Citations:feMRA

Noun: "a female men's rights activist"

 * 2016, Lise Gotell & Emily Dutton, "Sexual Violence in the 'Manosphere': Antifeminist Men’s Rights Discourses on Rape", International Journal for Crime, Justice and Social Democracy, Volume 5, Issue 2 (2016), page 74:
 * On the websites we examined, it was very often feMRAs – female men’s rights activists – who were the strongest critics of rape culture, with activists like Straughan (2013), Fiamengo (2014) and Barbara Kay (2014a, 2014b) taking the lead in contesting feminist arguments.
 * 2017, Erin Emily Ann Vance, "Why Women Are Leaving Feminism", Flurt, Winter 2017, page 19:
 * Lauren discusses these issues with FeMRAs – female mens's right's activists – something that seems like a completely foreign concept in a book about saving feminism.
 * 2018, Donna Zuckerberg, Not All Dead White Men: Classics and Misogyny in the Digital Age, unnumbered page:
 * Women who support the movement are sometimes known within the community as honey badgers or feMRAs, and they produce a significant portion of the content on A Voice for Men.
 * 2019, Ana Jordan, The New Politics of Fatherhood: Men's Movements and Masculinities, page 197:
 * At the same time, ‘good’ women who actively participate in MRGs (‘feMRAs’, or female men’s rights activists) are (a) held up as evidence that men’s rights activism is not anti-women and (b) enrolled to ‘legitimize claims that would likely be viewed as being clearly more offensive if put forward by men’ (Gotell and Dutton 2016: 74).