NYC Bd of Health Abandons Plan to Let People Define their own Sex
A page B1 story in (the NYC version of) today's NY Times reports that the NYC Bd of Health dropped a plan that would have permitted individuals to designate their own sex, regardless of anatomical and biological considerations. The article is notable in part for its bizarre use of the words "sex" and "gender" interchangeably. Sex is a biological category; gender is a social category. Some queer theorists argue that even sex is socially constructed, and there is something to that claim, but in most cases it's easy enough to distinguish the two. To be sure, there are intermediate cases with respect to "sex." E.g., the protagonist in the Jeffrey Eugenides novel Middlesex, whose recessed penis was mistaken for a large clitoris at birth, and was thus raised as a girl even though he was in other respects male; or androgen-insensitive males, who appear outwardly to be female but are chromosomally XY and thus lack female reproductive capacities; XXY's; XYY's; etc. But I understand the point of the proposed change as meant to address the circumstances of people whose genetic sex matches their phenotypical sex, yet who identify as the opposite sex: pre-op transsexuals, for example (regardless of whether the individual actually intends to have surgery).
The Times article cites a number of concerns that led to abandonment of the plan. For example, if a biological male self-identifies as female, does that person get a (conventional) female roommate in a hospital? If such a person is arrested for or convicted of a crime, is "she" (quotations used not pejoratively but simply to note the poverty of our language) housed with male or female inmates? The problems that arise tend to concern two principal issues: privacy and security. And they tend to trade off the security of transgendered persons (who are often at risk of assault from queerophobes) against the security and privacy of women (who may be at risk from the predatorial men that would take advantage of a rule that de facto integrates facilities like public restrooms to commit acts of sexual assault.
In a deeper sense, however, we should probably understand these tradeoffs as costs we bear simply in virtue of the continued sexism of our society. Aggressive feelings towards transgendered persons (and gays and lesbians) undoubtedly are rooted in normative views about the "proper" roles of men and women. Meanwhile, women's special concern about privacy/modesty are themselves a product of a kind of sexism. (I say "special" concern in recognition of the fact that men too are socialized to feel uncomfortable being exposed in front of members of the opposite sex--but substantially less so, I suspect.) And it's hard to believe that the vulnerability of women to assault by men is simply a matter of the on-average greater physical strength of men relative to women. Outside of prison, where they are, tellingly, coded as female, slight men do not generally face the same risks as women.
Of course, to recognize that this set of issues (one of which I wrote about in an April 2005 FindLaw column) pits claims of sex/gender justice against each other, is not to say that there is an easy solution in the short run. In the long run, at least on the sexual modesty side, the U.S. might eventually move in the direction of most of western Europe, in which integrated changing facilities, nude beaches, etc., are much more common than in the United States. The greater religiosity of the U.S. population may make that unlikely, though, and if anything, we might expect that Europe will move in the direction of the U.S., in light of its growing religious Muslim population.
The Times article cites a number of concerns that led to abandonment of the plan. For example, if a biological male self-identifies as female, does that person get a (conventional) female roommate in a hospital? If such a person is arrested for or convicted of a crime, is "she" (quotations used not pejoratively but simply to note the poverty of our language) housed with male or female inmates? The problems that arise tend to concern two principal issues: privacy and security. And they tend to trade off the security of transgendered persons (who are often at risk of assault from queerophobes) against the security and privacy of women (who may be at risk from the predatorial men that would take advantage of a rule that de facto integrates facilities like public restrooms to commit acts of sexual assault.
In a deeper sense, however, we should probably understand these tradeoffs as costs we bear simply in virtue of the continued sexism of our society. Aggressive feelings towards transgendered persons (and gays and lesbians) undoubtedly are rooted in normative views about the "proper" roles of men and women. Meanwhile, women's special concern about privacy/modesty are themselves a product of a kind of sexism. (I say "special" concern in recognition of the fact that men too are socialized to feel uncomfortable being exposed in front of members of the opposite sex--but substantially less so, I suspect.) And it's hard to believe that the vulnerability of women to assault by men is simply a matter of the on-average greater physical strength of men relative to women. Outside of prison, where they are, tellingly, coded as female, slight men do not generally face the same risks as women.
Of course, to recognize that this set of issues (one of which I wrote about in an April 2005 FindLaw column) pits claims of sex/gender justice against each other, is not to say that there is an easy solution in the short run. In the long run, at least on the sexual modesty side, the U.S. might eventually move in the direction of most of western Europe, in which integrated changing facilities, nude beaches, etc., are much more common than in the United States. The greater religiosity of the U.S. population may make that unlikely, though, and if anything, we might expect that Europe will move in the direction of the U.S., in light of its growing religious Muslim population.
2 Comments:
At 11:26 AM,
Adam P. said…
There are two main reasons to be dismayed with this change. One is the substantive issue, which Mike alludes to. The other is the "real story" of what went down here, and unfortunately has decreased my respect for one of my personal public health heroes, NYC Health Commissioner Thomas Frieden.
On the substance, trans people have often been the black sheep of the LGBT Rights movement. A lot of people who are generally supportive of gay rights are uncomfortable with the issues surrounding transgenderism, and cite the kinds of irrational fears about women having drag queen roommates, biological men in womens restrooms (the horror!), or just the very idea of someone's private parts not matching their outward appearance and/or sexual identity. (Interestingly, we are much less likely to hear about fears of the drag king or an FTM individual.) This is reflective of a social norm that has been internalized by the LGBT community. In gay men, "masculinity" is prized. It's okay to like boys, as long as you act like a boy. There are similar issues with the butch/femme dynamic in lesbian culture. Nonetheless, this plan would have been of a great benefit to trans individuals in New York, with minimal cost to everyone else.
For example, trans people already often use the bathroom of their self-identified sex. If people are uncomfortable with that, the changed law would not make any immediate difference. In the hospital roommate context, this law would have made things simpler- an MTF individual becomes a female, so they get a female roommate. Now, its an ad hoc policy with different results at different hospitals. So the argument that the issues would be too complicated is a cop-out.
Which brings me to my second issue. Frieden says the ban has been revoked because it had "broader societal implications" than they anticipated. I call his bluff. Frieden is a very bright guy, and has other very smart public health folks working for him. This plan wasnt proposed without substantial research and discussion. In fact, it was proposed BECAUSE of the broad societal implicatioms. So what did happen? I direct you to the front cover of this week's New York magazine: "Bloomberg in 08". Apparently, not content with a billion dollar empire, good luck with a mess of a democratic party in 2 subsequent elections, and a purchased mayoralty, Bloomberg's maniacal advisors have convinced him that he should run for President, and Bloomberg is convinced he'd be great at it! Of course, Bloomberg would run as a "Lieberman-type" independent, so the attention being directed at his administration by people on the left for this "radical" move would not be great for a centrist candidacy.
A political move that goes against health concerns, and goes against civil rights. For shame.
At 5:24 PM,
Adam P. said…
Though I seem to be the only one who cares, Kenji Yoshino of Yale has a piece up on this http://www.slate.com/id/2155278/
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