Hard-won, vital legal protections have been upended by the supreme court and the EHRC. Ultimately our lawmakers must fix thisAlexandra Parmar-Yee is a campaigner for trans equality and a director of Trans+ Solidarity...
See moreHard-won, vital legal protections have been upended by the supreme court and the EHRC. Ultimately our lawmakers must fix this
Alexandra Parmar-Yee is a campaigner for trans equality and a director of Trans+ Solidarity Alliance
When you try to imagine the lives of trans people in the UK today, you could be forgiven for thinking they have always been dominated entirely by fear and anxiety. Things have been getting worse, but until recently, my life as a transgender woman had not been consumed with worrying about how I’m supposed to live it. That is, until last year’s UK supreme court ruling.
In fact, when I’ve worried about needing a bathroom or felt hesitant about taking up space when invited to join a women’s network, it’s been other women who have made me feel welcome and pushed me to stop worrying. This was the reality for many trans people in the UK until 2025, when the court decided that “man” and “woman” in the Equality Act must refer to “biological sex”, upending decades of shared understanding of the law.
Alexandra Parmar-Yee is a campaigner for trans equality and a director of Trans+ Solidarity Alliance
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Hard-won, vital legal protections have been upended by the supreme court and the EHRC. Ultimately our lawmakers must fix thisAlexandra Parmar-Yee is a campaigner for trans equality and a director of Trans+ Solidarity...
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