In the new bits there is a shift from seeing "gender identity" as inherent to seeing it as a preference and a courtesy
And a dialing back on the sweeping legal statements about the effects of a GRC (this was clarified in the Forstater judgment 😊 )
Another bit of dialing back here
Some additions...
A long quote from Baroness Hale
(I'm not sure what the point of all this mood music is, other than I guess as a sop to offset the other additions)
This is a significant shift - from recognising "gender identity" to balancing between a person's desire to be referred to in a particular way (and to keep their sex secret) and other considerations
Here is the meat of that. Its set out in annoying language of "assigned at birth" but it is an important shift.
(Me: Fundamentally it comes down to the obligation of witnesses to tell the "truth, whole truth, nothing but.." and ppl who want to keep something that is blatantly obvious "private" (the right to privacy is limited)
Judges rewriting history as in the JLR case should be stopped)
A bit more dialing back here
And here
And here, on "deadnaming"
Removal of "cis" here
Recognition that "cis" is not acceptable to all
(or as @anyabike said in my tribunal "who are you calling cis?")
There is a new section on gender critical belief!
And then in the Appendix an extraordinarily long section on my case
It includes all the stuff the judge said my case didn't mean...
(this is really extraordinary, no other case is covered in this detail - (by comparison Lee v Ashers gets about half a paragraph)
All in all it is a step in the right direction, as a result of my case, efforts by academics, lawyers and legal commentators incl. @OHaraMaureen9 and the excellent @Policy_Exchange report by Thomas Chacko
Still, the whole thing could do with cutting 💇♀️💇♀️💇♀️ down. Simpler, clearer, aligned to the law.
These case examples that come from the @EHRC should be reviewed (is this really what the law and case law says ?🤨 )
The process of writing and reviewing the guidance is opaque.
Which organisations have inputed? We are not allowed to know. The Judicial College says it doesn't exist for the purposes of FOI (we are still working on this!)
Still, this revision is positive.
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Did you not even read what the GRA requires? There is no panel judging if you are "feminine or masculine enough" - this is complete fantasy. Pure propaganda
Bar charts like these with percentages and fixed overall lengths are usually read as 100% bar charts - each coloured slab is a proportion of the whole.
But in UCU's the percentages don't add up, because each one is a percentage of something else.
Its misdirection
It is a self selected survey (likely to attract people concerned about sexual violence and more likely to have been victims).
66% of respondents were women, 32% men, 2% trans/NB
And out of those who said they had experienced sexual violence 80% women, 16% men, 4% trans/NB