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niyad

(113,055 posts)
Thu Jun 30, 2016, 05:52 PM Jun 2016

The Humiliating Practice of Sex-Testing Female Athletes

The Humiliating Practice of Sex-Testing Female Athletes



For years, international sports organizations have been policing women for “masculine” qualities — and turning their Olympic dreams into nightmares. But when Dutee Chand appealed her ban, she may have changed the rules.


One day in June 2014, Dutee Chand was cooling down after a set of 200-meter sprints when she received a call from the director of the Athletics Federation of India, asking her to meet him in Delhi. Chand, then 18 and one of India’s fastest runners, was preparing for the coming Commonwealth Games in Glasgow, her first big international event as an adult. Earlier that month, Chand won gold in both the 200-meter sprint and the 4-by-400-meter relay at the Asian Junior Athletics Championships in Taipei, Taiwan, so her hopes for Scotland were high.
. . . . .






The tests were meant to identify competitors whose chromosomes, hormones, genitalia, reproductive organs or secondary sex characteristics don’t develop or align in the typical way. The word “hermaphrodite” is considered stigmatizing, so physicians and advocates instead use the term “intersex” or refer to the condition as D.S.D., which stands for either a disorder or a difference of sex development. Estimates of the number of intersex people vary widely, ranging from one in 5,000 to one in 60, because experts dispute which of the myriad conditions to include and how to tally them accurately. Some intersex women, for instance, have XX chromosomes and ovaries, but because of a genetic quirk are born with ambiguous genitalia, neither male nor female. Others have XY chromosomes and undescended testes, but a mutation affecting a key enzyme makes them appear female at birth; they’re raised as girls, though at puberty, rising testosterone levels spur a deeper voice, an elongated clitoris and increased muscle mass. Still other intersex women have XY chromosomes and internal testes but appear female their whole lives, developing rounded hips and breasts, because their cells are insensitive to testosterone. They, like others, may never know their sex development was unusual, unless they’re tested for infertility — or to compete in world-class sports.

. . . .


No governing body has so tenaciously tried to determine who counts as a woman for the purpose of sports as the I.A.A.F. and the International Olympic Committee (I.O.C.). Those two influential organizations have spent a half-century vigorously policing gender boundaries. Their rationale for decades was to catch male athletes masquerading as women, though they never once discovered an impostor. Instead, the athletes snagged in those efforts have been intersex women — scores of them.

The treatment of female athletes, and intersex women in particular, has a long and sordid his­tory. For centuries, sport was the exclusive province of males, the competitive arena where masculinity was cultivated and proven. Sport endowed men with the physical and psychological strength that “manhood” required. As women in the late 19th century encroached on explicitly male domains — sport, education, paid labor — many in society became increasingly anxious; if a woman’s place wasn’t immutable, maybe a man’s role, and the power it entailed, were not secure either.
Well into the 20th century, women were discouraged from participating in sports. Some medical experts claimed that vigorous exercise would damage women’s reproductive capacity and their fragile emotional state and would make them muscular, “mannish” and unattractive to men. Critics fretted that athletics would unbind women from femininity’s modesty and self-restraint.

. . . .

http://www.nytimes.com/2016/07/03/magazine/the-humiliating-practice-of-sex-testing-female-athletes.html?hp&action=click&pgtype=Homepage&clickSource=story-heading&module=photo-spot-region®ion=top-news&WT.nav=top-news&_r=0

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The Humiliating Practice of Sex-Testing Female Athletes (Original Post) niyad Jun 2016 OP
What would be preferable? jberryhill Jun 2016 #1
#2. n/t Chan790 Jun 2016 #2
Okay jberryhill Jun 2016 #3
Tough one. malthaussen Jul 2016 #4
 

jberryhill

(62,444 posts)
1. What would be preferable?
Thu Jun 30, 2016, 06:09 PM
Jun 2016

Should:

1. Gender divisions in sports be eliminated, or

2. Sports organizations rely on self-identification.

It is absolutely true that the IOC and other sports organizations have complex methods of determining eligibility to compete in women's sports. The complexity of these methods reflects the underlying complexity of biological "gender" determination itself.

What is the proposed alternative?
 

jberryhill

(62,444 posts)
3. Okay
Thu Jun 30, 2016, 06:56 PM
Jun 2016

I have no opinion. I'm sure the competitors of someone who is XY, physically presents as male, but psychologically identifies as female, will likely have opinions of their own.

I presume that the doping rules in relation to permissible testosterone levels will need to be changed, or that female athletes will be permitted to dope to the new standard.

malthaussen

(17,175 posts)
4. Tough one.
Fri Jul 1, 2016, 11:40 AM
Jul 2016

Sports is about physical capacity, not identity. The reason females are segregated from males is that it is recognized that only a few women can compete with men in physical activity. (well, the defensible reason, anyway. I make no assessment on how much it is fear of girl-cooties)

But if we stipulate that a class of competition is for women only, then we need some means of determining who is, physically, female, and psychological identity doesn't come directly into play, there. (Acknowledging that expectations based on gender identity could influence expectations of physical potential, and thus training, practice, and competitive opportunities). But if a person who psychologically identifies as female has the physical potential of a male, then is it fair for that individual to compete based on gender identity?

If not, then how does physical identity get tested in a way that is not potentially humiliating and demeaning?

-- Mal

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