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BackThailand's Corporal Punishment Ban: Cultural Tradition Meets Legal Reform
Thailand's Corporal Punishment Ban: Cultural Tradition Meets Legal Reform
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SCMP Economy02.05.2026Law1 dk okumaChina

Thailand's Corporal Punishment Ban: Cultural Tradition Meets Legal Reform

Despite 2025 legal amendment, over half of Thai children still subjected to violent discipline

En resumen

  • Thailand amended Section 1567 of its Civil and Commercial Code in March 2025 to ban all corporal punishment in homes, schools and facilities, elevating previous ministerial regulations to legal code.
  • However, Unicef data from June 2025 shows 54% of Thai children still experience violent discipline, while a 2020 survey found 60% of students were physically punished in schools—indicating minimal progress despite the ban and WHO warnings about harm to children's health and rights.

Resumen generado por IA

Por qué importa

Traditional Thai cultural practices have long normalized corporal punishment, supported by proverbs framing physical discipline as an act of care. Despite WHO warnings about harm to children's physical and mental health, and ministerial regulations since 2005, the practice remains widespread in Thai schools and homes.

Tamaño de fuente

An old Thai proverb says, "If you love your cow, tie it up; if you love your child, beat them". It is meant to convey that a loving and responsible guardian should discipline their child and that corporal punishment is an act of care as sensible as tethering one's cattle so that it does not wander off. For many generations, this proverb and traditional practices have normalised corporal punishment. This attitude is also displayed by teachers in schools. Today, corporal punishment is considered harmful to the physical and mental health of children. The World Health Organization asserts that such punishment increases behavioural problems, impairs socio-emotional development and, crucially, violates children's rights to good health and physical integrity. Since 2005, the Thai Ministry of Education (MOE) has permitted four forms of punishment in schools: verbal warning, formal written warning, grade deduction and remedial activities to correct behaviour. Punishing students by "violent means" is strictly prohibited. In March 2025, Thailand amended Section 1567 of its Civil and Commercial Code to ban all types of violent or corporal punishment in homes, schools and other facilities. This amendment elevates the ban from a ministerial regulation to the legal code, which fully enshrines the protection of children's bodily autonomy. Regardless of these recommendations and the ban, corporal punishment has been and continues to be prevalent in Thailand. In 2020, the Thailand Development Research Institute found that 60 per cent of Thai students had been physically punished in schools. In June 2025 – three months after the ban – Unicef found that 54 per cent of children in Thailand had been subjected to violent discipline. While the two surveys were conducted by organisations with different methodologies, a negligible decline is arguably an insufficient rate of progress for something as serious and well-studied as corporal punishment.

Preguntas abiertas

  • How will Thailand enforce the ban in private homes?
  • What training is being provided to teachers to implement alternative discipline?
  • Why did the decline in corporal punishment remain negligible three months after the ban?

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This article was originally published by SCMP Economy.

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