*WOMEN in politics, *ANTI-communist movements, *TWENTIETH century, *INTERNATIONAL cooperation, *HISTORY
Abstract
This article examines transnational connections among anti-communist women in Brazil, Chile and the United States from the 1960s to the 1980s. It explores the political beliefs and networks upon which these women drew and built in order to promote their role in the overthrow of João Goulart and Salvador Allende and to encourage other women across the Americas to join them in the fight against communism. This paper shows that these women reversed the flow of ideas, served as models for each other and for anti-communist women, and built gendered transnational networks of female anti-communist activists. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]