Semenya v. Switzerland (European Court of Human Rights), No. 10934/21, July 11 2023

Author:

Cooper Jonathan1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Business School, University of Gloucestershire, UK

Abstract

The issue of how to accommodate non-binary athletes in female sport whilst maintaining a sense of fair competition is something that many sports have struggled with in recent years. Whilst there has been debate about ethical and scientific justifications for imposing eligibility restrictions on athletes with sex variations, the potential impact of human rights norms on the policies of sport governing bodies in this area has received only peripheral attention. However, the recent decision of the European Court of Human Rights in Semenya v Switzerland, seems to have changed that narrative. In accepting jurisdiction and then finding Switzerland had failed to adequately protect Miss Semenya in relation to human rights concerns over eligibility restrictions imposed by World Athletics, the relevance and importance of substantive human rights in sport has been recognised, at least within a European context. This article reviews the most important aspects of the Court’s decision and argues that the consequences of the judgment are potentially far more significant than one set of eligibility restrictions in Athletics. In particular, the judg-ment would seem to lay down significant limits to the cherished ideal of sporting autonomy and, also, demand more rationally transparent decision making by sport governing bodies and those arbitrating on disputes in sport that involve human rights concerns.

Publisher

University of Westminster Press

Subject

General Materials Science

Reference6 articles.

1. Serum androgen levels and their relation to performance in track and field: mass spectrometry results from 2127 observations in male and female elite athletes;Bermon, S.Garnier, P. Y.;British Journal of Sports Medicine,2017

2. Protecting human rights in sport: is the Court of Arbitration for Sport up to the task? A review of the decision in Semenya v IAAF;Cooper, J.;The International Sports Law Journal,2023

3. The Compatibility of Forced CAS Arbitration with EU Competition Law: Pechstein Reloaded;Duval, A.Van Rompuy, B.;SSRN Electronic Journal,2015

4. Eligibility Regulations for the Female Classification (Athletes with Differences in Sexual Development) Explanatory Notes,2019

5. International Olympic Committee (2021) IOC Framework on fairness, inclusion and non-discrimination on the basis of gender identity and sex variations. International Olympic Committee. Available at: https://stillmed.olympics.com/media/Documents/Beyond-the-Games/Human-Rights/IOC-Framework-Fairness-Inclusion-Non-discrimination-2021.pdf.

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