Friends. I have been reading, listening and talking to people on different sides of the sex and gender debates for over a year before I felt confident enough to publicly to state an opinion.https://medium.com/@MForstater/international-development-lets-talk-about-sex-eb9de927c787 …
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Over that time I changed my mind from a view of "acceptance without exception" to "its a bit more complicated than that". Everyone's human rights should be protected, but being male or female is a material reality and that matters.
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When I started tweeting about this I was surprised by how many economists, researchers and development professionals: empirically minded people, not shy of serious debate thought this debate too unimportant or too controversial to get into
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Or they thought it was settled: women are not defined as people with female bodies anymore (thats exclusionary, unkind and old-fashioned). Women are people with a deeply held feminine identity, often expressed visually through clothes, hair and makeup.
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Except I don't think they really believe that.
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In our work we look at populations segmented by *sex* to study outcomes in education, employment, poverty, health, etc… and to look at violence against women, the burden of household work & etc...
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None of this is based on people having a personality at the ‘feminine end of the spectrum’. It is based on the way societies treat people who are male or female. Where women are treated as second class citizens its not something they can opt out of by dressing differently.
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Of course there can be different definitions for things. Being a woman is a social identity based on other people reading you as female, and being a woman is also a function of being female: chromosomes, gametes, genitalia
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We can use both definitions. Usually they align. When they don’t its polite and kind to treat people the way they want to be treated, even when they don’t ‘pass’ as the sex they’d like to be seen as.
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That's absolutely fair enough I think. No one should be compelled or pressured to. I was writing more for friends and colleagues who have taken a reflexively accomodating approach. i. e. if you use 'women' to mean a social perception ok, but don't forget that sex matters...
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