April
02
  8:45:01 PM

Gendered again

Norrie, with supporters, in SydneySorry, we missed this one: the world’s first officially genderless person has a gender again. Norrie, a 48-year-old born in Scotland but now living in Sydney, was allowed to list “sex not specific” on his government-issued “details certificate” last month. However, news of this achievement flew round the globe and the Registry of Births, Deaths and Marriages of the state of New South Wales told him that the certificate would be cancelled.

The Attorney-General, John Hatzistergos, said: "Advice from the Crown solicitor is that the registrar may only issue a recognised details certificate or new birth certificate following a change of sex in either male or female gender.”

Norrie, who was born male, but lives an androgynous existence after a sex-change operation, was outraged. "I felt killed. It's a hideously humiliating position to find myself in and makes a mockery of my human rights. I feel completely violated by the [NSW] Attorney-General's office," he told ABC News. He has lodged a complaint with the Australian Human Rights Commission.

Perhaps unaware of the reversal of the decision, Oxford bioethicist Julian Savulescu applauded it as “a step forward for respect for personal autonomy and for human enhancement”. He went on to explain, “The old binary categories are falling – tall and short, talented and untalented, smart and stupid, male and female. Human life is incredibly diverse. All states and talents affecting humans occur in shades of grey. We should make our choices in recognition of the shades of grey. And it makes sense to make decisions not based on crude categories but fine-grained realities.” ~ ABC, Mar 18; C-FAM, Apr 1



 

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