The paper discusses how, in 1915, The Hague convention represented women from 22 different countries with the main focus
of achieving peace. It examines how this process for peace was deemed feasible by a series of
resolutions established by the Women's Peace Congress and how these resolutions focused on many key ideas that the Women's Peace Congress believed could create world peace. It demonstrates the irony of President Woodrow Wilson's refusal to lead the
international mediation and how many of the principles established at the Women's Peace Congress in The Hague, were echoed with the publication of Woodrow Wilson's 14 Points, which earned him much international praise, three years later.