Yahoo Search Búsqueda en la Web

  1. Anuncio

    relacionado con: Jane Addams
  2. But did you check eBay? Check Out Addams Jane on eBay. Fast and Free Shipping on many items you love on eBay.

Resultado de búsqueda

  1. 8 de may. de 2019 · Resumen. Jane Addams es junto a Mary Richmond una de las pioneras más importantes del Trabajo Social. Vivió una época en la que se sustanciaron todos los problemas sociales del capitalismo liberal, de la industrialización y de los procesos de inmigración y urbanización acelerada. Fundó y dirigió toda su vida Hull House, la institución ...

  2. Jane Addams, constructora de paz. Jane Addams (Cedarville, 1860-Chicago, 1935) dedicó su vida al servicio y pensamiento de lo social. Ella se cuenta entre las pioneras del Trabajo Social en los Estados Unidos de América, fue una prominente socióloga y filósofa, fundadora de la Hull House y Premio Nobel de la Paz.

  3. it.wikipedia.org › wiki › Jane_AddamsJane Addams - Wikipedia

    Jane Laura Addams (Cedarville, 6 settembre 1860 – Chicago, 21 maggio 1935) è stata una scrittrice e attivista statunitense, pacifista, femminista. Nel 1889 fondò con Ellen Gates Starr la prima casa di assistenza sociale degli Stati Uniti, la Hull House di Chicago, e nel 1920 fu cofondatrice dell’ACLU ( American Civil Liberties Union ). [1]

  4. Jane Addams, (born Sept. 6, 1860, Cedarville, Ill., U.S.—died May 21, 1935, Chicago, Ill.), U.S. social reformer. Addams graduated from Rockford Female Seminary in Illinois in 1881 and was granted a degree the following year when the institution became Rockford College. During a trip to Europe in 1887–88 she visited the Toynbee Hall ...

  5. Jane Addams, née le 6 septembre 1860 à Cedarville et morte le 21 mai 1935 à Chicago , est une pionnière américaine, réformatrice sociale et militante, philosophe, écrivaine, impliquée dans des causes telles que le droit de vote des femmes et la paix dans le monde. À une époque où des présidents comme Theodore Roosevelt et Woodrow Wilson se déclarent eux-mêmes réformateurs et ...

  6. In 1889, Jane Addams, an idealistic college graduate, rented a run-down mansion on a derelict strip of Halsted Street in Chicago’s Nineteenth Ward. The neighborhood was home to thousands of recently arrived immigrants—Italians, Greeks, Russian Jews, Bohemians, and Irish. Addams, like many young people, was searching for purpose and meaning.

  7. Jane Addams Hull-House Museum serves as a dynamic memorial to social reformer Jane Addams, the first American woman to receive the Nobel Peace Prize, and her colleagues whose work changed the lives of their immigrant neighbors as well as national and international public policy. The Museum preserves and develops the original Hull-House site for ...

  1. Otras búsquedas realizadas