Nick Juravich

Nick Juravich is a doctoral student in US History at Columbia University, where he studies public education, social movements, labor organizing, and metropolitan development in the twentieth century. His dissertation explores the lives and labor of community-based, working-class woman educators in schools, communities, and the labor movement from the 1960s to the 1980s. Nick is a trained oral history researcher and first interviewed Professor Kessler-Harris for the Institute for Research on Women, Gender and Sexuality at Columbia. He is a participant in the Workshop on Social Justice after the Welfare State and has contributed research to projects documenting the ongoing struggles and impact of women educators in New York City and California.

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Seeking Women’s Rights: Colonial Period to the Civil War (edX)

Self Paced
Seeking Women’s Rights: Colonial Period to the Civil War (edX)
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Learn about the emergence of women's history and its impact on the study of history as a whole. Then, examine the experiences of women in Colonial America. We will learn the ways that women struggled to loosen the constraints of family by proclaiming that they, like men, possessed individual [...]