seanie
Senior Member
The specific example addressed in the supreme Court’s ruling was rape counselling group sessions.
The 2010 Act explicitly gave this as an an example where trans women could be excluded on a blanket basis, because the presence of any male persons might cause distress or lead to women self-excluding from the service. It can be legitimate and proportionate to exclude males from female only rape counselling sessions.
What the Sipreme Court ruled, in addition to excluding all biological males from such a space, it could also be legitimate to exclude trans men who’ve undergone sufficient transition to pass as men. Because they could trigger the same concerns from the other women users.
Trans men will still need rape counselling services, but it may be inappropriate to provide that in a female only setting. It could be provided in a non-sex segregated space, or a space focused on trans people, or on an individual basis. These are available options.
The 2010 Act explicitly gave this as an an example where trans women could be excluded on a blanket basis, because the presence of any male persons might cause distress or lead to women self-excluding from the service. It can be legitimate and proportionate to exclude males from female only rape counselling sessions.
What the Sipreme Court ruled, in addition to excluding all biological males from such a space, it could also be legitimate to exclude trans men who’ve undergone sufficient transition to pass as men. Because they could trigger the same concerns from the other women users.
Trans men will still need rape counselling services, but it may be inappropriate to provide that in a female only setting. It could be provided in a non-sex segregated space, or a space focused on trans people, or on an individual basis. These are available options.