This book presents the non-Western women delegates to the United Nations in 1945-1948 at the drafting of the UN Charter and the UDHR, and explores their arguments for women's rights and for a more inclusive language than "the Rights of Man" in these founding documents of the United Nations.
Introduction: A Counter Narrative to Earlier Research
1. The San Francisco Conference - A Call to All Women
2. A Charter Signed by Women?
3. The United Nations 1946 - Will Women Have a Say?
4. The Commission on Human Rights - or the "Rights of Man"?
5. The Commission on the Status of Women - on Sisterhood
6. A Lack of Acknowledgement - "Men" Trumps "All Human Beings"
7. The Commission on Human Rights Pressured to Consider the Rights of Women
8. The Third Committee - Rights in the Private Realm
9. The Socialist Dissent - A Surprising Support for Women?
10. Is a Vote in the General Assembly a Vote for the People?
Epilogue: On Female Representation in the United Nations