The meaning and significance of gender is currently a focus of heated and,
often, polarised debate in the UK and elsewhere. This article provides
a new perspective in the gender debate through focused exploration of
UK-based non-binary people’s perceptions of legal gender status and
reform. Binary gender/sex systems, such as the legal gender system in
the UK, are underpinned by cisgenderism and are challenged by those
whose identity falls outside of the binary of woman and man. In contrast
to most lay participants in the Future of Legal Gender (FLaG) project, the
majority of non-binary participants reported support for reform (85.5%
(n = 165) in favour) to the current UK legal gender system. Over half (57%,
n = 110) were in favour of abolishing legal gender (i.e. the state would no
longer assign a legal gender status), although this was constructed as ‘an
impossible dream’. Situating non-binary people’s perspectives at the heart
of the debate about the certification of gender offers novel insight which
could have significant ramifications for how societal structures could
support undoing gender in the future.
Funding
Reforming Legal Gender Identity: A Socio-Legal Evaluation
This is an Open Access Article. It is published by Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International Licence (CC BY). Full details of this licence are available at: https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/