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Summary: General overview of the Thailand's national legal provisions on children's rights, including guidance on how to conduct further research.
National laws on children's rights Status of the CRC in national law Constitution: Chapter III of the Thai Constitution contains a number of rights provisions that apply to children as to other citizens, but a small number of child specific provisions are also found throughout the Constitution: Legislation: there is no comprehensive or consolidated Children's Act in Thai law; rather, legislation related to children's rights can be found throughout a number of acts, some of which are specifically targeted at children. Relevant legislation includes, but is by no means limited to: Legal Research: Case Law: Case law research Compliance with the CRC In depth analysis With regards to juvenile justice, the Committee expressed concern at the low age of criminal responsibility (10 years) and the potentially inadequate training of members of the judiciary with regards to children's rights. Accordingly, the Committee recommended addressing these concerns, as well as ensuring that deprivation of liberty is used as a measure of last resort for children in conflict with the law and that children are always detained separately from adults. The Committee also raised concerns over violence against children in the State party, particularly with regards to the legality of corporal punishment in the home and by those with parental authority over a child. The Committee recommended that corporal punishment be explicitly prohibited in domestic legislation, along with all other forms of violence against children. Moreover, while welcoming amendments to the Penal Code with regards to the crime of rape, the Committee expressed concern that the investigation and criminal procedure for sexual abuse cases is unduly long. Current law reform projects
International conventions including the Convention on the Rights of the Child do not have direct effect in Thai law, and the rights contained therein must be incorporated into national law to be enforceable. The CRC has as a whole not been directly incorporated as such, meaning that its provisions can only be directly invoked by domestic courts and local agencies where they have been enacted in national laws. The Juvenile and Family Courts can use the Convention in interpreting domestic laws, but where there is a contradiction between national law and the CRC, national law will prevail.
The Thai Parliament (Rathasapha) maintains an official website in Thai offering legislative information (http://www.parliament.go.th/ewtadmin/ewt/parliament_parcy/main.php?filename=portal_02). The Thai Law Reform Commission publishes Acts of Parliament in English and Thai (http://www.lawreform.go.th/lawreform/eng/index.php?option=com_homelawreformen&task=show&gid=6&ename=Acts%20of%20Parliament) and the Thai Law Forum publishes legislation in English (http://www.thailawforum.com/database.html). The current Constitution and its predecessors are available in English through the Asian Legal Information Institute (http://www.asianlii.org/th/legis/const/). In addition, the GlobaLex project at New York University has published a guide to legal research in Thailand (http://www.nyulawglobal.org/Globalex/Thailand1.htm) and the U.S. Law Library of Congress (http://www.loc.gov/law/help/guide/nations/thailand.php), the World Legal Information Institute (http://www.worldlii.org/th/) and the Asian Legal Information Institute (http://www.asianlii.org/resources/266.html) provide a selection of links to relevant legal and governmental resources.
CRC jurisprudence
Please contact CRIN if you are aware of any cases in national law that reference the Convention on the Rights of the Child.
The website of the Law Reform Commission provides links to the case law of the Constitutional Court, the Supreme Court, the Administrative Court and the legal opinions of the Council of State in Thai (http://www.lawreform.go.th/). The Asian Legal Information Institute has published a selection of the case law of the Constitutional Court (http://www.asianlii.org/th/cases/THCC/) and the Supreme Court (http://www.asianlii.org/th/cases/THSC/) in English.
In its 2012 Concluding Observations, the Committee on the Rights of the Child welcomed a number of pieces of legislation contributing to the harmonisation of national law with the principles and provisions of the CRC. The Committee also welcomed the establishment of the Sub-Committee under the National Child and Youth Commission with the aim of revising existing laws to bring them into conformity with the Convention. The Committee raised concerns, however, at the inadequacy of measures to enforce and implement legal reform, particularly with regards to the Child Protection Act, which has not been reviewed since its implementation in 2003 and has no corresponding guidelines on the roles and responsibilities of the various agencies within its purview.
Despite welcoming a number of legislative reforms in its Concluding Observations of 2012, the Committee on the Rights of the Child highlighted several areas of Thai law that contained inconsistencies with the Convention on the Rights of the Child. The Committee noted the reforms of the Home Workers Protection Act with regards to minimum wages and safe working conditions for children over 15 years of age, but expressed concern that the legislation did not provide protection to informal workers in agriculture, the tourist industry, begging and domestic service, where children aged below 15 are mostly involved. The Committee recommended that the State amend its legislation to prohibit the involvement of children in informal sectors, "with particular attention to vulnerable groups of children such as foreign children and children in street situations".
At the time of the 2012 Concluding Observations of the Committee on the Rights of the Child, a Draft Reproductive Health Act was under consideration.