Women's suffrage

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Woman's suffrage parade in New York City, 1912

The term woman's suffrage refers to the economic and political reform movement aimed at extending suffrage — the right to vote — to women. The movement's modern origins lie in France in the 18th century. Of currently existing independent countries, New Zealand was the first to give women the vote. However when this happened in 1893 it was not a "country", in the sense of being an independent nation state, but a mostly self-governing colony.[1] Places with similar status which granted women the vote before New Zealand include Wyoming (1869). Other possible contenders for first "country" to grant female suffrage include the Corsican Republic, the Isle of Man, the Pitcairn Islands, Franceville and Tavolara, but some of these had brief existences as independent states and others were not clearly independent. A contestant for being the first independent nation to grant the right to vote for women would be Sweden, where women were in fact allowed to vote during the age of liberty (1718-1771), although this right was far from applying to women in general.

Voting rights for women were introduced into international law in 1948 when the UN adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. As stated in Article 21 “(1)Everyone has the right to take part in the government of his country, directly or through freely chosen representatives. (3)The will of the people shall be the basis of the authority of government; this will shall be expressed in periodic and genuine elections which shall be by universal and equal suffrage and shall be held by secret vote or by equivalent free voting procedures.”

Women’s suffrage is also explicitly stated as a right under the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, adopted by the United Nations in 1979. Currently the only state yet to grant women suffrage is Saudi Arabia.


History

Women's suffrage has been granted at various times in various countries throughout the world. In many countries women's suffrage was granted before universal suffrage, so women from certain races and social classes were still unable to vote.

In medieval France and several other European countries, voting for city and town assemblies and meetings was open to the heads of households, regardless of sex. Women's suffrage was granted by the Corsican Republic of 1755 whose Constitution stipulated a national representative assembly elected by all inhabitants over the age of 25, both women (if unmarried or widowed) and men.[citation needed] Women's suffrage was ended when France annexed the island in 1769. The origins of the modern movement for female suffrage are to be found in France in the 1780s and 1790s in the writings of Antoine Condorcet and Olympe de Gouges, who advocated this as a right in national elections.

In 1756, Lydia Chapin Taft, also known as Lydia Taft, became the first legal woman voter in America.[2] She voted on at least three occasions in an open New England Town Meeting, at Uxbridge, Massachusetts, with the consent of the electorate. This was between 1756 and 1768, during America's colonial period.[3] New Jersey granted women the vote (with the same property qualifications as for men, although, since married women did not own property in their own right, only unmarried women and widows qualified) under the state constitution of 1776, where the word "inhabitants" was used without qualification of sex or race. New Jersey women, along with "aliens...persons of color, or negroes," lost the vote in 1807, when the franchise was restricted to white males, partly in order, ostensibly at least, to combat electoral fraud by simplifying the conditions for eligibility.

The Pitcairn Islands granted women's suffrage in 1838. Various countries, colonies and states granted restricted women's suffrage in the latter half of the nineteenth century, starting with South Australia in 1861. The 1871 Paris Commune granted voting rights to women, but they were taken away with the fall of the Commune and would only be granted again in July 1944 by Charles de Gaulle. In 1886 the small island kingdom of Tavolara became a republic and introduced women's suffrage.[4][5] However, in 1899 the monarchy was reinstated, and the kingdom was some years later on annexed by Italy. The Pacific colony of Franceville, declaring independence in 1889, became the first self-governing nation to practice universal suffrage without distinction of sex or color;[6] however, it soon came back under French and British colonial rule.

Unrestricted women's suffrage in terms of voting rights (women were not initially permitted to stand for election) in a self-governing colony was granted in New Zealand in the early 1890s. Following a movement led by Kate Sheppard, the women's suffrage bill was adopted mere weeks before the general election of 1893.

The self-governing colony of South Australia granted both universal suffrage and allowed women to stand for the colonial parliament in 1895.[7] The Commonwealth of Australia provided this for women in Federal elections from 1902 (except Aboriginal women). The first European country to introduce women's suffrage was Finland, at the time a grand duchy of Russia. The administrative reforms following the 1905 uprising granted Finnish women the right both to vote (universal and equal suffrage) and to stand for election in 1906. The world's first female members of parliament were also in Finland, when on 1907, 19 women took up their places in the Parliament of Finland as a result of the 1907 parliamentary elections.

File:Poster23.jpg
Soviet poster celebrates women's right to vote and to be elected.

In the years before the First World War, Norway (1913) and Denmark also gave women the vote, and it was extended throughout the remaining Australian states. Canada granted the right in 1918 (except in Quebec, where it was postponed until 1940), as did Soviet Russia. British women over 30 and all German and Polish women had the vote in 1918, Dutch women in 1919, and American women in states that had previously denied them suffrage were allowed the vote in 1920. Women in Turkey were granted voting rights in 1926. In 1928, suffrage was extended to all British women on the same terms as men i.e. over 21. One of the last jurisdictions to grant women equal voting rights was the United Arab Emirates in 2006. Currently, Saudi Arabia is the only state that does not extend voting rights to women.

Suffrage movements

The suffrage movement was a very broad one which encompassed women and men with a very broad range of views. One major division, especially in Britain, was between suffragists, who sought to create change constitutionally, and suffragettes, who were more militant. There was also a diversity of views on a 'woman's place'. Some who campaigned for women's suffrage felt that women were naturally kinder, gentler, and more concerned about weaker members of society, especially children. It was often assumed that women voters would have a civilising effect on politics and would tend to support controls on alcohol, for example. They believed that although a woman's place was in the home, she should be able to influence laws which impacted upon that home. Other campaigners felt that men and women should be equal in every way and that there was no such thing as a woman's 'natural role'. There were also differences in opinion about other voters. Some campaigners felt that all adults were entitled to a vote, whether rich or poor, male or female, and regardless of race. Others saw women's suffrage as a way of canceling out the votes of lower class or non-white men.

The movement for women’s suffrage in Saudi Arabia is the only current women’s suffrage movement. The issue branches into the complicated role of modern Saudi women. (See Women's rights in Saudi Arabia and Human rights in Saudi Arabia).

Timeline of international women's suffrage

Date listed is the first date women were allowed to participate (by voting) in elections, not the date that women were granted universal suffrage without restrictions.

Country Year Voting Age

Afghanistan

1963

18 years

Albania

1920

18 years

Algeria

1962

18 years

American Samoa

1990

18 years

Andorra

1970

18 years

Angola

1975

18 years

Anguilla

1951

18 years

Antigua and Barbuda

1951

18 years

Argentina

1947

18 years

Armenia

1921

18 years

Aruba

N/A

18 years

Australia

1902

18 years

Austria

1918

18 years

Azerbaijan

1921

18 years

Bahamas, The

1960

18 years

Bahrain

1973

18 years

Bangladesh

1972

18 years

Barbados

1950

18 years

Belarus

1919

18 years

Belgium

1919

18 years

Belize

1954

18 years

Benin

1956

18 years

Bermuda

1944

18 years

Bhutan

1953

18 years

Bolivia

1938

18 years (married); 21 years (single)

Bosnia and Herzegovina

1949

18 years

Botswana

1965

18 years

Brazil

1932

16 years

British Virgin Islands

N/A

18 years

Brunei

1959

18 years (village elections only)

Bulgaria

1944

18 years

Burkina Faso

1958

universal

Burma

1922

18 years

Burundi

1961

NA

Cambodia

1955

18 years

Cameroon

1946

20 years

Canada

1917

18 years

Cape Verde

1975

18 years

Cayman Islands

N/A

18 years

Central African Republic

1986

21 years

Chad

1958

18 years

Chile

1931

18 years

China

1949

18 years

Cocos (Keeling) Islands

N/A

NA

Colombia

1954

18 years

Comoros

1956

18 years

Congo, Democratic Republic of the

1967

18 years

Congo, Republic of the

1963

18 years

Cook Islands

1893

NA

Costa Rica

1949

18 years

Cote d'Ivoire

1952

19 years

Croatia

1945

18 years (16 years, if employed)

Cuba

1934

16 years

Cyprus

1960

18 years

Czech Republic

1920

18 years

Denmark

1915

18 years

Djibouti

1946

18 years

Dominica

1951

18 years

Dominican Republic

1942

18 years

Ecuador

1929

18 years

Egypt

1956

18 years

El Salvador

1939

18 years

Equatorial Guinea

1963

18 years

Eritrea

1955

18 years

Estonia

1918

18 years

Ethiopia

1955

18 years

Falkland Islands (Islas Malvinas)

N/A

18 years

Faroe Islands

N/A

18 years

Fiji

1963

21 years

Finland

1906

18 years

France

1944

18 years

French Polynesia

N/A

18 years

Gabon

1956

21 years

Gambia, The

1960

18 years

Georgia

1918

18 years

Germany

1918

18 years

Ghana

1954

18 years

Gibraltar

N/A

18 years

Greece

1952

18 years

Greenland

N/A

18 years

Grenada

1951

18 years

Guam

N/A

18 years

Guatemala

1946

18 years

Guernsey

a

18 years

Guinea

1958

18 years

Guinea-Bissau

1977

18 years

Guyana

1953

18 years

Haiti

1950

18 years

Holy See (Vatican City)

b

limited to cardinals less than 80 years old

Honduras

1955

18 years

Hong Kong

1949

18 years

Hungary

1918

18 years

Iceland

1915

18 years

India

1950

18 years

Indonesia

1945

17 years (married persons regardless of age)

Iran

1963

16 years

Iraq

1980

18 years

Ireland

1918

18 years

Isle of Man

1881

16 years

Israel

1948

18 years

Italy

1945

18 years (except in senatorial elections, where minimum age is 25)

Jamaica

1944

18 years

Japan

1945

20 years

Jersey

N/A

16 years

Jordan

1974

18 years

Kazakhstan

1924

18 years

Kenya

1963

18 years

Kiribati

1967

18 years

Korea, North

1946

17 years

Korea, South

1948

19 years

Kosovo

a

18 years

Kuwait

2005

NArs

Kyrgyzstan

1918

18 years

Laos

1958

18 years

Latvia

1918

18 years

Lebanon

1952

21 years (women at age 21 with elementary education)

Lesotho

1965

18 years

Liberia

1946

18 years

Libya

1964

18 years

Liechtenstein

1984

18 years

Lithuania

1918

18 years

Luxembourg

1919

18 years

Macau

N/A

18 years

Macedonia

1946

18 years

Madagascar

1959

18 years

Malawi

1961

18 years

Malaysia

1957

21 years

Maldives

1932

21 years

Mali

1956

18 years

Malta

1947

18 years

Marshall Islands

1979

18 years

Mauritania

1961

18 years

Mauritius

1956

18 years

Mayotte

N/A

18 years

Mexico

1947

18 years

Micronesia, Federated States of

1979

18 years

Moldova

1978

18 years

Monaco

1962

18 years

Mongolia

1924

18 years

Montenegro

a

18 years

Montserrat

N/A

18 years

Morocco

1963

18 years

Mozambique

1975

18 years

Namibia

1989

18 years

Nauru

1968

20 years

Nepal

1951

18 years

Netherlands

1919

18 years

Netherlands Antilles

N/A

18 years

New Caledonia

a

18 years

New Zealand

1893

18 years

Nicaragua

1955

16 years

Niger

1948

18 years

Nigeria

1958

18 years

Niue

a

18 years

Norfolk Island

N/A

18 years

Northern Mariana Islands

N/A

18 years

Norway

1913

18 years

Oman

2003

21 years

Pakistan

1947

18 years

Palau

1979

18 years

Panama

1941

18 years

Papua New Guinea

1964

18 years

Paraguay

1961

18 years

Peru

1955

18 years

Philippines

1937

18 years

Pitcairn Islands

1838

18 years

Poland

1918

18 years

Portugal

1931

18 years

Puerto Rico

1929

18 years

Qatar

1997

18 years

Romania

1929

18 years

Russia

1918

18 years

Rwanda

1961

18 years

Saint Barthelemy

a

18 years

Saint Helena

N/A

NA

Saint Kitts and Nevis

1951

18 years

Saint Lucia

1924

18 years

Saint Martin

N/A

18 years

Saint Pierre and Miquelon

N/A

18 years

Saint Vincent and the Grenadines

1951

18 years

Samoa

1990

21 years

San Marino

1959

18 years

Sao Tome and Principe

1975

18 years

Saudi Arabia

No Suffrage for Women

21 years (male

Senegal

1945

18 years

Serbia

a

18 years

Seychelles

1948

17 years

Sierra Leone

1961

18 years

Singapore

1947

21 years

Slovakia

1920

18 years

Slovenia

1945

18 years (16 years, if employed)

Solomon Islands

1974

21 years

Somalia

1956

18 years

South Africa

1930 (white women) 1994 (black women)

18 years

Spain

1931

18 years

Sri Lanka

1931

18 years

Sudan

1964

17 years

Suriname

1948

18 years

Swaziland

1968

18 years

Sweden

1919

18 years

Switzerland

1971

18 years

Syria

1949

18 years

Taiwan

1947

20 years

Tajikistan

1924

18 years

Tanzania

1959

18 years

Thailand

1932

18 years

Timor-Leste

a

17 years

Togo

1945

N/A

Tokelau

N/A

21 years

Tonga

1960

21 years

Trinidad and Tobago

1946

18 years

Tunisia

1959

18 years

Turkey

1930

18 years

Turkmenistan

1924

18 years

Turks and Caicos Islands

N/A

18 years

Tuvalu

1967

18 years

Uganda

1962

18 years

Ukraine

1919

18 years

United Arab Emirates

2006

N/A

United Kingdom

1918

18 years

United States

1920

18 years

Uruguay

1932

18 years

Uzbekistan

1938

18 years

Vanuatu

1975

18 years

Venezuela

1946

18 years

Vietnam

1946

18 years

Virgin Islands

a

18 years

Wallis and Futuna

a

18 years

Yemen

1967

18 years

Zambia

1962

18 years

Zimbabwe

1957

18 years

(a) Data unavailable

(b) Voting is restricted to Cardinals, women are forbidden from being Cardinals.

Women's suffrage by country

File:Punchsuffrage.png
The argument over women's rights in Victoria, Australia, was lampooned in this Melbourne Punch cartoon of 1887

Australia

The first election for the Parliament of the newly-formed Commonwealth of Australia in 1901 was based on the electoral provisions of the six states, so that women who had the vote and the right to stand for Parliament at state level (in South Australia and Western Australia) had the same rights for the 1901 Federal election. In 1902, the Commonwealth Parliament passed its own electoral act that extended these rights to women in all states on the same basis as men. However, the Commonwealth legislation excluded all Aboriginal men and women from the Commonwealth franchise, which in theory some of them had enjoyed in 1901 (state Parliaments generally had property qualifications for the franchise, which in practice few Aboriginals met). This was not corrected until 1962, through an amendment to the Commonwealth Electoral Act (it was not an outcome of the 1967 referendum that gave the Commonwealth Parliament the power to legislate specifically on Aboriginal matters).

Canada

Widows and unmarried women were granted the right to vote in municipal elections in Ontario in 1884. Such limited franchises were extended in other provinces at the end of the 19th century, but bills to enfranchise women in provincial elections failed to pass in any province until Manitoba finally succeeded in 1916. Full enfranchisement was not to come until 1918, when the Dominion (federal) parliament passed an act giving women the vote. The remaining provinces quickly followed suit, except for Quebec, which did not do so until 1940. Agnes Macphail became the first woman elected to the Dominion Parliament in 1921.

Cook Islands (protectorate)

Women in Rarotonga were given the right to vote in 1893, shortly after New Zealand.[8]

Denmark

In Denmark women were given the right to vote in municipial elections April 20 1909. However it was not until June 5 1915 that they were allowed to vote in Folketing-elections.[9]

France

Suffrage was extended to women in France by the 5 October 1944 Ordinance of the French Provisional government.[10] The first elections with female participation were the municipal elections of 29 April 1945 and the parliamentary elections of 21 October 1945. Muslim women in French Algeria had to wait till a 3 July 1958 Decree.[11][12]

Greece

The municipal elections of 11 February 1934 were the first held with women voting. However, the right to vote was granted only to women that were literate and aged 30 or older. It was not until 28 May 1952 that suffrage was unconditionally extended to all adult women in Greece, with them voting for the first time in the parliamentary elections of 19 February 1956.

Indonesia

In the first half of the twentieth century, Indonesia was one of the slowest moving countries to gain women’s suffrage. They began their fight in 1905 by introducing municipal councils that included some members elected by a restricted district. Voting rights only went to males that could read and write, which excluded many non-European males. At the time, the literacy rate for males was 11% and for females 2%. The main group who pressured the Indonesian government for women’s suffrage was the Dutch Vereeninging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht (VVV-Women’s Suffrage Association) which was founded in Holland in 1894. They tried to attract Indonesian membership, but had very limited success because the leaders of the organization had little skill in relating to even the educated class of the Indonesians. When they eventually did connect somewhat with women, they failed to sympathize with them and thus ended up alienating many well-educated Indonesians. In 1918 the colony gained its first national representative body called the Volksraad, which still excluded women in voting. In 1935, the colonial administration used its power of nomination to appoint a European woman to the Volksraad. In 1938, the administration introduced the right of women to be elected to urban representative institution, which resulted in some Indonesian and European women entering municipal councils. Eventually, the law became that only European women and municipal councils could vote, which excluded all other women and local councils. September 1941 was when this law was amended and the law extended to women of all races by the Volksraad. Finally, in November 1941, the right to vote for municipal councils was granted to all women on a similar basis to men (with property and educational qualifications).[13]

Japan

The Netherlands

The group who were working for women’s suffrage in Holland was the Dutch Vereeninging voor Vrouwenkiesrecht (VVV-Women’s Suffrage Association) which was founded in 1894. In 1917 Dutch women became electable in national elections, this led to the election of Suze Groeneweg of the SDAP party in the general elections of 1918. On the 15th of May 1919 a new law was drafted to allow Women's suffrage without any limitations. The law was passed and the right to vote could be exercised for the first time in the general elections of 1922.

Voting was made mandatory from 1918, this was not lifted until 1970.

New Zealand

Women in New Zealand were inspired to fight for their voting rights by the equal-rights philosopher John Stuart Mill and the British feminists’ aggressiveness. In addition, the missionary efforts of the American-based Women’s Christian Temperance Union gave them the motivation to fight. There were, in fact, a few male politicians that supported women’s rights, such as John Hall, Robert Stout, Julius Vogel, and William Fox. In 1878, 1879, and 1887 amendments extending the vote to women failed by a hair each time. In 1893 the reformers at last succeeded in extending the franchise to women.

Although the Liberal government which passed the bill generally advocated social and political reform, the electoral bill was only passed because of a combination of personality issues and political accident. The bill granted the vote to women of all races. New Zealand women were not given the right to stand for parliament, however, until 1919. In 2005, almost a third of the Members of Parliament elected were female. Women recently have also occupied powerful and symbolic offices such as those of Prime Minister, Governor-General, Speaker of the House of Representatives, and Chief Justice.

Norway

Middle class women could vote for the first time in 1907 (i.e. women coming from families with a certain level of prosperity). Women in general were allowed to vote in local elections from 1910 on, and in 1913 a motion on general suffrage for women was carried unanimously in the Norwegian parliament (Stortinget).

Poland

Roza Pomerantz-Meltzer was the first woman elected to the Sejm in 1919 as a member of a Zionist party. [14] [15]

Portugal

Carolina Beatriz Ângelo was the first Portuguese woman to vote, in 1911, for the Republican Constitutional Parliament. She argued that she was the head of a household. The law was changed some time later, stating that only male heads of households could vote. In 1931, during the Estado Novo regime, women were allowed to vote for the first time, but only if they had a high school or university degree, while men had only to be able to read and write. In 1946, a new electoral law enlarged the possibility of female vote, but still with some differences regarding men. A law from 1968 claimed to establish "equality of political rights for men and women", but a few electoral rights were reserved for men. After the Carnation Revolution, in 1974, women were granted full and equal electoral rights.

Spain

In the Basque provinces of Biscay and Guipúzcoa women who paid a special election tax were allowed to voted and get elected to office till the abolition of the Basque Fueros. Nonetheless the possibility of being elected without the right to vote persisted, hence María Isabel de Ayala was elected mayor in Ikastegieta in 1865. Woman suffrage was officially adopted in 1933 not without the opposition of Margarita Nelken and Victoria Kent, two female deputees, who argued that women in Spain and at that time, were far too immature and ignorant to vote responsibly, thus putting at risk the existence of the Second Republic. During the Franco regime only male heads of household were allowed to vote. From 1976, during the Spanish transition to democracy women regained the right to vote and be elected to office.

Sweden

During the Swedish age of liberty (1718-1771), tax-paying female members of guilds, (most often widows), were allowed to vote, and stand for election, until 1771. Between 1726 and 1742, women took part in 30 percent of the elections. New regulations made the participation of women in the elections even more extensive in the period of 1743-58.

The vote was sometimes given through a male representative, which was a usual reason given by the opposition to female suffrage. In 1758, women were excluded from the mayor- and local elections, but continued to vote in the national elections. In 1771, this suffrage was abolished through the new constitution.

In 1862, tax-paying women of legal majority were again allowed to vote in the local elections. The right to vote in national elections was not returned to women until 1919, and was practiced again in the election of 1921, for the first time in 150 years.

Switzerland

The Swiss referendum on women's suffrage was held on 1 February 1959. The majority of Switzerland's men voted no, however in some cantons the vote was given to women.[16] Switzerland was one of the last Western democracies (the other being Liechtenstein) to allow women to vote. Women did not gain the right to vote in federal elections until 1973.

United Kingdom

A British cartoon showing why imprisoned suffragettes are refusing to eat in prison

The campaign for women's suffrage gained momentum throughout the early part of the nineteenth century as women became increasingly politically active, particularly during the campaigns to reform suffrage in the United Kingdom. John Stuart Mill, elected to Parliament in 1865 and an open advocate of female suffrage, campaigned for an amendment to the Reform Act to include female suffrage. Roundly defeated in an all male parliament under a Conservative government, the issue of women's suffrage came to the fore.

During the latter half of the 19th century, a number of campaign groups were formed in an attempt to lobby Members of Parliament and gain support. In 1897, seventeen of these groups came together to form the National Union of Women's Suffrage Societies (NUWSS), who held public meetings, wrote letters to politicians and published various texts. In 1907, the NUWSS organized its first large procession. This march became known as the Mud March as over 3000 women trudged through the cold and the rutty streets of London from Hyde Park to Exeter Hall to advocate for women’s suffrage.

In 1903, a number of members of the NUWSS broke away and, led by Emmeline Pankhurst, formed the Women's Social and Political Union (WSPU). As the national media lost interest in the suffrage campaign, the WSPU decided it would use other methods to create publicity. This began in 1905 at a meeting where Sir Edward Grey, a member of the newly elected Liberal government, was speaking. As he was talking, two members of the WSPU constantly shouted out, 'Will the Liberal Government give votes to women?' When they refused to cease calling out, police were called to evict them and the two suffragettes (as members of the WSPU became known after this incident) were involved in a struggle which ended with them being arrested and charged for assault. When they refused to pay their fine, they were sent to prison. The British public were shocked and took notice at this use of violence to win the vote for women.

After this media success, the WSPU's tactics became increasingly violent. This included an attempt in 1908 to storm the House of Commons, the arson of David Lloyd George's country home (despite his support for women's suffrage). In 1909 Lady Constance Lytton was imprisoned, but immediately released when her identity was discovered, so in 1910 she disguised herself as a working class seamstress called Jane Warton and endured inhumane treatment which included force feeding. An incident in 1913 in which Emily Davison, a suffragette, interfered with a horse owned by King George V during the running of the Epsom Derby and was trampled and died four days later. The WSPU ceased their militant activities during the First World War and agreed to assist with the war effort. Similarly, the NUWSS announced that they would cease political activity but continued to lobby discreetly throughout the First World War. In 1918, with the war over, Parliament agreed to enfranchise women who were over the age of 30. It was not until 1928 with the Representation of the People Act 1928 that women were granted the right to vote on the same terms as men.

United States

Seal of Wyoming. The state motto, "Equal Rights", refers to Wyoming being the first state to grant women's suffrage, in 1869

Lydia Chapin Taft was an early forerunner in Colonial America who was allowed to vote in three New England town meetings, beginning in 1756. American women were the first to fight for women’s suffrage[citation needed].

In 1848, at the Seneca Falls Convention in New York, activists including Elizabeth Cady Stanton and Lucretia Mott began a seventy year struggle to secure the right to vote for women. Susan B. Anthony, a native of Rochester New York, joined the cause four years later at the Syracuse Convention. Women's suffrage activists pointed out that blacks had been granted the franchise and had not been included in the language of the United States Constitution's Fourteenth and Fifteenth amendments (which gave people equal protection under the law and the right to vote regardless of their race, respectively). This, they contended, had been unjust. Early victories were won in the territories of Wyoming (1869)[17] and Utah (1870), although Utah women were disenfranchised by provisions of the federal Edmunds-Tucker Act enacted by the U.S. Congress in 1887. The push to grant Utah women's suffrage was at least partially fueled by the belief that, given the right to vote, Utah women would dispose of polygamy. It was only after Utah women exercised their suffrage rights in favor of polygamy that the U.S. Congress disenfranchised Utah women.[18] By the end of the nineteenth century, Idaho, Colorado, Utah, and Wyoming had enfranchised women after effort by the suffrage associations at the state level.

National women’s suffrage, however, did not exist until 1920. During the beginning of the twentieth century, as women's suffrage gained in popularity, suffragists were subject to arrests and many were jailed. Finally, President Woodrow Wilson urged Congress to pass what became, when it was ratified in 1920, the Nineteenth Amendment. While the ability to vote was a national trend forming since the progressive years of Republican President William Taft, Woodrow's predecessor, Taft's appointment as Chief Justice of the US Supreme Court in 1921 was seen as the watershed moment for equal-pay legislation. Taft's dissenting opinion in Adkins v. Children's Hospital in 1923 was a progressive move and called out a maximum-hours law was equivalent to a minimal-wage. The Supreme Court overturned the decision, to agree with Taft, in 1934 permanently ruling separate hours/rates for women and men as unconstitutional.

Women's suffrage denied or conditioned[19]

  • Brunei — Women (and men) have been denied the right to vote or to stand for election since 1962.[20]
  • Lebanon — Partial suffrage. Proof of elementary education is required for women but not for men. Voting is compulsory for men but optional for women.[21]
  • Saudi Arabia — No suffrage for women. The first local elections ever held in the country occurred in 2005. Women were not given the right to vote or to stand for election, although suffrage may be granted by 2009.[22]
  • United Arab Emirates — Limited, but it will be fully expanded by 2010.[23]
  • Vatican City — No suffrage for women; while most men in the Holy See also lack the vote, all persons with suffrage in Papal conclaves (the Cardinals) are male.

References

  1. ^ Colin Campbell Aikman, ‘History, Constitutional’ in McLintock, A.H. (ed),An Encyclopaedia of New Zealand, 3 vols, Wellington, NZ:R.E. Owen, Government Printer, 1966, vol 2, pp.67-75.
  2. ^ Chapin, Judge Henry (2081). Address Delivered at the Unitarian Church in Uxbridge; 1864. Worcester, Mass.: Charles Hamilton Press (Harvard Library; from Google Books). p. 172. {{cite book}}: Check date values in: |date= (help); Cite has empty unknown parameter: |coauthors= (help)
  3. ^ ""Uxbridge Breaks Tradition and Makes History: [[Lydia Chapin Taft]] by Carol Masiello"". The Blackstone Daily. Retrieved 2007-09-29. {{cite web}}: URL–wikilink conflict (help)
  4. ^ "Smallest State in the World," New York Times, 19 June 1896, p 6
  5. ^ "Tiny Nation to Vote: Smallest Republic in the World to Hold a Presidential Election," Lowell Daily Sun, Sep 17, 1896
  6. ^ "Wee, Small Republics: A Few Examples of Popular Government," Hawaiian Gazette, Nov 1, 1895, p1
  7. ^ ""Constitution (Female Suffrage) Act 1895 (SA)"". National Archives of Australia. Retrieved 2007-12-10.
  8. ^ Markoff, John, 'Margins, Centers, and Democracy: The Paradigmatic History of Women's Suffrage' Signs the Journal of Women in Culture and Society, 2003; 29 (1)
  9. ^ Report from Denmark in European Database Women in Decision-making.
  10. ^ Assemblée nationale. "La citoyenneté politique des femmes - La décision du Général de Gaulle" (in French). Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  11. ^ Patrick Weil. "Le statut des musulmans en Algérie coloniale. Une nationalité française dénaturée" (in French). in La Justice en Algérie 1830-1962, La Documentation française, Collection Histoire de la Justice, Paris, 2005, pp.95-109. Retrieved 2007-12-19. {{cite web}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help); line feed character in |publisher= at position 79 (help)
  12. ^ Daniel Lefeuvre (26 March 2003). "1945-1958 : un million et demi de citoyennes interdites de vote !" (in French). Clio, numéro 1/1995, Résistances et Libérations France 1940-1945. Retrieved 2007-12-19.
  13. ^ Blackburn, Susan, 'Winning the Vote for Women in Indonesia' Australian Feminist Studies, Volume 14, Number 29, 1 April 1999 , pp. 207-218
  14. ^ God's Playground: A History of Poland, By Norman Davies, Columbia University Press, 1982, p. 302
  15. ^ Hostages of Modernization: Studies on Modern Antisemitism, 1870-1933/39, By Herbert Arthur Strauss, Published 1993, Walter de Gruyter, p. 985
  16. ^ Switzerland's Long Way to Women's Right to Vote
  17. ^ see fac-simile at An Act to Grant to the Women of Wyoming Territory the Right of Suffrage and to Hold Office, Library of Congress, 10 December 1869, retrieved 2007-12-09 {{citation}}: Check date values in: |accessdate= (help)
  18. ^ Van Wagenen, Lola: "Sister-Wives and Suffragists: Polygamy and the Politics of Woman Suffrage 1870–1896," BYU Studies, 2001.
  19. ^ In Which Countries are Women Not Allowed to Vote?
  20. ^ Brunei sultan amends Constitution, eyes council elections | Asian Political News | Find Articles at BNET
  21. ^ CIA - The World Factbook - Lebanon
  22. ^ Women voters will have to wait until 2009
  23. ^ Al Jazeera English - News - UAE To Hold Its First Election
  • Baker, Jean H. Sisters: The Lives of America's Suffragists. Hill and Wang, New York, 2005. ISBN 0-8090-9528-9.
  • "Woman suffrage" in Collier's New Encyclopedia, X (New York: P.F. Collier & Son Company, 1921), pp. 403-405.
  • Webster's Ninth New Collegiate Dictionary (New York: Merriam Webster, 1983) ISBN 0-87779-511-8
  • http://www.hist.uu.se/historikermote05/program/Politik/52_Karlsson_Sjogren.pdf
  • Åsa Karlsson-Sjögren, "Männen, kvinnorna och rösträtten : medborgarskap och representation 1723-1866". ("Men, Women and the vote; Citizenship and representation 1723-1866")
  • [1]
  • [2]

Further reading

  • DuBois, Ellen Carol, Harriot Stanton Blatch and the Winning of Woman Suffrage (New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 1997) ISBN 0-300-06562-0
  • Flexner , Eleanor, Century of Struggle: The Woman's Rights Movement in the United States, enlarged edition with Foreword by Ellen Fitzpatrick (1959, 1975; Cambridge and London: The Belknap Press of the Harvard University Press, 1996) ISBN 0-674-10653-9
  • Kenney , Annie, Memories of a Militant' (London: Edwin Arnold, 1924)
  • Lloyd, Trevor, Suffragettes International: The World-wide Campaign for Women's Rights (New York: American Heritage Press, 1971).
  • Mackenzie, Midge, Shoulder to Shoulder: A Documentary (New York: Alfred A. Knopf, 1975). ISBN 0-394-73070-4
  • Raeburn, Antonia, Militant Suffragettes (London: New English Library, 1973)
  • Stevens, Doris, edited by Carol O'Hare, Jailed for Freedom: American Women Win the Vote (1920; Troutdale, OR: NewSage Press, 1995). ISBN 0-939165-25-2
  • Wheeler, Marjorie Spruill, editor, One Woman, One Vote: Rediscovering the Woman Suffrage Movement (Troutdale, OR: NewSage Press, 1995) ISBN 0-939165-26-0

External links