A Year After The First Womens March, Whats Changed?

NEWTON, MA - JANUARY 15: Tami Gouveia, 43, of Acton, one of the two lead state organizers of the Massachusetts chapter of the Women's March on Washington, poses for a portrait at California Street Studios in Newton, MA on Jan. 15, 2018. 12 months prior, millions of women took to the streets to protest the inauguration of a president who had boasted of sexual assault. What came next was a head-spinning period of upheaval in womens lives, a roller coaster ride of ups and downs, joy and rage, humiliation and vindication. (Photo by Dina Rudick/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
NEWTON, MA - JANUARY 15: Tami Gouveia, 43, of Acton, one of the two lead state organizers of the Massachusetts chapter of the Women's March on Washington, poses for a portrait at California Street Studios in Newton, MA on Jan. 15, 2018. 12 months prior, millions of women took to the streets to protest the inauguration of a president who had boasted of sexual assault. What came next was a head-spinning period of upheaval in womens lives, a roller coaster ride of ups and downs, joy and rage, humiliation and vindication. (Photo by Dina Rudick/The Boston Globe via Getty Images)
A Year After The First Womens March, Whats Changed?
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Credit:
Boston Globe / Contributor
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908809576
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Boston Globe
Date created:
15 January, 2018
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Boston Globe
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