International organisations UN Women works to protect the rights of transgender people, and "urgently calls on communities and governments around the world to stand up for LGBTIQ+ rights." The
Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID) supports LGBTIQ rights and opposes the
anti-gender movement, and has described trans-exclusionary feminists as "trojan horses in human rights spaces" that seek to undermine human rights; AWID said that anti-trans activity is "alarming", that "the 'sex-based' rhetoric misuses concepts of sex and gender to push a deeply discriminatory agenda" and that "trans-exclusionary feminists... undermine progressions on gender and sexuality and protection of rights of
marginalized groups." The
International Alliance of Women along with its over fifty affiliates worldwide support LGBT+ rights and have expressed concern over "anti-trans voices [that] are becoming ever louder and [that] are threatening feminist solidarity across borders."
Africa In 2010, the
Social, Health and Empowerment Feminist Collective of Transgender Women in Africa was formed.
South America Argentina During the 1990s, Argentine
LGBT activism took off, and the end of the decade saw the entry of
travestis into spaces of feminist discussion, marking the beginning of
transfeminism in Argentina.
Lohana Berkins was a feminist and one of travesti activism's most prominent leaders. Berkins got into feminism in the 1990s through meetings with
lesbian feminists such as Alejandra Sarda,
Ilse Fuskova, Chela Nadio and Fabiana Tron. The Argentine government's response to the
COVID-19 pandemic in Argentina included trans-inclusive gender-based measures, with
Minister of Women, Genders and Diversity Elizabeth Gómez Alcorta stating that "trans people are particularly vulnerable in our country." The Argentine feminist movement, including the
National Gathering of Women, has seen debates over reforming the Spanish language to be more gender neutral in recent years. The campaign to legalise
abortion in Argentina has included transgender people, and after the movement was successful, the bill legalising abortion explicitly included trans and non-binary people.
North America Canada The
Canadian Anti-Hate Network said that despite labelling themselves as feminists, TERF groups often collaborate with conservative and far-right groups. According to journalist
Neil Macdonald, Canada saw an increase in debates about transgender issues in feminism especially after the introduction of
Bill C-16 in 2016, which added gender expression and gender identity as protected characteristics to the
Canadian Human Rights Act and was opposed by a range of conservatives and some feminists, such as
Meghan Murphy. Feminist writer
Margaret Atwood has said she disagrees with the views that trans women are not women or should not use women's washrooms. In May 2021, over 110 women's and human rights organisations in Canada signed a statement supporting trans-inclusionary feminism, stating that "trans people are a driving force in our feminist movements and make incredible contributions across all facets of our society." Canadian women's sporting organisations have also supported trans-inclusion, with the
Canadian Women's Hockey League having an openly trans woman play, the
Canada women's national soccer team having an openly non-binary player play, and
Rugby Canada rejecting proposals to ban trans women from the sport. In 1995,
Kimberly Nixon, a trans woman, volunteered for training as a
rape crisis counselor at
Vancouver Rape Relief & Women's Shelter. When the shelter determined Nixon was trans, it expelled her, with staff saying it made it impossible for her to understand the experiences of their clients. Nixon disagreed, disclosing her own history of partner abuse, and sued on the grounds of discrimination. Nixon's attorneys argued there was no basis for the dismissal, citing Diana Courvant's experiences as the first publicly trans woman to work in a women-only
domestic violence shelter. In 2007 the
Canadian Supreme Court refused to hear Nixon's appeal, ending the case. The
Vancouver Rape Relief & Women's Shelter was the centre of a further controversy regarding exclusion of transgender women when the
City of Vancouver Council stopped awarding the shelter an annual $34,000 grant in 2019 over its exclusion of trans women. In January 2018, the
Halifax Women's March came under criticism for a lack of intersectionality, with a number of Indigenous, Muslim, and trans feminist activists breaking away from the march to form a rally of their own, titled Walking the Talk. In March of that year,
Gabrielle Bouchard was elected leader of the
Fédération des femmes du Québec, the first transgender woman to hold the position.
United States Mainstream feminist organizations in the United States such as the
National Organization for Women (NOW), the
League of Women Voters, the
National Women's Law Center and the
Feminist Majority Foundation all support trans rights. In 1997, NOW passed a resolution that affirmed trans inclusion within the organization; they also supported "recognition of transgender oppression" and issued a call "for education on the rights of transgender people." NOW president
Terry O'Neill said the struggle against transphobia is a feminist issue. NOW has affirmed that "trans women are women, trans girls are girls." In a further statement NOW said that "trans women are women. They deserve equal opportunity, health care, a safe community & workplace, and they deserve to play sports. They have a right to have their identity respected without conforming to perceived sex and gender identity standards. We stand with you." NOW has said that debate' about trans girls and women in school sports spreads transphobia and bigotry through the false lens of 'fairness that amounts to a hate campaign.
Women's March, an organization launched in 2017 to protest the policies of the
Trump administration, is also trans-inclusive, has stated that "trans women are women" and condemned
TERFs. Women's March doesn't allow transphobia in its events. The
National Women's Law Center "unequivocally supports the inclusion of trans women in women's sports" and has said that "in recent years, the
far right has been attempting to divide, and thereby weaken, our feminist movement with fearmongering around transgender women athletes in women's sports." In 2020 the
League of Women Voters joined a lawsuit to protect transgender women and girls in sports. A statement by 16 women's rights organizations including the
National Women's Law Center, the
National Women's Political Caucus,
Girls, Inc.,
Legal Momentum, End Rape on Campus, the
American Association of University Women,
Equal Rights Advocates and the
Women's Sports Foundation said that, "as organizations that fight every day for equal opportunities for all women and girls, we speak from experience and expertise when we say that nondiscrimination protections for transgender people—including women and girls who are transgender—are not at odds with women's equality or well-being, but advance them" and that "we support laws and policies that protect transgender people from discrimination, including in participation in sports, and reject the suggestion that cisgender women and girls benefit from the exclusion of women and girls who happen to be transgender."
Mexico Contemporary feminist organizations active in Mexico like Grupo de Información en Reproducción Elegida (GIRE), Equis - Justicia para las Mujeres, the Luchadoras collective, and Fondo Semillas are supportive of transgender people and consider transgender rights a part of their stated goals. Conversely some feminist groups with ties to anti-trans politics have gained popularity in recent years. Las Brujas del Mar and one of their spokespersons,
Arussi Unda— cited as an organizer of the
2020 National Women's Strike— have been accused of aligning themselves with anti-trans politics. Trans exclusive sentiments have had a marginal influence on Mexico’s feminist movements since the 1970s, but Laura Lecuona’s 2017 book “Cuando lo trans no es transgresor” ("When Trans Is Not Transgressive") is credited with sparking the emergence of a broader, contemporary gender-critical feminist movement. A year earlier, in 2016, a large anti-gender, anti-LGBT protest organized by the Frente Nacional por la Familia (
National Front for the Family) also led to an increased presence of anti-trans rhetoric within the conservative Mexican politics. Authors Siobhan McManus and Julianna Neuhouser argue that, since 2017, gender-critical feminism has increasingly converged with Mexico's conservative political wing. Since the implementation of
femicide laws in Mexico, trans feminist and feminist groups broadly have criticized its exclusion of crimes committed against trans women. After the murder of Paola Buenrostro, a trans sex worker, in 2016, activists in Mexico City lobbied against what they saw as the police’s negligence in investigating her murder. These efforts culminated in Mexico City passing the nation’s second transfemicide law in 2024, naming it after Buenrostro.
Asia South Korea According to Hyun-Jae Lee of the
University of Seoul, although "until the eighties modern
Korean feminism had been fairly cis-woman-centric and based on female identity, they did not officially exclude "biological men", refugees, or transgender people because of their biological sex" and that the "[trans-]exclusive stance of radical feminism never existed in Korean society before the 2000s." In 2016, the Korean-based online radical feminist community
WOMAD split from the larger community
Megalia after Megalia issued a ban on the use of certain explicit slurs against gay men and transgender people. This change in policy led to the migration of
anti-LGBT members. WOMAD has caused controversy due to extreme
online trolling and show extreme hatred towards transgender people; for this reason, WOMAD have been called "Korean-style
TERFs". The organisers of the 2018
Hyehwa Station Protest barred trans women and non-binary people from attending the protest.
Europe The
European Women's Lobby (EWL) is trans-inclusive. EWL called for more attention and research into discrimination against trans women and lesbians and their specific health needs. EWL has said that "women with multiple identities are rendered more vulnerable to discrimination, violence and violation of their rights. The situation of (...) transgender women has long been made invisible. It is urgent to make sure that all policies are designed to not leave a single girl or woman behind."
Denmark The
Danish Women's Society supports
LGBTQA rights, and has stated that it takes
homophobia and transphobia very seriously, that "we support all initiatives that promote the rights of gay and transgender people" and that "we see the LGBTQA movement as close allies in the struggle against inequality and we fight together for a society where gender and sexuality do not limit an individual."
France In February 2020, an open letter was published in the
Huffington Post signed by around 50 French feminists, including sociologist
Christine Delphy and ex-
Femen activist
Marguerite Stern, questioning the presence of trans women in feminist movements. The Huffington Post later removed the letter from their website. In response to the letter, several different feminist organisations, such as the
Syndicat du travail sexuel, the
Collectif NousToutes, and the
Collages féminicides Paris, who Stern had previously been involved with, issued statements condemning transphobia. In late-February 2020, a further group of feminists and feminist organisations released an open letter stating that they opposed the importing of "transphobic debates" into France and that creating divisions between cis and trans women "only serve the
patriarchy."
Germany Leading German women's organization
Deutscher Frauenring is intersectional and opposes transphobia. The umbrella organization for the German women's movement, the
German Women's Council, has stated that "trans women are women and we need to represent them and defend their rights."
Iceland In 2012,
Jyl Josephson, professor of Political Science and Women's and Gender Studies at
Rutgers University–Newark, stated that in Iceland "transgender and gender scholars seem to have a more congenial and more recent relationship." Non-binary Icelandic journalist
Owl Fisher has stated that "in Iceland the women's rights movement as a whole has been wholly supportive of trans rights for decades." In 2019, Icelandic Prime Minister
Katrín Jakobsdóttir proposed a bill to introduce gender recognition via statutory declaration in the country. The bill was passed by the
Althing by a vote of 45–0, with three abstentions. On Women's Rights Day in Iceland in 2020, the
Icelandic Women's Rights Association organised an event together with
Trans Ísland that saw several different feminist organisations in the country discuss strategies to stop anti-trans sentiment from increasing its influence within Icelandic feminism. Later that year, Trans Ísland was unanimously granted status as a member association of the
Icelandic Women's Rights Association. In 2021 the Icelandic Women's Rights Association, noting the traditional sense of solidarity between the women's movement and LGBTQ+ movement, organized an event on how the women's movement could counter "anti-trans voices [that] are becoming ever louder and [that] are threatening feminist solidarity across borders."
Ireland In January 2018, roughly 1,000 feminists in Ireland, including members of several feminist groups such as the
Irish Network Against Racism (INAR), signed an open letter condemning an event held in
Dublin by a group of UK-based trans-exclusionary radical feminists which opposed proposed reforms to the British
Gender Recognition Act. The open letter stated that "the signatories of this letter, organise hand in hand with our trans sisters. Together, cis and trans, we are
Irish feminism. Trans women are our sisters; their struggles are ours, our struggles theirs." During the referendum on the
Thirty-sixth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland that successfully saw the legalisation for abortion, the
Together for Yes campaign group was explicitly trans-inclusive. In November 2020, on
Trans Day of Remembrance, the
National Women's Council of Ireland and
Amnesty International Ireland co-signed a statement along with a number of LGBT+ and human rights groups condemning trans-exclusionary feminism. The letter called upon the media and politicians "to no longer provide legitimate representation for those that share bigoted beliefs, that are aligned with
far right ideologies and seek nothing but harm and division" and stated that "these fringe internet accounts stand against affirmative medical care of transgender people, and they stand against the right to self-identification of transgender people in this country. In summation they stand against trans, women's and gay rights by aligning themselves with far right tropes and stances." In March 2021, the
Abortion Rights Campaign issued a statement condemning the
Bell v Tavistock ruling the UK, stating that trans people had played a role in the Yes vote of the
Thirty-sixth Amendment of the Constitution of Ireland referendum and that the ruling was "ultimately an attack on our collective right to bodily integrity."
Italy A 2019 study from the
European University Institute that examined the feminist
Non Una Di Meno (Italian chapter of
Ni una menos association) in Italy argued that
difference feminism had traditionally been prevalent in the country, but was being supplanted by
intersectional feminism. The shift was driven especially by younger feminist activists, often accompanied with rejections of binary gender as well as increased prominence of anti-racist and
anti-capitalist organising, who considered that "intersectional feminism grasps the core of the feminist and LGBT struggles, which is the "union of all the oppressed against the oppressors."
Norway In Norway, the
Norwegian Association for Women's Rights (NKF) is trans-inclusive and supports legal protections against discrimination on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expression. In 2015/2016 NKF supported the
Gender Recognition Act, which the NKF President described as a milestone for LGBT+ rights that the women's rights movement welcomes. In 2018 NKF also supported legal protections against discrimination and
hate speech on the basis of sexual orientation, gender identity and gender expression in the Penal Code.
Spain During the
Spanish transition to democracy in the late-1970s, trans people in Spain organised under the gay liberation movement seeking to repeal the Francoist regime's ban on homosexuality, as the Francoist regime would arrest trans people using those same laws. In 1978, the
Colectivo de Travestis y Transexuales was founded as part of the Catalan gay liberation movement, the first trans-specific organisation in Spain. In 1987, the first national transgender association was formed, Transexualia, to fight against police violence. As several of the Transexualia founders were
sex workers, they soon began working with feminist groups fighting against gendered violence, such as the
Colectivo de Feministas Lesbianas de Madrid and the
Comisión Antiagresiones. Part of the 1993 National Feminist Conference was dedicated to discussing trans issues in Spain. Through the 1990s, the scope of co-operation between the trans liberation movement and the feminist movement grew, and at the 2000 National Feminist Conference featured several talks by trans people, including
Kim Pérez and
Laura Bugalho. The 2009 Granada Feminist Conference then saw an influx of younger feminists, and a dedication to formulating a distinct Spanish transfeminism. According to
Lucas Platero of
King Juan Carlos University, the 2009 conference resulted in a shift towards a feminism that placed greater emphasis on criticising the gender binary and that was "more queer, more
decolonial, and intersectional." In 2021, a split in the Spanish left-wing coalition government occurred over the
Legislative Proposal for the Real and Effective Equality of Trans People, with
United Podemos Minister for Equality
Irene Montero advancing the bill that would have included the introduction of legal gender recognition via statutory declaration (therefore responding to long-lasting demands for full depathologization) as well as legal recognition of non-binary identities. However,
Spanish Socialist Workers' Party (PSOE) Deputy Prime Minister
Carmen Calvo argued that the bill "could put at risk the identity criteria for 47 million Spaniards." The bill ultimately failed to pass after the Socialist Workers' Party abstained on the vote. In parallel to this, some feminist intellectuals with different degrees of affinity to the PSOE, most notably authors
Amelia Valcárcel,
Alicia Miyares and
Lidia Falcón, had been making public remarks opposing the legislative proposal, as well as comments that other feminist figures reported as transphobic. Ultimately, a new, similar legislative proposal was passed, recognizing the right of trans people to self-determine without the need of any medical process, although demands concerning non-binary people eventually fell off.
United Kingdom The UK government's 2018 consultation on reforming the
Gender Recognition Act 2004 became a locus of conflict between trans-exclusionary radical feminists and advocates for trans acceptance. Proposed reforms would allow one to self-declare one's legal gender without a diagnosis or waiting period. While the UK's
Equality Act 2010 permitted providers of single-sex or sex-segregated services such as women's shelters to deny access to transgender people on a case-by-case basis, a 2016 report of the
House of Commons's
Women and Equalities Committee recommended that providers no longer be permitted to exclude persons who had obtained legal recognition of their "acquired gender" under the GRA. Groups including
Fair Play For Women and
Woman's Place UK were founded in opposition to the proposed reforms. The groups have been condemned by feminists who support the reforms. London
Feminist Library organiser
Lola Olufemi described Woman's Place UK as "a clearly transphobic organisation" after withdrawing from an event at the
University of Oxford that featured WPUK supporter and Oxford professor
Selina Todd. British trans-exclusive feminist groups objected to the proposed GRA self-ID reform as eroding protections for women-only safe spaces and liable to abuse by cisgender men—issues disputed by advocates of reform and unsupported by current evidence. A 2020 paper in
SAGE Open said that "the case against trans inclusion in the United Kingdom has been presented primarily through social media and blog-type or journalistic online platforms lacking the traditional prepublication checks of academic
peer review". Pro-trans feminist academics such as
Akwugo Emejulu and
Alison Phipps view self-declaration as a right for transgender people. In October 2018 the UK edition of
The Guardian published an editorial on GRA reform supporting a lessening of the barriers to legal gender change but also stating that "Women's oppression by men has a physical basis, and to deny the relevance of biology when considering sexual inequality is a mistake", and that, "Women's concerns about sharing dormitories or changing rooms with 'male-bodied' people must be taken seriously." Journalists from
The Guardian's
US edition wrote an editorial repudiating their UK counterpart's stance, stating that it "promoted transphobic viewpoints" and that its "unsubstantiated argument only serves to dehumanize and stigmatize trans people". In March 2019 more than 160 women, including
Emma Thompson and
members of the UK parliament, cosigned an
open letter expressing solidarity with trans women and support for GRA reform, organised by LGBT charity
Time for Inclusive Education. Seven Scottish women's groups –
Close the Gap,
Engender,
Equate Scotland,
Rape Crisis Scotland,
Scottish Women's Aid,
Women 50:50, and Zero Tolerance – released a joint statement during the GRA consultations endorsing the proposed reforms and stating that "we do not regard trans equality and women's equality to be in competition or contradiction with each other." The
Cambridge Rape Crisis Centre has indicated that it accepts trans people as volunteers and the
Edinburgh Rape Crisis Centre has maintained individual gender-neutral bathrooms. Feminist direct action group
Sisters Uncut has stated that "trans people and gender-nonconforming people experience disproportionate levels of violence... if we don't centre those who exist on the margins, what kind of movement is that?" In 2021, an
Employment Appeal Tribunal in the case of
Maya Forstater v Centre for Global Development (CGD) found that gender-critical beliefs pass the legal test of a protected belief under the
Equality Act 2010 because they "did not seek to destroy the rights of trans persons". In November 2021, the
Middle Temple LGBTQ+ Forum hosted a debate on the topic of
conversion therapy, following the launch of a
public consultation on how to ban the practice. The panel consisted of
Stonewall CEO
Nancy Kelley, campaigner
Jayne Ozanne, and gender-critical feminist and barrister
Naomi Cunningham. Ozanne spoke about her personal experience of conversion therapy, but also described Cunningham's speech as "very insensitive" and "transphobic", which Cunningham denied.
Finn Mackay argued that "during the
pandemic, the ceaseless attacks on and lies told about trans people in our media have only increased... the fact that our media is awash with conspiracy theories about trans lives... should be a national shame."
Oceania The
Māori Women's Welfare League and the
National Council of Women of New Zealand are trans-inclusive and have supported a shift to legal
gender self-determination. ==See also==