0 to give a person or group of people the right to vote in elections:
Women in Britain were first enfranchised in 1918.
1 to give a person or group of people the right to vote in elections
Depending on who was enfranchised and where, reform could turn a rural constituency into an industrial one or swamp a manufacturing town with agricultural votes.
For those who were born before 1907, women over 35 and all men have been counted as having been enfranchised since 1918.
Rather, it was designed to enfranchise new interest groups not associated with the ruling party who had previously been excluded from the policy process.
American women have been enfranchised since 1920, well ahead of women in many other countries, and thus more experienced in participating in politics.
The computer, an "intrinsically rhetorical device," enfranchises the free play and experimentation that pervade postmodern arts and letters' (jacket).
In this form, it would have enfranchised around 20,000 fewer voters than the 1866 bill.
The numbers enfranchised were therefore always less important than the type of people and their location.
In this case imagining place and enfranchising people is less about dance, movement and poetics than about righting inequality, promoting economic regeneration and achieving sustainability.