That depends a great deal on how you define "feminist". For the purposes of this answer a "feminist" will be defined as someone who believes in or promotes establishing equal political, economic, personal, and social rights for women. What constitutes a "right" is quite the broad question as does what constitutes "equal". In general Hillary has been a strong advocate for political, economic, personal, and social rights for women when they align with her agenda and a bitter opponent of anything in those arenas that contradicts her agenda. When something doesn't much affect her agenda, she tends to ignore it. If you agree with her political agenda then you would consider her a feminist. If you are a supporter of something that opposes or does not advance her agenda but you believe is important to women, then you probably would not consider her a feminist.
betty frieden NOW
Justice Scalia is considered to be anti-feminist due to his ultra-conservative ideology, his stance on abortion, and certain comments he has made about domestic violence. To be fair, most of the sound bites were taken out of context and adapted to fit the opposing political agenda; however, the balance of evidence suggests Scalia is neither a feminist nor a strong supporter of human rights.
Susan B. Anthony
Technically, all you have to do is identify as a feminist. At worst, you'd be a bad feminist (as opposed to not a real feminist) because feminism is a movement, not an organisation. To be a good feminist, you'd have to engage in women's rights advocacy or women's rights activism.
he was very feminist in nature.
Feminist Library was created in 1975.
Feminist Formations was created in 1988.
The Feminist Press was created in 1970.
The Naked Feminist was created in 2004.
there is no hierarchical power relationship between researcher and respondent in Feminist Research. feminist research analyze the variable in feminist perspective.
The individual feminists propounded the feminist theories.