Talk:Women's suffrage/Archive 1

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General discussion

Why is it just voting here in the female suffrage page? It vould be great i someone would put in other subjects here as well, for example; when did women get legal majority in different countrys? I think this is a very important question, almost as important as the vote; when was women no longer regarded as minors to law? When did they no longer have to have a male guardian? The vote gave women the right to be a part to society, but the legal majority gave them, us, the right to their own lifes, so wy are they no information at all about this? I'm interested, and i think others are as well, but it is a hard information to get a hold of! A nother question i think should be answered here is; when was women alowed to study in universitys with men in different countrys? Perhaps there should be two other timelines about this? I would be grateful if someone had this information and put it here; its hard to find. What do you think?

Why is it that Utah was the second state to grant Women's sufferage? It was generally assumed at that time that Mormon men were authoritarian in nature, so why would this be the case? Does a brief explanation belong here, or somewhere else? tito2000

Can Kuwait be removed from list of countries not supporting women's suffrage due to their allowance now in the 2007 national election?

Someone started a change yesterday; I've added more today. In 2007, we can drop them from the list entirely. Somone put it on their "things to do" list! :-) Atlant 12:28, 17 May 2005 (UTC)

Can someone clarify the apparent disconnect between 'The earliest country extending...' and the countries listed before Australia? What is the disqualification?

In UK, wasn't the age requirement different for men and women when women were first allowed to vote (age 30 or so)? -- Someone else 21:19 Feb 26, 2003 (UTC)

Where is it called "female suffrage?" I have never heard of this phrase. Do people in England or Australia call it female sufferage? Slrubenstein

Where is it called "woman's suffrage?" I have never heard of this phrase. Do people in England or America call it woman's sufferage? Tannin
I don't know if "female suffrage" passes the google test or not. I get 4200 hits on that phrase, compared to 48300 for "women's suffrage". I agree that as long as female suffrage redirects to women's suffrage, which it currently does, we are fine.

women's (plural), not woman's. While women's suffrage is the most popular phrase online, but ~8% "female suffrage" is sufficient to call for a bolding in the intro, I suspect. Martin

Sorry. The "female suffrage" stub was there in the first place because someone had been looking for that phrase and, not finding it, had added a comment. I turned it into a stub without realising there was already an article under women's suffrage -- I should have known, because that's how I normally refer to it! Deb 23:15 Feb 26, 2003 (UTC)

Women should have the right to vote. how would the men feel if it was the other way around

Wouldn't the list of countries be more illustrative in chronological order? --- Timo Honkasalo 14:46 Feb 27, 2003 (UTC)

I think so :) Martin

I just noticed that the paragraph on the US suffrage movement says, "The push to grant Utah women's suffrage was at least partially fueled by gays belief that, given the right to vote, Utah women would get rid of polygamy." I suspect that the word "gays" was improperly inserted as an act of vandalism, but I don't have the time to verify this - could someone more motivated than me have a look at it? 69.140.81.177 18:28, 6 June 2007 (UTC)


The Inter-Parliamentary Union, a highly respected, reliable and serious organization, established in 1889 and now working in close cooperation with the UN, clearly states that full women's suffrage was institued in Australia from 1962. From 1902, women's suffrage was subject to race, where by 'aboriginal natives were not allowed to vote. See also [1] -- Egil 14:52 May 4, 2003 (UTC)

What a load of silly nonsense: tell me, just exactly how were the voting rights of women different from the voting rights of men during the period 1902 - 1962? (Ans: none - they were exactly the same.)

Egil, that is one of the most absurd distinctions I ever heard! Tell me this also: how many women were allowed to vote in ... oh ... let's say Alabama ... in the 1950s? You want to make a point about race, that's fine with me. Do it in a page where it has some shred of relevance.

Oh, and you had better remove that 1962 date as well, because there are still all sorts of exceptions. For one thing, you cannot vote if you are serving a prison term. Seeing as there are some women in prison in Australia right now, then we had better say that we still don't have female sufferage.

And seeing the male prison population outnumbers the female one by something like 15 to 1, we don't have votes for men either. Tannin 16:04 May 4, 2003 (UTC)

In terms of years, I am referring respected sources, not making things up. Please study my sources carefully.
You call me words like "silly", "fool", "absurd", "nonsense". I will not call you words, you seem to manage that yourself by seeming you believe that the title of this article is White women's suffrage. How dare you compare the rights of the original inhabitants of Australia to those of criminals? (I did not know that serving prison time automatically lead one to loose ones right to vote, but perhaps that is the ways in Australia).
In the case USA, the case is not quite clear. The 15th Amendment did in fact mean there was a constitutional women's suffrage from 1920. But de facto women's suffrage in all states cannot really be claimed before 1965 with the Voting Rights Act.
In Australia, there were laws that explicitly took away the rights of men and women to vote due to race. That situation is exactly similar to that of South Africa, where true women's suffrage cannot be said to exist before 1994. Or do you mean to say that South Africa had women's suffrage from 1930? (Oh wait, was it only white women that mattered?)
-- Egil 16:53 May 4, 2003 (UTC)

You've got it arse-about again. According to the 1902 act (which I am not going to look up again right now because my cable link has gone belly up and I've dug out a 56k modem and brushed the dust off it to tide me over, which is painfully slow by comparison), the responsibility for allowing/not allowing the vote on the basis of race was assigned to the individual states. At the time, being Aboriginal was indeed very similar to being a criminal (only you didn't have to actually do anything, except be born). Aboriginal people were not really considered to be part of the nation or to be citizens: they were "too primitive" to understand civilised things like elections (or at least this was the more-or-less unquestioned assumption). It is more sensible to compare white Australia's interaction with the Aboriginal people with America's interaction with Native Americans than with African Americans. That parallel is fairly exact, although it didn't go as far as outright war - not, in my judgement, because the European colonists of Australia were any better than their opposite numbers in the US, but simply because there was no particular point to it: Europeans arrived in Australia 250-odd years after they started colonising North America: this meant that the technology gap was bigger, and because Europeans spread across the country faster, the impact of disease was more concentrated and the possibility of armed resistance even less.

Mate, in Australia in 1902 it was only white people who mattered. (Unless you were not white, in which case your opinion didn't count.) The provisions of the voting laws were not intended to deny Aboriginal people power, the intention was to be kind (in the worst of paternalistic ways, of course) by not imposing the requirement to vote on people who "could not understand it". Voting is compulsory in Australia, remember - you get fined if you don't show up at the polling booth, and in 1902 there were not a lot of polling booths in the Gibson Desert. In fact, there are none there to this day: they use mobile ones now, carried on trucks and in aircraft. Also, there were exceptions: in particular, Aboriginal people who had served the nation in the armed forces were entitled to vote. As I remember, the 1962 constitutional change referendum to give Aboriginal people the vote was carried by the largest majority any referendum in history. The original intention, though, was nothing to do with denying the power of the vote, that was an accidental by-product: in 1902, broadly speaking, it simply didn't occur to European people that there could be such as thing as Aboriginal people with the ability and the interest to be citizens, rather than simply "poor primitives" to be cared for in an off-hand sort of way and ignored so far as possible. Tannin 17:21 May 4, 2003 (UTC)

Strange that you believe that the issue of human rights didn't occur to European people 1902? That issue was already well developed at that time. Ever heard of Rousseau? I suggest you make yourself familiar with his ideas; he lived in the 18th century. And what do you think the American Civil War was about (amomg other things)?
Or in other words, Australia had women's suffrage in 1902, but didn't have universal suffrage until 1962? Martin
That is a matter of definition. If we go for the definition of some women being sufficient, then South Africa is 1930, Portugal is 1931 etc. This I feel is quite misleading. If a full women's suffrage was not available, the nature of the restrictions should be noted. -- Egil 13:08 May 5, 2003 (UTC)
It has got nothing to do with gender, Egil. Accuracy is a fine and admirable quality, but absurd hair-splitting is just that: absurd hair-splitting. As a matter of detail, it also affected a very small number of people in population-relative terms, just a few percent, where in the South African example the proportions were reversed. By 1902, there were not many Australian Aborigines left alive; a generally accepted figure is 10% of the original population. Appropriation of land and deliberate violence played a part, but by far the main killers were smallpox, measles, influenza, chicken pox, and various other European nasties. There is debate about the specifics, but a broad consensus view is that around 90% of the population loss was due to disease. Again, the parallel to the fate of Native Americans is close. If we are going to take the view that it must be "all women", then (as I commented above) there is still no female sufferage in Australia, nor is there male sufferage. (I imagine that an identical situation obtains in many (probably most) other countries around the world.) Tannin 13:46 May 5, 2003 (UTC)

Would you both agree that the current notation:


is misleading? To the casual reader, it suggests that women were treated differently to men until 1962. If Egil wants to continue to split hairs, he'd better do it in a clearer, more accurate way. If Egil doesn't do it I will, when I have time. I suggest finding out the nature of the exception in each of the five cases, and writing something like:

-- Tim Starling 14:25 May 5, 2003 (UTC)

In broad, I agree. In detail, I don't think this is really the place to discuss matters of race at all. However, the opening few paragraphs should say something to the effect that "this is about voting and gender, but other matters besides gender are important too and they are discussed at ABC and XYZ". At the end of the entry, there should be a "see also" that leads to the entries that cover the many other ways that:
  • (a) Voting rights have been granted or denied to people. Race and economic class are the two obvious front-runners (one imagines that these are covered in some depth here already, if they are not then this ought to be rectified) but there are doubtless others as well.
  • (b) Other rights (i.e., not to do with voting) have been granted or denied on the basis of gender. Property rights and inheritance rights are examples.
In summary, this topic sits at the intersection of gender and political rights, and the signposts should lead off in both directions. (BTW, I'm knee-deep in fauna entries at present, but I'll try to remember to take a longer look at these topics at some stage, maybe help out here and there.) Tannin
I'm with Tim & Tannin on this. Egil, it's simple set theory. "All women can vote" and "no blacks can vote" means "black women can't vote". if you really want to find out whether it was women's suffrage, you'd have to check the actual laws that were passed and see how they worded it: "all white women", or just "all women" and let the apartheid laws take precedence -- Tarquin 15:34 May 5, 2003 (UTC) (PS -- I can see that it would be interesting to know which way it was done at the time -- how they unravelled / justified the inconsistencies!)
Which would make 3:1, doesn't it. With Tim's addition (finding why the exceptions is a rather interesting and enlightening exercise), that could work for me. -- Egil 16:09 May 5, 2003 (UTC)

I thought Kuwaiti women were given the right to vote and stand for office in 1999. Could somebody please verify this and edit accordingly?

They were not able to in 1999 since Parliament defeated the motion late in November of that year. It was only passed later on May 16, 2005. That-Vela-Fella 13:03, 16 December 2006 (UTC)
In the first paragraph Turkey is mentioned. As far as I know Women's right to vote and be elected was only granted in 1930 (being elected in local elections) and in 1934 (for nationwide elections). —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 88.234.132.179 (talk) 11:26, 17 February 2007 (UTC).


The claim about New Zealand.

I have put in my thoughts about this below but basically it's that the claim is simply untrue.

The statement in this section is "New Zealand, however, was the first fully independent country to give universal suffrage."

The objection is that in 1893 when votes were extended to women for the New Zealand House of Representatives New Zealand was not a fully independent country but a self-governing colony of Great Britain. The franchise was being extended for a form of local government, not for a sovereign assembly. See my remarks below about this but for a source see the Encyclopaedia of New Zealand (edited by A.H. McLintock) New Zealand Government Printer, Wellington, 1966, three volumes, the article about constitutional history.

It's my recollection too that in 1893 the franchise was only extended to women 30 years old and above - there may have been a property qualification too. I haven't been able to check this but the point is the franchise to this less than sovereign assembly was not extended to all women, so we are not talking about universal female suffrage. I hate to be a party-pooper but... Peter Entwisle (talk) 21:21, 21 April 2008 (UTC)

South Africa 1930

Contray to what's said above, here there was a gender divide maintained. At this time in the Cape province, black and coloured men who owned sufficient property qualified for the franchise. In 1930 only white women were enfranchised on the same basis as white men; black and coloured women who owned property did not get the vote on the same basis as black and coloured men. The reason was that the non-white voters tended to support the South African Party and the Nationalist Party government wanted to water this down by increasing the number of white voters on the role.

I think this is very clearly not a case of the franchise being completely non-gender specific and have marked it as such. However I'm not sure when the non-whites in the Cape were completely disenfranchised - which would effectively mark total gender equality in the franchise by default. Timrollpickering 21:11, 7 Sep 2004 (UTC)

Coloureds says "the political rights of Coloureds varied by location and over time ...(they) lost their votes largely in the 1950s, with the last municipal votes being removed in 1972." The date may be complicated because it involved an entrenched clause and a Supreme Court dispute. --Henrygb 19:04, 3 Dec 2004 (UTC)

24.126.89.154 08:18, 29 April 2006 (UTC)

Shouldn't someone change "In 1869 the Wyoming Territory in the United States became the first modern polity " to "In 1869 the Wyoming Territory, the first modern polity in the United States became.." ? It is a little less broad and sweeping of a statement. 24.126.89.154 08:18, 29 April 2006 (UTC)

Oman

Wasn't suffrage to all granted in 2003? Dainamo

I do recall that being the case. ;) That-Vela-Fella 13:11, 16 December 2006 (UTC)

Opening

The international movement for women's suffrage, led by suffragists (commonly called suffragettes), was a social, economic and political reform movement aimed at extending the suffrage (i.e. the right to vote) to women, advocating equal suffrage (abolition of graded votes) rather than universal suffrage (abolition of discrimination due to, for instance, race), which was considered too radical. A catch phrase was "one man, one vote!"'

Surely "one man, one vote" refers to calls for universal suffrage (either for all men or for all) and the demands were actually for the gender distinction to be abolished - in the UK at least there wasn't universal male suffrage until 1918, with a strong property/rate franchise still in existance (and continuing for susbequent decades at local government level). Also would "one man, one vote" really have been used in calls for female enfranchisement?

I find the opening rather confusing, in the UK a distinction is made between suffragist and suffragette whilst here it implies there is no difference. The point about eual suffrage v. universal suffrage is probably more relevent for America than the UK, where I don't think it was such an issue. The catch phrase I'm completely lost about, I suspect again it's an American thing. If I get some time I'll try to reword this. -- Joolz 13:54, 19 May 2005 (UTC)

Kuwait and more.

With the news of Kuwait allowing women to vote do you think we should / could put together a table of what countries gave women the vote when (and to what extent)? gren 21:08, 17 May 2005 (UTC)

To me, that sounds like a great idea! Be bold!
Atlant 23:23, 17 May 2005 (UTC)

Orphan article about suffrage in South Carolina

I happened upon Women's suffrage in South Carolina (originally South Carolina Woman Suffrage) and moved it to its current location, but I'm not sure what to do with it. It looks like copyvio, but random Google searches say otherwise. It looks too specific for Wikipedia, but it's good information. I'm debating whether to put wikify, merge, copyvio, and/or vfd tags on it. Nifboy 05:00, 31 July 2005 (UTC)

======================================

I think this is a good article and provides some good specifics, at least relating to the suffrage movement overall in the Southern states, where resistance was often at its highest.

I don't like the following though:

"One of these arguments is that the women of South Carolina still believed in the ideal of the "Southern Lady." This ideal encouraged women to be subservient to their husbands and to take pride in their place in the home as mother and homemaker."

I think the idea of women becoming anything other than "mothers" and "homemakers" (which many suffragettes could afford somebody else to take care of "homemaking") was highly unheard of anywhere, and not just in South Carolina, at the time. The East coast states were all the most resistant to women's suffrage. Getting rid of "demon rum" was part of the movement for women's rights (never mind the syringes they were shooting up with), and even in South Carolina, it was harder to get between men and their booze.

Anyway, don't think you can pinpoint anything about South Carolina specifically, other than a resistance to change. I'm a proud native, but SC is notorious for that - I wish that wasn't the case, but it is. SC will change and adjust if it is forced to, but it will resist it as much as possible. I don't want to go on and on but that's what South Carolina is all about. I remember my 8th grade SC history textbook ('89), where the antebellum period was nearly twice as big as what has happened here since 1865. Yet, I don't know why, but I am a proud sandlapper, despite the anachronism that we are... I guess its sort of like being proud of an underdog, except we've put ourselves there and we aren't anywhere near shining shoes like Underdog did

United Kingdom

I am begining on a project to write about The Votes for Women campain in the United Kingdom. Please could you indicate in your title that this page is dedicated to the movements in the USA? Thanks. Levi_allemany 1945 GMT 26/09/05

New Zealand

New Zealand wasn't even a "country" when this claims it became the first country to adopt universal suffrage. It was a colony until 1907.

It was self-governing and had its own parliament, which is what counts. The change in status from colony to dominion had no real impact since New Zealanders had been running their own affairs since sometime in the mid 19th century. --Helenalex 22:46, 28 January 2007 (UTC)

With respect it is what counts but in 1893 New Zealand was only a self governing colony, not a sovereign state, which means its voters had limited control over their own destiny. They couldn't decide foreign policy; they couldn't start or end a war; they had limited control of their economy. A self-governing colony had more or less the same rights as a big municipal government, like the contemporary cities of Manchester or Birmingham in the UK for example, where women were also enfranchised. In fact the enfranchisement of women at this date is part of that movement inside the British world by which women sought to gain power gradually, first by winning the right to vote for bodies with limited powers such as local governments - or colonial ones. This was possible just because it wasn't seen as so important as the sovereign franchise.

New Zealand didn't 'run its own affairs'in the sense of being a fully sovereign nation until some time after 1907. One suggested date is 1919 when Prime Minister Massey independently signed the Treaty of Versailles, with Britain's approval, thus implying political independence, although Massey denied it. Another is 1931 when Britain passed the Statute of Westminster making it explicit that Dominions like New Zealand had these rights. New Zealand insisted on a clause saying we didn't have to take them up and in fact we didn't until 1947 when the New Zealand House of representatives formally adopted the statute.

I realise this belief is very dear to many New Zealand hearts but it rests on two big misapprehensions. The first, outlined above, that New Zealand was a 'country' at that time, meaning a sovereign state, when in fact it was only a self-governing colony. The other being that unknown to many people, other nations allowed women the franchise in sovereign assemblies long before these times. The first modern occasion was in the early 1790s when the French Revolutionary republic, at Olympe de Gouges urging, passed a law universally enfranchising women. It didn't last long but it was done. But long before that, going right back into medieval times, the right to vote in sovereign assemblies, for example the English and Scottish parliaments, didn't depend on sex but property ownership. If you had the property you had the right to send someone to parliament, or to vote. Usually women didn't have the property but sometimes they did. Antonia Fraser in The Weaker Vessel 1984 gives examples in Scotland and England in the 16th and 17th centuries. She points out it was only as this started to happen more often that the doctrine was developed and established in British law that even with the property qualification a woman couldn't vote just because she was a woman. The developments discussed in the article here are all part of the reaction to that. In that process New Zealand was late to grant sovereign voting rights to anyone because it was late to become an independent nation. But, even so, women's position in New Zealand society was relatively advanced in the 19th century.

I know the idea that New Zealand was the first country in the world to extend the vote to women is very widely believed, including outside New Zealand, and very proudly held in this country. But unfortunately it just isn't true. Peter Entwisle (talk) 10:08, 21 April 2008 (UTC)


To make things clear I should point out the exact claims I am contesting. In the general section it is stated "New Zealand, however, was the first fully independent country to give universal suffrage."

As stated above and further above this is false because New Zealand was not a fully independent country but a self-governing colony; also becuase, if my recollection is right, the 1893 act extended the franchise only to women 30 years of age and above. I think there may also have been a property qualification, which means suffrage was not universal.

Further down the claim is made "The first unrestricted women's suffrage in terms of voting rights (women were not initially permitted to stand for election) in a self-governing still-independent country was granted in New Zealand."

This is false because in 1893 New Zealand was not a self-governing "country" but a self governing colony. It is also false that New Zealand then was a "still-independent country". It had been independent, or rather a number of sovereign, independent,tribal areas until May 21 1840 when Britain assumed sovereignty over the three main islands by way of two proclamations by William Hobson. From that time sovereignty resided with Britain whose sovereign assembly was the Westminster parliament. It wasn't returned here until sometime in the 20th century, 1907 at the earliest when Dominion status was granted but more plausibly 1919 when Prime Minister Massey signed the Treaty of Versailles, or possibly as late as 1931 or 1947, for the reasons stated above.

I'm afraid neither the claim in the introductory article nor the one here is capable of salvation. The best one can say is that in the 1890s women's political and legal rights in New Zealand were among the most advanced in the world. We have no significant first in granting women suffrage in a sovereign assembly. Peter Entwisle (talk) 21:38, 21 April 2008 (UTC)

Deatails of women sufrage DURING THE 19TH AMENDMENT

Finnish claims

This was published by the Finnish government. It claims that "In 1906, Finnish women were the first women in Europe to receive universal and equal franchise, and the first women in the world to become eligible for parliamentary elections.".

Is this correct? Have they not heard of NZ? As pointed out above, NZ was still a colony when it granted universal suffrage in 1893, but by the same token Finland was still a duchy of Russia until (?) 1917. JackofOz 05:39, 4 February 2006 (UTC)

The claim about Finish women becoming the first in Europe to gain suffrage (without caveat) may be true, but the latter is false. The right to stand for election (right to political candidacy) was granted to women first in South Australia in 1894. What I believe this Finish claim derives from, though I'm not certain, is that it may have been in Finland that women were first successfully elected to parliament (in 1906). --cj | talk 14:54, 4 February 2006 (UTC)
New Zealand didn't give women the right to stand for parliament until about the 1920s, certainly later than Finland. --Helenalex 06:16, 21 February 2007 (UTC)

Note on the Spanish version of the page

Although slightly out of date, it has a huge list of the countries in order of their changing their laws, etc. If someone wants to import that (It'll take alot of plodding), it's there. I may get to it someday if noone else does. 68.39.174.238 03:15, 1 March 2006 (UTC)

Brunei

Considering that the sultan of Brunei rules by decree, does anyone have the vote in that country? Durova 02:52, 9 March 2006 (UTC)

Nope, they did before but lost that right in 1962. Look at universal suffrage at the bottom of the list it has there. That-Vela-Fella 13:14, 16 December 2006 (UTC)

Didn't Arab women get the right to vote in the US in 1920?

I think the sentence claiming that the first country to give Arab women the right to vote being Israel in 1948 is clearly factually incorrect. For example in the US Arab women got the right to vote in 1920; and there were some 10s of thousands of Arabs living in the US at the time.--jackbrown 20:01, 24 March 2006 (UTC)

Grand merging and reforms!

Hello to everyone, -- of course you can see all the manifold changes for yourselves. I have merged the following independent articles here: History of women's suffrage in the United States, Women's suffrage in South Carolina, Women's suffrage (United Kingdom), Suffragette, and Anti-suffragism. Note that I have made few changes and reforms into those article themselves so as to fit in the whole. Most of these changes are quite minor. But still, this article now needs much work, particularly the In the United States section. Anyway, soon, this article could be nominated as a feature article.
I noticed that the other articles that are now merged here were quite small, and I thought it was a good idea to merge them here as they would make this article a better one, since this article too, was quite stubby. Yes, the result is a relatively long article, but I assume that after more clean-up editing, especially in the "In the United States" section, and perhaps other sections too, it will be shortened a little. However, if further editing came up with more data, perhaps then we could separate one section into an independent article; the only section qualified to stand by itself independently right now is that titled "In the United Kingdom". However, to spare too much potential reverting, I have not yet removed the other articles, until support or consensus has been given to the current modification. Thank you, __ Maysara 14:45, 23 May 2006 (UTC)

  • Thank you for updating the suffrage by country list. I think that should be added to the Women's rights article. Felixboy 17:42, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
  • Hello there, -- "Women's Rights" article is probably concerned with a lot more general and varied topics and issues, of which Suffrage is only one.
There is no need to add the whole list there too;
perhaps, adding a little link there would do.
For when so "dense", readers cannot go through!
:-) Best, __ Maysara 19:28, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
Hi, and thank you for your enthusiasm, but I think this article has some way to go before it stands of chance of becoming a featured article. Featured status is not just about length, but also about addressing a topic comprehensively, but concisely, with references. The standards at Featured article candidates are quite high - see the criteria.
I am not convinced that it is sensible to merge all of the other artices here - the essence of writing in Summary style (which is one of the criteria) is have a shorter, more general overview article, which links to other "main articles" with a narrower focus that address sub-topics in more detail. So, for example, this article should do a general overview of women's sufferage, including a section on women's sufferage in the UK, with a link to a separate article that deals with the UK in more detail. That is to say, the parts that have been copied here need to be radically shortened if they are to stay. -- ALoan (Talk) 18:22, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
  • Hello there, ALoan -- I totally agree with you, and actually, I just hope that what you said will be the case in the near future. But if you look up those other articles right now, including that here, you will find that non of them truly "address sub-topics in more detail." they are stubs, in fact, with no stub template - I think. I also believe that it is more proper, in such occasions, to derive those articles that "address sub-topics in more detail" and to appoint a separate and independent pages for them, as they grow fuller within the more general article, not before that. The reason I believe so is, having so many stubs and scrawny articles that relatively address the same topic, more or less, is more uncontextual than having all these little articles gathered in an embracing whole. They -those many little articles- make more sense in such setup. Also, I think that by doing what I just did here, I have managed to turn "Women's suffrage" from, generally and relatively, a bad article, into a very good one (said humbly and objectively! Though not so well referenced, I just trust the editors who added all these information). Although, as you say, it is yet to meet with the higher standards and criteria of Wikipedia, it is still quite in good shape as a whole, in my personal openion. I should here refer again to the contextuality issue. I think that is better than before. But yes, as I said earlier, section "In the United Kingdom" could very soon move into an independent article, I certainly hope so. But someone simply must do some work on it; it is currently poor. If you looked up the current independent article that is Women's suffrage (United Kingdom) and which has been merged into a section here, you will find no references at all. This problem does not vanish as it is merged here, but at least, there is thus "less weakness" all-in-all.
Again, I assume that giving much time to that article in its current form, will lead to the better shape you want for: Independent articles will eventually be derived from it, in a more strong and encyclopedic form than that they currently are. But having them scattered the way they are now, or would be, I think might at least hinder or retards the process of development and improvement. At the same time, it avoids the possibility of having a relatively good article (I refer to that here now).
As for the featured status issue, I think that it might be featured when shortened and not lengthened further. But yes, you're right, let's keep that issue for sometime, indeed, much work is needed for this article right now. (I think I just perhaps liked the images so much!)
What do you think? Consider! Thank you, __ Maysara 19:28, 23 May 2006 (UTC)
I agree with Aloan. I do not see the rationale for merging those articles here and then spliting some (such as the UK article) off again. The UK shouldn't have a stand alone article unless other countries do. However, U.S. states should be combined in a U.S. article. The article as it is right now is not well enough written and is way too long. It would be nice to discuss major actions such as this merge before they happen. Sunray 06:07, 24 May 2006 (UTC)
  • Sunray, I will even put it like this:
(1) I did provide a rational for "merging those articles here and then spliting some (such as the UK article) off again." Or is it that by "I do not see" you mean that you do not agree. However, for the rational, please see above, my reply to ALoan. Or, if you already did, I hope you may tell us why you "can't see" (i.e. agree with) the rational.
(2) You say "The UK shouldn't have a stand alone article unless other countries do." I just wonder, WHY NOT?! It is quite a Wiki in here!
(3) You say "U.S. states should be combined in a U.S. article." Well, that does not quite conform to the standards and criteria of Wikipedia, in fact. ALoan was just talking about this: to "have a shorter, more general overview article, which links to other "main articles" with a narrower focus that address sub-topics in more detail." In the end, it all depends on the quality of all those presumed articles.
(4) The article right now is not well enough written, you're absolutely correct - then?! Now I, too, can't see, the relevance of this to our discussion here! Please elaborate. However, the article is not way too long. It is a little long, yes, but that too may change, we hope.
(5) Finally, "major actions" have always been the deeds of great and able personalities; not anyone can perpetrate major actions! Thus, not anyone can conceptualise, major actions. Well, "this merge", according to me, is among the slightest of all actions! However, never before has a major action "happened" by means of discussion and by being nice! These little and dainty attitudes, indeed belong to the "slightest of all actions", faraway from major actions and from where they occur - they simply negate the "happenning" of the action, if it should continue to be, major. Thus, they shall never occur before it happens, and perhaps they shan't occur at all, unless with the slightest of actions; thus, you're right!
In other words: It was going to be very difficult to convey how the merge, "this merge", will be, by means of discussion (and I presume that this is quite evident already). I myself did not know how was it going to be, and, by the way, "this merge" was not merely a blind merge of articles. It took hours so that I may fit them all together. If you even try to check this fact, it will take you hours as well, going back and forth, here and there, between all the articles. So, what I did so far is already quite NICE, regardless of whether you agree or not. What is truly not nice is, when you come to me with your conceptions about the quality and nature of "major actions" and, very conclusively say: "Hey, you know you shouldn't have done what you did!" Especially that I haven't really merged the articles yet; the original separate articles are still there, and earlier versions of this article are going no where. So how can I be more nice?! I seriously disagree with your protective and restrictive attitudes in Wikipedia, as far as I can see here (and such attitudes are becoming, somehow, more and more frequent). Other editors should be encouraged to edit rather than "be careful, be nice, discuss first, etc." It is a WIKI, and where one finds serious and constructive contributions, one does not debate their appropriateness, one debates there value and usefulness (which, honestly, you haven't even done in your comment!). There is no such thing as "major actions" here; you either can do things, or can do them not. I will not be frustrated at all if agreement does not ensue for the current modification. But I will certainly get frustrated and annoyed, when someone comes to me saying that I shouldn't even have done it, because it was n o t - n i c e . __ Maysara 14:08, 24 May 2006 (UTC)

I have two brief points:

1) I said I agreed with Aloan. You ask what that means. Here's what he said:

I am not convinced that it is sensible to merge all of the other artices here - the essence of writing in Summary style (which is one of the criteria) is have a shorter, more general overview article, which links to other "main articles" with a narrower focus that address sub-topics in more detail...

What don't you understand about that?

2) "Be Bold" does not mean conduct a "grand merge" for an article that has been around for some time (whatever its faults) without discussing it first on the talk page. Sunray 04:22, 25 May 2006 (UTC)

I have quite a lot of trouble with the merging, as it means that the section on women's suffrage is subtantailly dominated by the U.S. and U.K., which does give the impression that they are the most significant, earliest and/or typical cases. As a South Australian, it's a point of pride that we achieved the vote and the right to election well before most places, and it seems irritatingly ethnocentric that other countries get detailed timelines while we get a few references. Surely it would be more appropriate and less biased to separate out articles on specific places, and keep the main article as an account of the global struggle for female suffrage?

Besides which, it's really long right now, and just seems like endless data on two places. Lindleyle 02:31, 15 December 2006 (UTC)

I have only just found this article and have no idea what it looked like before the 'grand merge', but I think it has quite a few weaknesses:

  • There is too much on the US and UK - neither of these countries were leaders of women's suffrage and although I can accept they are both important, I can't see any justification for going into the entire history of the movement in each country on this page which wouldn't also justify screeds and screeds on women's suffrage in half the other countries on the planet. Both histories should be reduced to a couple of paragraphs and given their own pages.
  • The timeline in the UK section bewilders me. Many of the entires relate to neither women's suffrage nor the UK. What does Swiss women being given the right to study have to do with women voting in Britain? I suggest that this be either removed completely or severely pruned to only include things which are actually relevant.
  • The 'see also' section is also very cluttered. This shouldn't be a list of everything relating to women's rights: if you want that, then create a women's rights category (which would be a good idea anyway).
  • Some of the text is quite clunky, particularly in the UK section.

This is an important article and needs to be of better quality than this. --Helenalex 23:00, 28 January 2007 (UTC)

Chaining to railings

The suffragette bit claims that suffragettes chained themselves to railings. Now, in the UK I know this to be a myth, it genuinely didn't happen, and more postboxes had acid poured in them than were set alight. Can somebody who knows about the American movement comment on whether this was the case in America? If not then I could quite easily ammend some of the protesting methods. Levi_allemany

Myth? Well, the BBC are reporting it as fact.
1908 On 17 January a handful of suffragettes chain themselves to the railings of 10 Downing Street. The WSPU also introduce their stone-throwing campaign. Emmeline Pankhurst is imprisoned for the first time.[2]
Perhaps it was not as common as is generally thought, but are you saying that it never happened? -- ALoan (Talk) 09:13, 25 May 2006 (UTC)

Stand for election

What does it mean to "stand for election"?? Georgia guy 22:53, 1 June 2006 (UTC)

I would defind to "stand for election" as "to place one's name before the voters for consideration or to actively campaign for a political position". Other definitions, anyone? WBardwin 01:22, 2 June 2006 (UTC)
That sounds about right 10:37, october 31, 2006

Australia, South Australia etc

A lot of people are missing the point here that, when countries like Australia and some others (whether at state or federal level) gave women the vote, they were essentially only giving *white immigratns* the vote. This defies then definition of "universal suffrage" as it was anythign but universal, and only selective.

Australia only introduced universal suffrage late in the 20th century less than 50 years ago. I come from New zealand, while I am not an expert on the dubject what we are taught there at school was New zealand was the first "country" as such to unrestricted voting rights across to the entire population, regardless of gender ro race.

While not technically a country at the time, you could still argue "technically" it is not its own country in it's own right at the moment... as the head of state is still british. Although you may be right to point that out, it's only a technicality.. We still had basically unreserved right to decide our own affairs. We still have that right, although the British Crown *still* has the right to dismiss parliament in New zealand - so it entirely depends on what your criteria is to meet to define yourself as a country (which differs between experts)—Preceding unsigned comment added by 203.59.215.242 (talk) 18:56, 3 June 2006

New Zealand is an independent country, and has been by any definition since the passing of the Statute of Westminster. In 1894, South Australia did grant universal suffrage: men and women of all races and classes could vote in general elections. However, voting for the South Australian Legislative Council did remain restricted until 1973.--cj | talk 05:34, 4 June 2006 (UTC)

Lynchers produced fear

I placed the [citation needed] entry tag onto the United States portion of the page because the colored women were terrified of being lynched in 1913. They were not politically active. Whatever occurred involved actions between white men and white women. The statement about "African American women" is bunkum.Superslum 14:12, 20 June 2006 (UTC)

What's "bunkum" is the slightly bizarre assertion that the KKK was all-powerful in 1913... Churchh 22:45, 21 June 2006 (UTC)

Add individual U.S. territories/states to timeline

Maybe we should add the dates when women were allowed to vote in individual U.S. jurisdictions to the nineteenth-century part of the timeline (though at the beginning, these were mainly territories, and women didn't have the right to vote for the national congress and the president until such territories were admitted as states). Also, the first U.S. congresswoman was elected in 1916. Churchh 08:42, 27 June 2006 (UTC)

What about including South Australia as mentioned in the article? Subdivisions of other countries where they have distinct dates have been listed separately, like the constuituent republics of the USSR and of Yugoslavia. Also, should countries which have had their names changed be listed under their name as at the date mentioned, with their current name in parentheses? For example, Myanmar, a number of African countries, and in particular the reference to the F.Y.R of Macedonia seems a little anachronistic when Yugoslavia was well and truly functioning in 1946 - hardly "former"! - Pedrocelli

Man Show

Is the man show information really that important? Futhermore, I am 99% sure that the ending womens suffrage episode was released way before 2004 (I think it is probably from 2000 or 2001 at the latest). Flyerhell 07:04, 3 July 2006 (UTC)

Vandalism or valid edit on December 9? And again on December 14?

I don't know if this edit, made on December 9, is a valid edit or vandalism. Anchoress 16:40, 9 December 2006 (UTC)

This was the paragraph I was referring to. I re-added it as the role during war is not really covered anywhere else. There doesn't seem to be a valid reason to remove it. pschemp | talk 03:17, 15 December 2006 (UTC)

Same with this edit. Anchoress 02:16, 15 December 2006 (UTC)

Not sure what's going on there because I don't know if it needed to be 2/3 vote or a simple majority or what. The math doesn't work for either of those two options at 6 or 7. This may need research. pschemp | talk 03:21, 15 December 2006 (UTC)

What were the cons of women's rights?

I've researched it many times, but there doesn't seem to be anything on what was tragic about it. Getting in trouble with the law from illegal strikes and such, losing time, and hunger from the hunger strikes were bad about it. That's all I could come up with. Does anyone have any ideas on how it could come off as a bad thing? —The preceding unsigned comment was added by 69.105.97.231 (talk) 21:08, 10 December 2006 (UTC).

These weren't actually cons of suffrage, though, just things suffragists went through in order to *gain* suffrage. Presumably no one went on a hunger strike as a result of gaining the vote!

Lindleyle 02:15, 15 December 2006 (UTC)

The one listed under [3] should be editted to say for the U.A.E.(limited, but will be fully expanded by 2010)as told on here: [4] Same thing below should have Qatar included for 1997 & I'm quite sure Bosnia already had the right to vote since 1949 as per here: [5] & not in 2006! That-Vela-Fella 13:22, 16 December 2006 (UTC)


Arguments against Women's Suffrage

What were the main arguments against women's suffrage? If there was a debate going on in the US during the early 20th century, there must have been arguments on either side of the issue. Yet I don't see the arguments against women's suffrage explicitly detailed here. Themeparkphoto 02:46, 17 January 2007 (UTC)


who was Emmeline Pankhurst and what role did she play in getting thr vote for women who was Millicent Fawcett and what role did she play in getting thr vote for women —Preceding unsigned comment added by 82.69.16.151 (talk) 16:42, January 19, 2007

See links to Wikipedia articles above. WBardwin 04:31, 3 August 2007 (UTC)

I think the main argument that you'll run into will involve the fact that in most nations women are able to vote but are not draftable. There are those who consider this to be "equal rights without equal responsability." The basic idea, as I understand it, is that if women want equality with men they must also take shoulder all responsabilities that men shoulder--i.e., the Draft. Anything else would, under this view, constitute unfairness to men, a form of reverse discrimination. 2 August 2006

The only country I can think of off the top of my head that actually has the draft is Israel, and it applies to both genders. In some ways it's a fair enough point in principle, but I think it would be extremely problematic to link the right to vote directly to the requirement/ability to fight in wars. The logical end to that is disenfranchisement of disabled people, the elderly, conscientious objecters, etc. --Helenalex 15:59, 3 August 2007 (UTC)

Almost every nation reserves the right to draft its males into armed service if it wants to. There might be other nations besides Israel that use a gender-neutral draft, but if there are I certainly haven't heard of them. That said, I think that it's less about linking the right to vote with the particular selective service/conscription requirement than it is rights in general. Throughout much of the world, I'm really not sure that men and women have -equal- rights. After all, don't women have one extra right that men do not possess--the right not to be drafted via selective service? Now, as a thought experiment (and that's all that this is--I sincerely hope that no one out there seriously wants to end women's suffrage), doesn't that make men second class citizens in terms of rights? Heh... Perhaps this line of reasoning should be re-titled "Arguments Against Women's, Senior's, and Disabled People's Suffrage." 7 August 2007

I don't see anywhere sourced arguing anything tied in with respect to the military & what is asked on this. We're dealing here solely on the political aspect & anything opposite to these rights are just no longer valid since the nearly universal adoption of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, etc. What is needed to be expanded on would be the historical/past arguments used. That-Vela-Fella 11:23, 8 August 2007 (UTC)

Iraq

Who put in Iraq for 2008 when the nation had given that right back since 1964? I don't recall any restrictions being on there for women also. Anyone have a source for it? That-Vela-Fella 23:30, 2 February 2007 (UTC)

Portal:PoliticsFormat and side-box

The Politics portal needs a format that can sit on the side or bottom of an article. This pertains to the present article fits into the larger topic of political rights and political systems. Dogru144 22:02, 4 February 2007 (UTC)

Australia and other countries

It would be good to have something in the Australia section on women's voting rights in various states, since South Australia in particular was a leader in this. There should also be sections on more countries, especially those which gave women the vote relatively early on. Finland is an obvious example. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Helenalex (talkcontribs) 06:22, 21 February 2007 (UTC).

As for the other countries...looking at this page, it seems like it might make more sense to have a separate section on each region, with further subdivisions for countries with more detail. This would give us an intermediate level between the date of the timeline and the long paragraphs for, e.g., the United Kingdom. Thoughts? Starryharlequin 09:27, 28 April 2007 (UTC)
This would only work for regions which were relatively homogenous. While Australia and NZ could reasonably be grouped together, I'm not sure if the same applies to other regions, and it certainly doesn't to Europe - Finland was one of the earliest countries to give women the vote, and Switzerland was one of the more recent. Obviously if every country ends up with a paragraph the page will get unweildy, but perhaps we should wait until that starts happening before trying to fix it. --Helenalex 23:23, 6 June 2007 (UTC)

Citations

Overall this looks like a very good article. However, many of the sections of the article seem not to have proper citations. (The introduction, for example; the section on Australia; etc.) It would be great if we could flesh out citations for some things in the article, particularly dates. Does anybody have access to sources for some of these? (It would obviously be ideal if all the dates in the timeline list had sources.) wes 14:59, 15 March 2007 (UTC)

As for the dates itself, almost all could be found from the external sources listed at the bottom of the page.That-Vela-Fella 19:29, 15 March 2007 (UTC)

Article contradicts itself with respect to NZ?

The article seems to contradict itself with respect to New Zealand. In the history section it states:

The first unrestricted women's suffrage in terms of voting rights ... in a self-governing country was granted in New Zealand.

but in the NZ section it states:

In 1893, New Zealand became the second self-governing country in the world to give women the vote.

If it really was second, who was first and what is the subtle distinction between the two statements that could make them both true? If we are talking about the 'unrestricted' part, then the Timeline of women's suffrage seems to suggest there was more than one country before NZ that granted partial rights, meaning 'second' is wrong. Either way I think some clarification may be required. BigBadaboom0 15:55, 24 July 2007 (UTC)

The confusion might be cause of the way it's put (thus the minor move I just did to the section of the paragraph below that 1st statement). Seems that it was the 1st "unrestricted" in that sense, but the 2nd to give that right due to "In 1886 the small island kingdom of Tavolara..." being the 1st, but with restrictions (although it's not stated as to what it/they may have been). That-Vela-Fella 18:33, 24 July 2007 (UTC)
I've rewritten the first sentence of the New Zealand section. It was the one that was most confusing in my opinion. It now says: "In 1893, New Zealand became the first self-governing country in the world to give women the vote — or the second if you count Tavolara". I hope that is acceptable to everyone. BigBadaboom0 20:10, 24 July 2007 (UTC)

dates needing correction

An IP user left a comment in the 'History' section that "Some dates need correction". I've commented that out using <!-- --> this means that anyone wishing to edit the section will see it but passers by wont. IP user please leave comments on this talk page or use "<!-- -->" to place them within the article. Also for everyone else's benefit could you specify the inaccuracies in the article so that we can help sort them out quickly. Thanks for your comment--Cailil talk 14:16, 10 November 2007 (UTC)

infoboxes

This pages is using two infoboxes. {{Feminism sidebar}} and {{Discrimination sidebar}} Due to their size and to the existence of alternatives (ie {{Feminism}} and {{Discrimination}}) I'm suggesting we use the footer versions. I made this change over a week ago but it was reverted last night by IP User:97.88.205.124 [6]--Cailil talk 16:19, 24 December 2007 (UTC)

Contribution for discussion

The following good faith edit was moved from the article for discussion. WBardwin (talk) 22:05, 13 February 2008 (UTC)

Problems: There is still problems in the world today, with in some countries women not being allowed to vote. This is mostly in undeveloped countries. Also, there are still people today that feels womens place in in the home, despite women repeativly showing that they are far more capable than that. E.g. New Zealand has a female prime miniser. Psychologically, people that feel women are for domesiticism only feel insecure about themselves. For example, the author was surfing a website once and found people discussing that they thought the womens movement was bringing down America. These people were later found to have serious psychological problems involving narcissm, sexism, and violence towards other living creatures.
Doesn't seem to have any reference or source given for what was said. Looks to be just another POV or personal comment on this issue. That-Vela-Fella (talk) 20:35, 19 February 2008 (UTC)
I agree. It's not even particularly relevant to the subject of the article. Just because something is good faith doesn't mean it should be kept. --Helenalex (talk) 09:30, 20 February 2008 (UTC)

Protection

This page is a regular target of vandalism for some reason. Can editing be restricted to registered users? This would probably eliminate about 95% of the vandalism. --Helenalex (talk) 09:35, 20 February 2008 (UTC)

As a preventative measure page semi-protection can be requested at WP:RFPP (see relevant policy at WP:PROTECT) if anon IP vandalism is considered to be accute enough--Cailil talk 14:44, 20 February 2008 (UTC)
Well, that's done, and now hopefully we won't have to waste so much time reverting vandalism. --Helenalex (talk) 02:09, 22 February 2008 (UTC)

Amen! That-Vela-Fella (talk) 10:31, 23 February 2008 (UTC)

Isle of Man

According to their own website the Isle of Man granted women voting rights in 1881, not 1866 as stated w/o source. See http://www.gov.im/lib/news/mnh/125thanniversary.xml Perhaps someone can fix that. Gerhard 2007-01-03

^from above^ So can the Isle of Man get a mention for being the first country in the world to give women the right to vote in a national election —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.137.14.33 (talk) 22:20, 5 March 2008 (UTC)

The Isle of Man isn't a country. But this is information which should be added to the UK section. --Helenalex (talk) 01:52, 7 March 2008 (UTC)
The Isle of Man is most certainly a country we are dependent of the British Crown and not part of the United Kingdom or Great Britain. Rigard (talk) 23:29, 12 March 2008 (UTC)

It's now put under the UK, since it's not part of it, but either is it fully independent. Same as the Cook Islands under New Zealand. That-Vela-Fella (talk) 22:25, 14 March 2008 (UTC)

the grammar is horrendous! fix it! (especially in the intro) this is a very weak wiki article. needs some editing —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.80.184.39 (talk) 02:16, 25 April 2008 (UTC)

Fix it yourself... Wikipedia is not your mother. --Helenalex (talk) 11:26, 17 May 2008 (UTC)

Orphaned references in Women's suffrage

I check pages listed in Category:Pages with incorrect ref formatting to try to fix reference errors. One of the things I do is look for content for orphaned references in wikilinked articles. I have found content for some of Women's suffrage's orphans, the problem is that I found more than one version. I can't determine which (if any) is correct for this article, so I am asking for a sentient editor to look it over and copy the correct ref content into this article.

Reference named "history":

  • From Dominican Republic: "History of Smallpox – Smallpox Through the Ages". Texas Department of State Health Services.
  • From Guinea-Bissau: "A Brief History of Guinea-Bissau – Part 1". Africanhistory, US Department of State, at About.com. Retrieved 22 June 2013.
  • From World War I: "European powers maintain focus despite killings in Sarajevo  — History.com This Day in History". History.com. 30 June 1914. Retrieved 26 December 2013.
  • From Suffrage in Australia: History Of The Voting Franchise In Australia
  • From Bahrain: Akbar Shāh Ḵẖān Najībābādī, History of Islam, Volume 1, p. 194. Quote: "Again, the Holy Prophet «P sent Dihyah bin Khalifa Kalbi to the Byzantine king Heraclius, Hatib bin Abi Baltaeh to the king of Egypt and Alexandria; Allabn Al-Hazermi to Munzer bin Sawa the king of Bahrain; Amer bin Aas to the king of Oman. Salit bin Amri to Hozah bin Ali— the king of Yamama; Shiya bin Wahab to Haris bin Ghasanni to the king of Damascus"
  • From Women's suffrage in Australia: Passports.gov.au Passport History
  • From Cameroon: "Cameroon". US Department of State. 25 August 2011. Retrieved 24 September 2011.
  • From International Standard Book Number: "ISBN History". isbn.org. 20 April 2014. Archived from the original on 20 April 2014. Retrieved 20 April 2014. {{cite web}}: Unknown parameter |deadurl= ignored (|url-status= suggested) (help)
  • From Moldova: Asociația Oamenilor de știință din Moldova. H. Milescu-Spătaru., ed. (2002). Istoria Republicii Moldova: din cele mai vechi timpuri pină în zilele noastre [History of the Republic of Moldova: From Ancient Times to Our Days] (in Romanian) (2nd ed.). Chișinău: Elan Poligraf. pp. 239–244. ISBN 9975-9719-5-4.
  • From First Nations: "National Aboriginal Day History" (PDF). Indian and Northern Affairs Canada. Retrieved October 18, 2009.
  • From National Council of Women of Canada: "About Us - History". National Council of Women of Canada. Retrieved 2008-09-02.

I apologize if any of the above are effectively identical; I am just a simple computer program, so I can't determine whether minor differences are significant or not. AnomieBOT 20:17, 22 January 2018 (UTC)

Thank you, it does not in fact appear ever to have been a true reference, and I have removed it. DuncanHill (talk) 18:34, 29 January 2018 (UTC)

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External links modified

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I have just added archive links to one external link on Women's suffrage. Please take a moment to review my edit. If necessary, add {{cbignore}} after the link to keep me from modifying it. Alternatively, you can add {{nobots|deny=InternetArchiveBot}} to keep me off the page altogether. I made the following changes:

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Utah and (dis)enfranchisement

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.

This doesn't seem to make sense. Is it misworded? Should the last sentence say enfranchised, not disenfranchised? I can't read the linked source to determine what was intended 2602:306:CC95:B20:BD47:E9E4:C102:E31 (talk) 21:40, 6 October 2012 (UTC)

South Australia

A number of editors seem to believe that Aborigines were excluded from voting in South Australia. This is not correct.

It is not the case that only "white" women obtained the right to vote and stand for Parliament in South Australia in 1894/5. In fact the South Australian legislation did not discriminate on racial grounds. South Australia was then a self-governing colony, however in 1901 it was subsumed into the Australian Federation and became a state of Australia. Under Australia's Federal system, some other states and for a time the Federal government had restrictions on Aboriginal voters, but South Australia never did. For more see here.Ozhistory (talk) 03:45, 14 January 2013 (UTC)

Paris Commune

The Paris Commune did NOT grant Women the right to vote. There were many women groups active, but suffrage for women was not an Issue. This sentence should therefore be cancelled (it's strange that it is in anyhow since there is no reference...) — Preceding unsigned comment added by Antjeschrupp (talkcontribs) 11:29, 17 February 2014 (UTC)

Women sufferage effects / developments women sufferage

Hey I found an article on the effect of women sufferage. I'd like to recieve more sources so I may make this small headline, or create a different page if it'll be a large topic.Night-changer (talk) 10:50, 16 June 2014 (UTC)

Turkey

Turkey is in Europe. --Ail Subway (talk) 18:23, 28 June 2015 (UTC)

Turkey is part Europe, part Middle East - a tricky one!--Aciram (talk) 14:41, 6 August 2015 (UTC)

Poland in 1795?

The article's section of Poland says: "Previous to the Partition of Poland in 1795, tax-paying females were allowed to take part in political life." What does that actually mean, exactly? "Take part in political life" needs to be specified, as of course, any one could informally participate in political life, but the article is about formal rights and specifically voting rights. --Aciram (talk) 14:41, 6 August 2015 (UTC)

US/UK/Australia sections too big

I believe that when nations have their own articles about women's suffrage, the information presented on this overview page should be brief in favour of not excessively duplicating that information, so as to give greater precidence to other nations reflected on this overview page which lack their own articles.

To serve as an example, the nations of Japan/Kuwait/Switzerland all have their own articles and only a brief paragraph on this overview page. I think that is how the US/UK sections should look. There is a problem when the section on nations with their own pages are bigger than the sections on nations which do not.

For example, compare the size of the UK/US sections to the section about Canada, which doesn't yet have its own page. Ranze (talk) 22:37, 30 January 2013 (UTC)

there are two problems here --a very short statement about each country means the reader will never be able to get a world-wide viewpoint, which is the main goal of the article. Second, it gives every flag equal space which means some movements get 10 or 100x more attention proportionate to their female population. I think each country where there is solid infotrmation should get a couple paragraphsRjensen (talk) 23:38, 30 January 2013 (UTC)
Agree with the problems related to short statements about each country. Also, the endless listing of tiny places that were "first" to extend suffrage to women tells readers nothing about why it happened there or didn't happen elsewhere. Surely there can be some regional discussions - also, it is missing any reference to organizing activities/actions across Latin America, which had active women's groups in the early 20th century, who gained suffrage in numerous places.Parkwells (talk) 19:54, 8 November 2013 (UTC)
Ranze is surely right that ultimately, we do not need big sections for nations that have their own page, yet it is true that removing information that might give us a bigger picture might be a mistake. If for example the Women's suffrage in the UK or US was demonstrated to have a big influence on other countries, which I suspect to be the case, then perhaps we might need to retain a bit more info on this page about it. For the time being, it is usual for the main English speaking nations to put the work in most in their countries, but when the information comes in for the other countries, we should be aiming for a balanced world view.

IceDragon64 (talk) 23:02, 31 August 2015 (UTC)

The readers can skip over the countries that do not interest them in one second, so they are not inconvenienced by having a surplus of information. No change is needed, in my opinion. Rjensen (talk) 23:28, 31 August 2015 (UTC)