In the opinion of the average American soldier who came of age during the Peace movement of the 1960s, Vietnam was lost a long time ago.
International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement | Justice of the Peace | Nobel Peace Prize | Non-Aligned Movement | Peace Corps | War and Peace | Union for a Popular Movement | Paris Peace Conference, 1919 | Paris Peace Conference | Arts and Crafts movement | Oxford Movement | Indian independence movement | White movement | Our Lady Peace | justice of the peace | Temperance movement | Movement for Democratic Change | Polish resistance movement in World War II | Partnership for Peace | Latter Day Saint movement | Peace River | Peace of Westphalia | conservation movement | Resistance movement | Italian resistance movement | Comprehensive Peace Agreement | Carnegie Endowment for International Peace | 19th of April Movement | temperance movement | Orange Democratic Movement |
Carmen Magallón-Portolés is a PhD, a physicist, and Master in Philosophy of Science by University of Zaragoza, Spain, committed with the advancement of women through researching their contributions to two important fields: science and peace.
In the early and mid-1980s, as a school girl and a young student, she was actively involved in the German peace movement, specifically in the protest against the stationing of MGM-31 Pershing missiles at a United States Armed Forces Missile Storage Area at Mutlanger Heide ("Mutlangen heathland") near her hometown (as part of the NATO Double-Track Decision).
In 1916 she emigrated in protest of World War I to Switzerland, where she studied at the University of Geneva, became involved in the peace movement, and began to work as a journalist.
END also provided the main peace movement organisation, the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, with much of its leadership: (Bruce Kent, Joan Ruddock, Dan Smith and Meg Beresford were all END supporters).
Brockington, Grace, Lecturer in History of Art, University of Bristol, Above the Battlefield: Modernism and the Peace Movement in Britain, 1900–1918, Yale University Press, (08/03/2011) – 244 pages, ISBN 978-0-300-15195-4
Besides serving as editor in chief of the American Journal of International Law and as editor of the American Case Book, and writing numerous articles on international law and the peace movement.
The 26-minute documentary by Martin Duckworth follows the survivors on their mission to New York City as part of the Japanese peace movement at the second United Nations Special Session on Disarmament held in June, 1982.
He served on Nelson Rockefeller's Commission on the Higher Education of Women, and was active in the peace movement in the U.S. in the Episcopal Peace Fellowship and on the Joint Commission of Peace of the Episcopal Church.