Title: Transgender Rights
1Transgender Rights
- Helena Pereira de Melo
- Helena.melo_at_fd.unl.pt
- October 2014
2Agrado (All about my mother, 1999)
3They call me Pleasure, because I have always
tried to make everyones life more pleasant
Aside from being pleasant I am also very
authentic. Almond shaped eyes, 80 thousand
silicone in lips, forehead, cheeks, hips and
assthe liter costs 6000 pesetas It costs me a
lot to be authentic. But we must not be cheap in
regards to the way we look. Because a woman is
more authentic the more she looks like what she
has dreamed for herself.
4David Bell
- All citizenship is sexual citizenship
5Sex legal prerequisite
- Acquisition of rights
- Sex anti-discrimination law
6Law
- Does not define sex nor gender
- Influenced by the vision of man and woman and
the heterosexual family model.
7Mainstream law
- Based upon the heterosexual and male privilege
- Hetronormativity - originates inequality in
family life, political participation rights,
access to welfare entitlements and employment
conditions
8Sara Crawley
- Gender is serious business. If you have broken
the rules, you will know about it
9dissident sexual citizenship
10Transgender movement, 1980
- People should be free to change, either
temporarily or permanently, the sex type to which
they were assigned since infancy
11Members
- Transexuals want to have sex reassignment
surgery - Transgenderists live in the gender role
associated with other sex without wanting to have
surgery - Bigender persons identify as both man and women
- Drag queens men who dress in womens clothes
- Kings women who dress in mens clothes
12Is the drag queen discriminated?
13Transgendered people
- Pathologised as being mentally ill
- Forced to divorced or to be sterilized
- Cannot marry and found a family
- Dismissed from their work
- Rejected by their family
- Victims of hate crimes
14Transsexuals
15Transsexualism
- Gender identity does not align with the sex
assigned at birth - Through medical intervention they want to alter
their external physical appearance to match their
internal gender identity - Mental illness - WHO
16Gender dysphoria
- A person identifies completely with the
gender that the body does not biologically
represent.
17Gender confirming procedure
- Hormonal and surgical treatment
- Male-to-female transwoman
- Female-to-male - transman
18John and Chaz have virtually the same DNA and a
penis transplant from John to Chaz will be a
success. The danger of Chazs body rejecting
Johns penis is virtually zero. Dean Traherne
MD, North Dakota University of Medicine
19S. Kessler
- the transsexual movement reproduces and rebels
against gender dualism and biocentrism
20The transsexual wants to
- destroy the importance of biology
- be fully identified with one of the poles of the
rigid binary system - the status of what they fully are after
transitioning - men or women.
21(No Transcript)
22The legal relevance of sex names, coulors,
behaviours, expectations
23Sex linked with human rights
- To get married only with someone from the
opposite sex? - To get divorced only men?
- To paid work differently paid for the same type
of work? - To maternity leave shorter paternity leave?
24To sexual harassment protection does it apply
to transsexuals?
25Can she be a killer?
- Age of retirement earlier for women?
- To vote and to be elected
- To join the army
- To a fair trial in criminal law the sensitive
and fragile woman
26Which are the effects of changing sex?
- In a pre-existing marriage would become a
homosexual marriage - In parenthood 2 mothers or to fathers
27Transsexual husband annuls marriage and enters
into civil partnership with wife to keep pension
benefits (UK, 2008)
28ECHR
- Rees v. The UK (1986)
- Cossey v. The UK (1984)
- B v. France (1987)
- Christine Goodwin v. The UK (1995)
- L V. The UK (1994)
- X, Y and Zv. The UK, 1997
- Sheffield and Horsham v. The UK (1998)
29Cossey v. The UK (1984)
- a transsexual who was registered at birth as
being of the male sex. - assumed a woman's name and adopted a female role
for all purposes. - underwent gender reassignment surgery, after
which, according to the medical report, she has
lived a full life as a female.
30The applicant
- Wishes to marry, but the UK authorities informed
her that - such a marriage would be void, because English
law would treat her as a male - she could not be issued with a birth certificate
showing her sex as female.
31- The applicant complained of her inability to
claim full recognition of her changed status and
alleged a violation of Art. 8 (right to respect
for private life) and Art. 12 (right to marry) of
the ECHR
32The ECHR (1990)
- gender reassignment surgery does not result in
the acquisition of all the biological
characteristics of the other sex - Invoking the UKs margin of appreciation, the
Court found no breach of articles 8 or 12
33Judge Paul Martens
- The refusal by the state is cruel
- Transsexual tragic human being
34B v. France (1992)
- was born in 1935 at Sidi Bel Abbès, Algeria
- was registered with the civil status registrer as
of male sex, with the names Norbert Antoine - adopted female behavior from a early age
35B v. France
- in 1963 and settled in Paris, working in a
cabaret under an assumed name - underwent a surgical operation in Morocco in
1972 - the removal of the external genital organs
and the creation of a vaginal cavity
36B. v. France
- is now living with a man whom she met before
her operation - is no longer working on the stage
- is unable to find employment due to the hostile
reactions she arouses
37B v. France
- Asked the Court of Libourne to order the
rectification of her birth certificate she would
bear the names Lynne Antoinette - Her application was not granted because of the
principle of the inalienability of the status of
individuals
38B v. France
- Appealed to the Court de Cassation - even after
the hormone treatment and surgical operation
which she underwent she continued to show the
characteristics of a person of male sex.
39B v. France
- complained of the refusal of the French
authorities to - recognise her true sexual identity
- to allow her to change her civil status
- relying on Articles 3, 8 and 12 of the ECHR.
40B v. France
- it is undeniable that attitudes have changed,
science has progressed and increasing importance
is attached to the problem of transsexualism - in the light of the relevant studies carried out
in this field, there still remains uncertainty as
to the essential nature of transsexualism and the
legitimacy of surgical intervention in such cases
- there is as yet no sufficiently broad consensus
between the member States of the Council of
Europe to persuade the Court to reach opposite
conclusions to those in its Cossey judgment.
41Christine Godwinn v. The UK (1995)
- Is a UK citizen born in 1937 and is a
post-operative male to female transsexual
- Though she married a woman and they had 4
children, her conviction was that her brain sex
did not fit her body - Until 1990 she dressed as a man for work but as
a woman in her free time - She claims that between 1990 and 1992 she was
sexually harassed by colleagues at work - In 1997 the Contributions Agency informed her
that she would be ineligible for a State pension
at the age of 60, the age of entitlement for
women in the UK.
42Christine Godwinn v. The UK (1995)
- signals its consciousness of the serious problems
facing transsexuals and stresses the importance
of keeping the need for appropriate legal
measures in this area - where a State authorizes and finances the
treatment alleviating the condition of a
transsexual, it appears illogical to refuse to
recognize the legal implications of the result to
which the treatment leads.
43Christine Godwinn v. The UK (1995)
- It is not apparent that the chromosomal element
must inevitably take on decisive significance for
the purposes of legal attribution of gender
identity for transsexuals. - is not persuaded that the state of medical
science provides any determining argument as
regards the legal recognition of transsexuals.
- attaches less importance to the lack of evidence
of a common European approach to the resolution
of the legal problems posed, than to the clear
and uncontested evidence of a continuing
international trend in favor of increased social
acceptance of transsexuals and of legal
recognition of the new sexual identity of
post-operative transsexuals.
44Article 14 ECHR
- The enjoyment of the rights and freedoms set
forth in the Convention shall be secured without
discrimination on any ground such as sex, race,
color, language, religion, political or other
opinion, natural or social origin, association
with a national minority, property, birth or
other status.
45The ECHR
- In the wording of Art. 14 there is no explicit
category such as gender identity - The ECHR has refused to interpret extensively the
sex category embracing transsexuals. - Art. 14 refers to other status
46What about the European Court of Justice?
- P v. S and Cornwall County Council, 1996
- KB v. National Health Service Pensions Agency,
2004 - Richards v. Secretary of State for Work and
Pensions, 2006
47The ECJ
- The prohibition of discrimination on the grounds
of sex (Council Directive 2006/54/EC) includes
discrimination on the grounds of gender
reassignment - Such discrimination is based on the fact that a
person belongs to a particular sex
48The ECJ
- On the principle of equal treatment for men and
women as regards access to employment - On the payment of (survival, retirement) pensions
- On the exercise of the right to marry
49The ECJ
- Protects against sex discrimination
- Protects especially post-operative transsexuals
and not all transgendered people
50Rights
- Right to life
- Right to the protection of private and family
life - Right to marry and to found a family
- Right to health
- Right to free development of personality
51International Law
- UDHR (1948)
- ICCPR (1966)
- ICESR (1966)
- ECHR (1950)
- CFREU (2000)
52Parliamentary Assembly
- Recommendation on the Condition of Transsexuals
(29 July 1989) - Resolution recommending all member states to
recognize basic rights to transsexuals (12
September 1989)
53Rights
- To live according to ones sexual identity
- To change sex
- To rectification of the registered sex in the
birth certificate and - identity documents
- To change forename in accordance with the new sex
- To health care.
54Right to health
- Psychiatric diagnosis of transsexualism
- Psychotherapeutic assistance before and after the
surgery - Information on the change of sex
- Hormone treatment
- Clinical trial in living the role of the new sex
for 1 year - Surgery
55The EU States national health funding scheme
- Phalloplasty
- Psychotherapy
- Hormone replacement therapy
- Hair removal
- Breast augmentation
- Bilateral mastectomies
- Vaginoplasty
56Problems - transsexuals
- Wait years until they are diagnosed
- Are diagnosed as being mentally ill
- Waiting lists for surgeries
- Humiliated by medical practitioners
- Not well protected against hate crimes
572006
58Transsexuals gender outlaws
- Protect against negative discrimination
- Adopt affirmative action measures - access to
medical and legal formalities
59- Women and men have rights not because they are
gendered beings, but because they are human
beings - The target is to make sex a feature of the
citizen no more relevant than being left-handed