There is no doubt—the 19th Amendment was a milestone. When it was ratified in 1920, women in the United States won the right to vote. But the 19th Amendment did not flip the switch for women equally, and the struggle against voter suppression continued for decades, and in some cases, it still does. In this edition of Intersections: The RIT Podcast, RIT associate professor of history Tamar Carroll and fourth-year student Anika Griffiths speak with Johns Hopkins University professor Martha S. Jones about the past, present and future of voting rights and social justice in America.
Read a transcript of this podcast here: https://www.rit.edu/sites/rit.edu/files/docs/podcast-transcripts/Voting-Rights-Podcast-Transcript.pdf