Justice for Trans Athletes

Challenges and Struggles

Ali Durham Greey|Helen Jefferson Lenskyj
Emerald
Emerald

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Paperback / softback
9781802629880
18 May 2026
£36.99
Hardback
9781802629866
05 December 2022
£68.99
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9781802629859
05 December 2022
£36.99
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9781802629873
05 December 2022
£36.99

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  • Description
  • Contents
  • Reviews
  • About

The last decade has seen significant changes in global attitudes, policies and practices that impact the lives of trans people, but the world of sport has been slow to follow these initiatives.

Contributors to this book document the formidable social-cultural and legal challenges facing trans athletes, particularly girls and women, at the global, national, and local levels, in contexts ranging from school sport to international competition. They demonstrate how proponents of trans exclusion rely on flawed or inconclusive science, selectively employed to support their purported goal of ‘protecting women’s sport’. Politicians in the US, UK, and elsewhere who have shown little interest in women or in sport exploit the issue to advance broader conservative agendas, while hostile mainstream and social media coverage exacerbates the problem.

Bringing insights from sociology, philosophy, science and law, contributors present cogent analyses of these developments and explore the way forward, providing thoughtful and original recommendations for changes to policies and practices that are inclusive, innovative and democratic.

Chapter 1. Introduction: The Binary World of Sport; Ali Durham Greey and Helen Jefferson Lenskyj

  • Chapter 2. The Future of Women’s Sport Includes Transgender Women and Girls; Jaime Schultz, Anna Baeth, Anne Lieberman, Lindsay Parks Pieper, and Elizabeth A. Sharrow
  • Chapter 3. Making Sense of Debate Over Transgender Athletes in Olympic Sport; Roger Pielke Jr.
  • Chapter 4. ‘Female’ Sport and Testosterone Panic; Travers
  • Chapter 5. Competitive Fairness or Inclusion: Balancing Governance and Human Rights Law; Lauren McCoy Coffey
  • Chapter 6. Examining World Rugby’s Transgender Ban and Perspectives of Women and Girls Who Play Rugby in England, Canada, and Australia; Richard Pringle and Erik Denison
  • Chapter 7. Something Old, Something New: Biofeminist Resistance to Trans Inclusion in Sport; Madeleine Pape
  • Chapter 8. “This Bill is About Fairness”: An Argument Against the Prioritization of Competitive Fairness at the Expense of Justice in US School Sport; Colleen English and Lindsay Parks Pieper
  • Chapter 9. Mediated Moral Panics: Trans Athlete Spectres, the Haunting of Cisgender Girls, and Politicians as Moral Entrepreneurs in 2021; Anna Baeth and Anna Goorevich
  • Chapter 10. “We’re Missing That Humanity”: A Feminist Media Analysis of Laurel Hubbard and the Tokyo Olympic Games; Monica Nelson, Shannon Scovel, and Holly Thorpe
  • Chapter 11. Conclusion: Challenges, Struggles, and the Way Forward; Ali Durham Greey and Helen Jefferson Lenskyj

The sudden controversies over trans women's place in elite sports call for investigation. This book traces how moral panics have been fabricated to justify prejudice and exclusion. It carefully unpacks the policies of different sports bodies, and shows how a spurious rhetoric of 'science' is invoked to maintain social barriers. Equally important, the authors offer a positive approach based on principles of justice. In brief: an important resource.

- Raewyn Connell, author of Gender: In World Perspective

Ali Durham Greey (they/them) is a PhD candidate at the University of Toronto. Their work examines the experiences of trans and non-binary people in sport and in education. Ali is a SSHRC-Joseph-Armand Bombardier Scholar and a retired member of the Canadian Olympic boxing team.

Helen Jefferson Lenskyj (she/her) is Professor Emerita, University of Toronto. Her work as a researcher and activist on gender and sport issues began in the 1980s, and her critiques of the Olympic industry include seven books, most recently The Olympic Games: A Critical Approach (Emerald, 2020).