
Former President Jimmy Carter's urgent manifesto exposes the global crisis of violence against women, offering 23 actionable solutions that have sparked TED talks and international reform. The book that made religious leaders reconsider doctrine and prompted military commanders to reexamine sexual assault policies.
James Earl Carter Jr., the 39th U.S. President and Nobel Peace Prize laureate, brings decades of global humanitarian leadership to A Call to Action. This politically engaged work reflects Carter’s lifelong advocacy for human rights, conflict resolution, and public health.
These themes were honed through his post-presidential work co-founding The Carter Center and mobilizing Habitat for Humanity volunteers worldwide.
A New York Times bestselling author of 32 books including the memoir A Full Life: Reflections at Ninety and The Virtues of Aging, Carter combines personal experience with policy insights gained from mediating international disputes and eradicating diseases like Guinea worm.
His hands-on approach to social justice—evidenced by negotiating Middle East peace accords and building homes for low-income families—informs the book’s urgent appeal for civic engagement. Carter’s works have been translated into over 20 languages, with An Hour Before Daylight earning recognition as “an American classic” by The New Yorker.
A Call to Action by Jimmy Carter exposes systemic global discrimination and violence against women and girls, including child marriage, genital cutting, honor killings, and sexual violence. Carter links these abuses to misinterpretations of religious texts and societal tolerance of warfare, urging religious leaders, policymakers, and individuals to adopt 23 actionable reforms like prosecuting sex traffickers and implementing UN resolutions on gender equality.
This book is essential for human rights advocates, policymakers, religious leaders, and anyone seeking to understand gender-based violence. It offers data-driven insights for activists combating child marriage or workplace discrimination, alongside practical steps for promoting women’s leadership in peacebuilding and governance.
Yes. Carter combines firsthand diplomatic experiences with stark statistics—such as 90% of U.S. military sexual assault victims being women—to deliver a compelling case for gender equality. The book’s blend of moral urgency and policy blueprints makes it a vital resource for driving societal change.
Carter condemns patriarchal interpretations of religious texts that justify suppressing women’s rights, notably within Christianity, Islam, and Hinduism. He highlights his 2000 split from the Southern Baptist Convention over its rejection of female clergy, advocating for interfaith efforts to reinterpret scriptures through a gender-equitable lens.
While global in scope, Carter critiques the U.S. for lagging behind peers in pay equity (23% wage gap) and political representation. He calls for prosecuting campus sexual assault, ratifying the Equal Rights Amendment, and increasing female leadership in business and government.
Key recommendations include:
Unlike his memoirs or conflict-resolution books, this 2014 work focuses solely on gender inequality. It expands on themes from Carter’s humanitarian efforts with The Carter Center, emphasizing how women’s rights underpin global stability and economic progress.
Some argue Carter overlooks grassroots movements led by women in developing nations. Others note the book’s heavy reliance on U.S.-centric examples, despite its global framing. However, critics praise its unflinching examination of religious complicity in oppression.
With ongoing conflicts exacerbating violence against women and stalled U.S. gender-equity legislation, Carter’s advocacy for policy accountability and interfaith dialogue remains urgent. The book’s framework aids activists navigating post-#MeToo challenges and rising authoritarianism.
Carter urges readers to:
Senti il libro attraverso la voce dell'autore
Trasforma la conoscenza in spunti coinvolgenti e ricchi di esempi
Cattura le idee chiave in un lampo per un apprendimento veloce
Goditi il libro in modo divertente e coinvolgente
We need to show our strength.
Religious leaders remaining remarkably silent.
Faith mandates sexual discrimination.
Violence has become a natural facet of U.S. foreign policy.
An aura like a queen.
Scomponi le idee chiave di A Call to Action in punti facili da capire per comprendere come i team innovativi creano, collaborano e crescono.
Distilla A Call to Action in rapidi promemoria che evidenziano i principi chiave di franchezza, lavoro di squadra e resilienza creativa.

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Chiedi qualsiasi cosa, scegli la voce e co-crea spunti che risuonino davvero con te.

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What if the most pervasive human rights violation isn't happening in distant war zones but right before our eyes? In "A Call to Action," Jimmy Carter confronts an uncomfortable truth: the systematic abuse and discrimination against women and girls across every continent and culture. Growing up in rural Georgia during the 1930s, Carter witnessed contradictions that shaped his understanding of gender equality. His mother worked as a nurse while his father insisted on respectful treatment of the Black women who helped in their home. His childhood heroine was Rachel Clark, an African American woman with "an aura like a queen" who taught him fishing, nature, and spiritual values. Yet as he matured, Carter observed how his community interpreted religious texts to justify discrimination and maintain different standards for men and women. These formative experiences planted seeds for his later human rights advocacy, showing how personal awakening often precedes social change.