[5] Unlike the male counterpart, the women's organization had no military objectives and were open about the need to improve the socio-economic, cultural and political access of all members.
[6] Between 1924 and 1929 four conferences were held for women to meet and discuss issues, such as abolishing capital punishment, child labor, employment protections, illegitimacy, peace initiatives, and suffrage of the member countries.
The Polish delegates were unable to attend, but a report was read by LEW secretary Ksenija Atanasijević to report that the women had filed a draft with the legislature to address illegitimacy and were working with local police to establish women officers to address prostitution and at risk girls.
The Romanian delegate, Cantacuzino, reported that work was ongoing to reform the Civil Code with relation to mothers and children and that a conference had been scheduled to unite feminists in the Banatian, Bukovinian, and Transylvanian regions.
Members included activists like Vinko Šperac Bulić,[11] Zofia Daszyńska-Golińska,[12] Anna Papadimitriou, Ivande Kaija,[13] Jelka Perić,[11] Alojzija Štebi,[14] Maria Svolou,[15] Angela Vode,[16] Maša Živanović, among others,[4] who afterward continued their involvement in the international feminist movement.