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31 Feminist L. Stud. 1 (2023)

handle is hein.journals/femlst31 and id is 1 raw text is: 


Feminist Legal Studies (2023) 31:1-16
https:Ildoi.org/10.1007/si0691-022-09514-5

EDITORIAL



Introduction to Special Issue: Decertifying Legal

Sex-Prefigurative Law Reform and the Future of Legal

Gender


Davina  Cooper'      Flora Renz2


Accepted: 6 December 2022 / Published online: 23 March 2023
©The Author(s) 2023



Introduction


This  special issue explores the politics and  controversy surrounding   the proposal
to decertify (or abolish) legal sex status in Britain, focusing on the jurisdiction of
England   and Wales.'  Decertification emerged  as a law  reform idea, from  the con-
fluence  of several  developments:   feminist  and  transgender  politics, intellectual
movements in critical and prefigurative research, and the institutionalisation of
liberal equality paradigms.  However,   the immediate  story  starts with legal meas-
ures introduced  transnationally to accommodate gender transitioning and in some
cases to legally recognise gender  identities other than as women  and men  (e.g., see
Sharpe  2007;  Clarke 2018;  Holzer  2018; Renz  2020a).  These  state legislative pro-
jects of incorporation, intent on  maintaining  broader  legal sex and  gender  struc-
tures,2 provide for some movement   away  from binary  statuses assigned at birth (e.g.,
Dunne   and Mulder   2018; Renz  2020b).  Yet, the assumption  that minorities should
be  incorporated within  existing classificatory structures, with all the political and


  Our analysis includes laws that relate specifically to England and Wales as well as laws which also
extend to Scotland and Northern Ireland, e.g., see Ministerial and Other Maternity Allowances Act 2021,
s7(1).
2 Political contestation over the terms of sex and gender in what they mean, what they include, and
how they operate as material enactments makes their usage complicated. Our use of gender does not
refer principally to identity or expression but to socially institutionalised processes that draw and main-
tain hierarchical distinctions. These also work with and give meaning to material forms of embodiment,
conventionally understood as sex. Thus, we refer to gender in contexts where some sex-based feminists
would prefer to talk about sex. Where the law refers explicitly to 'sex', we follow this terminology. How-
ever, English law is often inconsistent in its usage of these terms.

E   Davina Cooper
    Davina.cooper@kcl.ac.uk
    Flora Renz
    flora.renz@kent.ac.uk

    Dickson Poon School of Law, King's College London, London WC2R 2LS, UK
2   Kent Law School, University of Kent, Canterbury CT2 7NS, Kent, UK


1  Springer

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