Paris 2024 Olympic Games: transgender athletes and performance, between scientific challenge and human rights

Paris 2024 Olympic Games: transgender athletes and performance, between scientific challenge and human rights
Paris 2024 Olympic Games: transgender athletes and performance, between scientific challenge and human rights

Transgender athletes, a challenge for the Olympic world.

Extremely rare at the highest level, transgender athletes have nevertheless sparked an avalanche of specific rules in recent years, pushing the sporting world to clarify the links between gender and performance, and to reconcile scientific debate and human rights.

While qualifying for the Paris Games continues, nothing says that the French capital will see a competitor like New Zealand weightlifter Laurel Hubbard, the first transgender athlete to participate in the Olympics, in 2021 in Tokyo.

In addition to Laurel Hubbard, so emotional that she was unable to lift a single bar, non-binary footballer Quinn had won gold with the Canadians. Before the event, she explained that she wanted to embody “a visible figure” for young transgender people, as she would have liked to have had as a teenager.

Former child skateboard prodigy, Alana Smith, for her part, created a surprise during the women’s street event: smiling and relaxed, the American had not attempted any technical feat, saying she preferred the quest for a medal “his happiness” et sa “pride” non-binary athlete.

Transgender athletes therefore arrived on the Olympic stage without crushing their category

Transgender athletes therefore arrived on the Olympic scene without crushing their category, far from the controversies arising around certain hyperandrogenic athletes – women with a natural excess of male hormones – like the South African Caster Semenya, double Olympic champion in the 800m (2012, 2016), deprived of competition since 2018 because she refuses to lower her testosterone levels, and in the middle of a legal battle at the European Court of Human Rights.

In 2004, the IOC called for “hormone therapy”

For sporting bodies, however, the two subjects raise similar questions: if women achieve lower performances than men in almost all disciplines, should access to the women’s category be controlled? And how ?

In 2004, for its first regulation on transgender athletes, the International Olympic Committee (IOC) required a sex reassignment operation at least two years before registration in a new category – a criterion lifted in 2011 -, as well as a “hormonal therapy” verifiable during “a duration long enough to minimize competitive advantages linked to gender”.

But in November 2021, the Olympic body invited the international federations (IF) to establish their own policy, by proposing ten principles: aim “fairness” sports by tracking the physiological advantages “unfair and disproportionate”; rely on data specific to their discipline; but also respect the right to privacy, non-discrimination, and avoid invasive examinations and pressure to follow hormonal treatment.

The challenge for scientists

Most federations “were primarily requesters of scientific research”what remains “a challenge”explains to AFP sociologist Madeleine Pape, specialist in gender and inclusion at the IOC, and former opponent of Semenya at the 2008 Olympics.

“Studies that rely on a sufficiently robust sample of transgender athletes are very few in number”, underlines Ms. Pape. Furthermore, they analyze “a very limited range of athletic characteristics”such as strength or cardiovascular capacity, when sports performance is multifactorial.

For Magali Martowicz, head of human rights at the IOC, it was also necessary to raise awareness of the legal and human aspects, since “transgender athletes are so few in number that there is a certain level of ignorance” about their journey and their experiences.

World Rugby bans transgender players from women’s competitions altogether

Among the cascade of regulations born in recent years, the strictest comes from World Rugby, which purely and simply excludes transgender players from women’s competitions, citing in particular the “risk of injury too high” in this contact sport.

Are the athletics, swimming and cycling federations demanding a transition? “before puberty” – which in practice amounts to virtual exclusion, as most countries do not allow such early gender change. And the American Lia Thomas, the first transgender swimmer to win an American university competition, was unable to challenge this rule: she was rejected in mid-June by the Court of Arbitration for Sport, because she was not admitted to the elite category by USA Swimming.

Capital testosterone level

From tennis to triathlon, many authorities have set a duration during which the testosterone level must not exceed a certain threshold, while several Olympic sports stand out: shooting, which concluded “lack of advantage” linked to male hormones, and especially gymnastics or judo, which have not adopted any international rules in this area.

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