their clients would be ineffective in combating the spread of venereal diseases.[38] She attended the 1899 International Council of Women's 2nd Congress, held in London. It had a profound effect on her,[1] and she began to consider focusing all of her efforts into securing voting rights for women, as a path to eliminate barriers to women in other areas.[2] By 1900, the VvVk (Association for Women's Suffrage) had around 20,000 members.[42]

At the turn of the twentieth century in May 1900, together with Arnold Aletrino, Jacobs co-founded the Nederlandsche Vereeniging tot Bevordering der Belangen van Verpleegsters en Verplegers (Dutch Society to promote the interests of male and female nurses), bent on improving socio-economic opportunities for nurses. Between 1902 and 1912, she wrote articles on international nursing and served as an editor for Nosokomos, the society's journal.[38][43] Beginning in 1900, Jacobs published translations of feminist theory, such as Women and Economics by Charlotte Perkins Gilman and Women and Labor by Olive Schreiner (1910).[1] In 1901, she and Gerritsen left the Radical League and joined the founders of the Vrijzinnig Democratische Bond (Free-thinking Democratic League). (She continued to be associated with the league, serving on its board from 1921 through 1927.) Jacobs also regularly published articles in Sociaal Weekblad addressing women's working conditions and was finally rewarded in 1903 when the National Bureau for Women's Work published a preliminary draft law to reform working conditions.[38] Jacobs retired from her medical practice in 1903, thereafter devoting her time to women's suffrage,[44] financing her efforts from the sale of her private library.[38]

Women's suffrage (1903–1919)

Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht (Association for Women's Suffrage) officers: From left to right — Jo Van Buuren-Huys (first secretary), Frederike van Balen-Klaar (vice president), Aletta H. Jacobs (president), Clara Mulder van de Graaf-de Bruyn, Jeanne Carolina van Lanschot- Hubrecht (second secretary) and Sophie Wichers (treasurer); Amsterdam, February 1914.

In 1903, Jacobs became president of the Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht, holding the post for the next 16 years.[11] In 1904, she traveled with her husband to Berlin to attend the Congress of the International Council of Women (ICW) and joined with the suffragists who broke off from the ICW at the conference to form the International Woman Suffrage Alliance (IWSA).[38] As soon as the conference was over, the couple traveled to the United States and made a cross-country tour. Together they wrote Brieven uit en over Amerika (Letters from and about America), which was published in 1906.[38][45] During their travels, Gerritsen became ill and died in 1905 from cancer. After recovering from a depression caused by her loss, Jacobs resumed her suffrage work in 1906, touring with Carrie Chapman Catt through the Austro-Hungarian Empire.[1]

Jacobs spearheaded the organization of the 1908 IWSA Congress, the first to be held in the Netherlands.[32] It took place in June in Amsterdam bringing international delegates to the city,[46] spurring growth of the Dutch suffrage movement. In 1910, she traveled to South Africa, invited by activists who called on her organizational services. She toured from Cape Town to Johannesburg making speeches on suffrage, as well as hygiene, sanitation, prostitution and venereal diseases, while calling for universal sex education. In 1911, after the IWSA conference in Stockholm,[47] Jacobs and Catt embarked on a 16-month tour to evaluate women's legal and social positions and encourage women to struggle for pertinent improvements. The trip took them to "South Africa, the Middle East, India, Ceylon, the Dutch East Indies, Burma, the Philippines, China and Japan". Jacobs financed the trip by writing articles about their adventures for the newspaper De Telegraaf.[1][38]

International Congress of Women in 1915. left to right:1. Lucy Thoumaian – Armenia, 2. Leopoldine Kulka, 3. Laura Hughes – Canada, 4. Rosika Schwimmer – Hungary, 5. Anika Augspurg – Germany, 6. Jane Addams – USA, 7. Eugenie Hanner, 8. Aletta Jacobs – Netherlands, 9. Chrystal Macmillan – UK, 10. Rosa Genoni – Italy, 11. Anna Kleman – Sweden, 12. Thora Daugaard – Denmark, 13. Louise Keilhau – Norway

In 1914, shortly after the start of World War I, Jacobs promoted holding the International Women's Congress in The Hague, given the country's neutrality. Intended as a forum for women from throughout the world to meet and discuss opposition to war,[48] the meeting was chaired by the pacifist Jane Addams from Chicago.[38] Coordinated by Jacobs, Mia Boissevain, and Rosa Manus, the conference, which opened on 28 April 1915,[49] was attended by 1,136 participants from both neutral and non-belligerent nations,[50] and resulted in the establishment of an organization which would become the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF).[51] Jacobs became the vice-president of both the international organization and the Dutch chapter of WILPF.[38] After the conference closed on 3 May 1915, Addams and Jacobs, along with Chrystal Macmillan, Rosika Schwimmer and Mien van Wulfften Palthe-Broese van Groenou[38] and others, formed two delegations of women who were dispatched to meet European heads of state over the next several months. The women secured agreement from reluctant Foreign Ministers, who overall felt that such a body would be ineffective. Nevertheless, they agreed to participate, or not impede creation of a neutral mediating body, if other nations agreed and if US President Woodrow Wilson would initiate a body. In the midst of the war, Wilson refused.[52][53]

In 1917 Dutch women obtained the right to stand in elections, though they could not vote. Jacobs stood as a candidate for the Vrijzinnig Democratische Bond in the election of 1918 and though she received more votes than any other woman candidate, she was not elected. Along with MP Henri Marchant, in 1918 Jacobs founded the journal, De opbouw, Democratisch Tijdschrift (The building, Democratic Magazine) in which she wrote several articles between 1918 and 1924. Marchant introduced a women's suffrage bill which was adopted in 1919,[38] and signed by Queen Wilhelmina on 18 September 1919.[54] Shortly thereafter, Jacobs resigned from the presidency of the Vereeniging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht.[11]

Later life (1919–1924)

Portrait by Isaac Israëls, 1920

Jacobs left Amsterdam and moved to The Hague after the suffrage fight was won in 1919.[38] Thanks to the international reputation she had gained from the suffrage movement, Jacobs' role as a pioneer of contraception was drawn on by birth control activists in the United States, such as Margaret Sanger.[11] Between 1922 and 1923, Jacobs served on the advisory board of the Voluntary Parenthood League, established by Mary Dennett. The following year, she was the guest of honor at the VPL's annual conference held in New York City.[55]

Having lost most of her money in poor investments, Jacobs was supported by her friend Mien van Wulfften Palthe-Broese van Groenou.[38] Between 1923 and 1924, she worked on her autobiography, at her home on Van Aerssenstraat 46, refusing offers from family friends to reside with them, so that she could spread out her clippings and journals in her own home.[56] After completing her autobiography she lived with the Broese van Groenou family.[38] She continued to attend the conferences of the International Council of Women, International Alliance of Women and WILPF until her death.[11]

Death and legacy

Baarn's Badhotel

Jacobs died on 10 August 1929 in Baarn,[1] at the Badhotel [nl], while on holiday. After her cremation, her ashes were placed in the Broese van Groenou family mausoleum in Loenen op de Veluwe until 1931, when they were placed with her husband's ashes in the Westerveld Cemetery [nl] in Driehuis.[38] The following year, Bernard Premsela opened a contraception advice center in Amsterdam named in her honor.[57] In the Netherlands, there are numerous awards and institutes which bear her name, such as the Aletta Jacobs Prize granted by the University of Groningen and a college in Hoogezand-Sappemeer. There is a planetoid named after her and a plaque with her image is displayed on her former house in Amsterdam at 15 Tesselschadestraat.[2][38] Between 11 August 2009 and 28 January 2013 the Atria Institute on gender equality and women's history was known as the Aletta Institute for Women's History, in her honor.[58][59] Her personal papers are a part of the collections of the institute.[1] Her life was adapted into film in 1995 as Aletta Jacobs: Het Hoogste Streven (The Highest Aspiration).[60]

Plaque at No. 15 Tesselschadestraat, Amsterdam

In 1903, when she retired, Jacobs sold her collection of 2,000 books, magazines and pamphlets on women's history to the John Crerar Library in Chicago. The Crerar Library added English language volumes to her collection which mainly contained titles in Dutch, French and German, doubling the collection size. In 1954, the University of Kansas bought the Gerritsen Collection, which has volumes dating from the 16th century, but mainly focuses on women of the 19th and early-20th centuries.[44] In particular, the collection contains works on anti-feminist views, education of women, the legal status of women throughout history, prostitution, sexual relations, suffrage, women's economic and employment history,[61] and is considered a significant resource for primary materials of women's studies.[62]

At a time when married women were typically forced to relinquish their names and employment, Jacobs retained her own identity and continued to work outside her home, inspiring others to follow suit.[63] Her pioneering birth control clinic preceded both Margaret Sanger's and Marie Stopes's clinics in the United States and England by more than three decades[64] and her role in the contraception movement was influential in helping those women who followed in her footsteps,[11][55] in establishing clinics throughout Europe and the United States by the time of her death.[65] Her campaigns regarding working conditions for women and the right to vote were successful in changing Dutch law,[38] and her work in the peace movement led to the establishment of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom.[51] In assessing her own career, Jacobs wrote a letter to Catt in 1928:

I feel happy that I have seen the three great objects of my life come to fulfillment during my life … They were: the opening for women of all opportunities to study and to bring it into practice; to make Motherhood a question of desire, no more a duty; and the political equality for women.

— Memories (1996, p. 194)

On 9 February 2017, Google Doodle celebrated Jacobs's 163rd birthday.[66][67]

See also

Selected works

Notes

  1. ^ Jacobs' sister Frederika later became the first girl admitted as a regular student to this same high school.[8]
  2. ^ While Aletta Jacobs is recognized as the first "official female physician", in the 1620s and 1630s, Trijn Jacobs, who was a member of the surgeons' guild of Amsterdam, treated patients. Records in the archives indicate that her treatments went beyond those of a traditional midwife or herbalist and that she performed surgery for leg and uterine injuries.[14]

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Feinberg 2009.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v Bosch 2018.
  3. ^ a b c Haire 1928, p. 172.
  4. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 7.
  5. ^ Jacobs 1996, pp. 8–9.
  6. ^ a b Jacobs 1996, p. 9.
  7. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 13.
  8. ^ a b Bosch 1997, p. 41.
  9. ^ a b c d e f g Windsor 2002, p. 107.
  10. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 11.
  11. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Bosch 2008, p. 637.
  12. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 15.
  13. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 30.
  14. ^ a b Dekkers 2018.
  15. ^ Pyenson 1989, p. 161.
  16. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 19.
  17. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 20.
  18. ^ a b c d Rappaport 2001, p. 329.
  19. ^ Haire 1928, p. 173.
  20. ^ a b Haire 1928, p. 174.
  21. ^ Haire 1928, p. 175.
  22. ^ Bosch 2017, p. 181.
  23. ^ Marland 1995, p. 446.
  24. ^ van Poppel & Röling 2003, p. 159.
  25. ^ van Poppel & Röling 2003, pp. 159–160.
  26. ^ Leijenaar 2004, p. 88.
  27. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 54.
  28. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 55.
  29. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 117.
  30. ^ Sanger 1910, p. 5.
  31. ^ "Report of the Secretary of the Interior" 1896, p. 485.
  32. ^ a b c Rappaport 2001, p. 330.
  33. ^ van Oostrom 2007, pp. 12–13.
  34. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 56.
  35. ^ a b c Voerman 2002.
  36. ^ Jacobs 1996, pp. 187–188.
  37. ^ Jacobs 1996, pp. xv, 118.
  38. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w de Wilde 2018.
  39. ^ a b Bosch 2017, p. 173.
  40. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 120.
  41. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 67.
  42. ^ Leijenaar 2004, p. 89.
  43. ^ Publications for Nurses and Carers Foundation 2016.
  44. ^ a b Sharistanian et al. 1976, p. 200.
  45. ^ Jacobs 1996, pp. 133–134.
  46. ^ Harper 1908, p. 72.
  47. ^ Rappaport 2001, pp. 330–331.
  48. ^ Kay 2013, p. 21.
  49. ^ Everard & de Haan 2016, pp. 64–65.
  50. ^ van der Veen 2017.
  51. ^ a b Jacobs 1996, p. 94.
  52. ^ Caravantes 2004, pp. 101–103.
  53. ^ Wiltsher 1985, pp. 110–125.
  54. ^ Nwanazia 2018.
  55. ^ a b Bosch 2017, p. 179.
  56. ^ Jacobs 1996, pp. vii–viii.
  57. ^ van Poppel & Röling 2003, p. 168.
  58. ^ Yearbook of International Organizations Online 2009.
  59. ^ Salon 21 2013.
  60. ^ Atria 1995.
  61. ^ Sharistanian et al. 1976, pp. 201–204.
  62. ^ Sharistanian et al. 1976, p. 205.
  63. ^ Jacobs 1996, pp. 180–181.
  64. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 184.
  65. ^ Jacobs 1996, p. 195.
  66. ^ "9 February: Remembering Aletta Jacobs on Birthday". Observer Voice. 8 February 2023. Retrieved 8 February 2023.
  67. ^ "Aletta Jacobs' 163rd Birthday". www.google.com. Retrieved 8 February 2023.

Bibliography