Women in Thailand
Women in Thailand were among the first women in Asia who were granted the right to vote in 1932. They are underrepresented in Thai politics. Yingluck Shinawatra, a woman, was prime minister from 2011 to 2014. Factors that affect women's participation in the socio-economic field include "inadequate gender awareness in the policy and planning process" and social stereotyping.
History and Women's movement
During the Ayutthaya period, rural and commoner women enjoyed a large amount of freedom, while noble women lacked any degree of freedom. Historically, foreign travelers to Thailand through the centuries continually remarked on the predominance of women entrepreneurs in the marketplace.In the 1920s, women were allowed to study at the Chulalongkorn University, King Rama VI supported the new class of women who started to dress in modern fashion and educate and support themselves as independent professionals, and new ideals of women's liberation and equality was voiced by a new women's press such as Satri thai and Netnari.
The first women's organization was charitable, the first of whom were the Red Unalom Society of Siam in 1885, but the first women's organization for women's rights was the Women's Association of Siam founded in 1932, and the women's groups were united under the National Council of Women of Thailand in 1957; it was however not until the foundation of Promotion of Status of Women Group, later called Association for the Promotion of Status of Women in 1970, that was called an actual feminist organization.
Politics
Despite the absence of legal limitations to women participating in the political arena in Thailand, the factors that have impeded the rise of women in politics include structural barriers, cultural impediments, lower educational attainments, lower socioeconomic status, and power-sharing issues with the opposite sex. It was only on 5 June 1949 that Orapin Chaiyakan became the first woman to be elected to a post in the National Assembly of ThailandBusiness
Thailand's female population constitutes 47% of the country's workforce, the highest percentage of working women in the Asia-Pacific region. However, these women are also confronted by hiring discrimination and gender inequality in relation to wages due to being "concentrated in lower-paying jobs".Marriage
According to the National Statistical Office of Thailand, female Thais marry at an earlier age than male Thais, and 24% of Thai households have women identified as "heads of households".Thailand outlawed marital rape in 2007.