Transgender people Alsalem has promoted
gender-critical views. Legal scholar Sandra Duffy cites Alsalem's promotion of gender-critical views as a prominent instance of
anti-gender lobbying against transgender rights in the United Kingdom, observing that her intervention, made eleven days after the
United Nations Independent Expert on sexual orientation and gender identity warned of the hostile climate facing transgender people, seemed intended as a pointed rebuttal. Legal scholars Tamsin Phillipa Paige and Claerwen O'Hara describe Alsalem as part of an increasingly aggressive anti-queer and transphobic movement that is now active also in legal circles. In 2023 Alsalem attended the
gender-critical FiLiA conference amid protests against the conference. The same year, an open letter published by the
Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID), endorsed by over 550 NGOs and women's groups, accused her of being "
anti-trans", which she denies. In July, legal scholar Jens Theilen said that Alsalem "is using women's rights as a tool to undermine trans rights" and considered her actions "a stark example of individual politics furthering rather than contesting oppression", citing the AWID letter. In 2025 Alsalem said she has faced "relentless" opposition from governments, international organizations and civil society over her trans-related views, and that those critics had called her regressive, racist, transphobic, and fascist. The Catholic
Zenit News Agency also wrote that Alsalem has been "ostracized by the global women's rights establishment" because she opposes "
gender ideology", and that she has faced strong criticism both from women's organizations and within the UN system for her views on trans people. In January 2024, Alsalem criticised the composition of a
World Health Organization (WHO) committee, saying that most committee members had "strong, one-sided views in favour of promoting hormonal gender transition and legal recognition of self-asserted gender" and that none of them was an expert in adolescent development. In February, she opposed the
Gender Recognition Reform (Scotland) Bill and claimed it could "open the door for violent males". Six feminist organizations in Scotland—
Engender, JustRight Scotland, Scottish Women's Rights Centre,
Scottish Women's Aid,
Amnesty International Scotland and
Rape Crisis Scotland—also expressed disappointment by Alsalem's comments, accusing her of failing to speak with Scottish human rights or feminist organisations before her statements. In April, Alsalem opposed President Biden's
Title IX policies for transgender youth in the United States. In October Alsalem also criticized the
Self-Determination Act that entered into force in Germany. International law scholar Selin Altay criticized Alsalem for her position on the Self-Determination Act, saying that Alsalem has long faced criticism for holding anti-trans views. Altay argues that Alsalem fails to fulfill her mandate as special rapporteur if she does not actively defend the right to gender self-determination. According to Altay, Alsalem is responsible for addressing all forms of violence against women at the international level, including
violence against trans women falls within her mandate to uphold the right to gender self-determination. In February 2025, Alsalem supported
Donald Trump's executive order "
Keeping Men Out of Women's Sports", which allows the federal government to withhold funding from schools which allow transgender students to compete on women's teams and refers to trans women as "men". Alsalem also urged the United States to create open sports categories so that no athlete is left behind. It claimed there are "long-lasting and harmful consequences of social and medical transitioning" and recommended banning medical and social transition for minors and providing them psychological treatment to "address underlying neuro-developmental, psychological, or other conditions". It praised restrictions on trans healthcare in the Netherlands, the U.K., and Brazil. It falsely claimed
80% of "childhood gender distress" would disappear at puberty, that "female
detransitioners" were overwhelmingly gay and transitioned due to internalized homophobia, and that autistic children are developing
socially contagious gender dysphoria as a coping strategy. It cited anti-trans organizations such as
LGB Alliance and
For Women Scotland. The report claimed that trans identities threaten to erase women and praised the outcome of
For Women Scotland Ltd v The Scottish Ministers. The report was criticized by LGBT advocates and researchers such as the
Human Rights Campaign,
OutRight Action International. The
Christian advocacy group
Alliance Defending Freedom supported Alsalem for resisting "
gender ideology".
Views on prostitution and pornography Alsalem has expressed support for the
abolitionist approach to prostitution and voiced opposition to the
pornography industry. She developed these views in her thematic report titled
Prostitution and violence against women and girls, presented to the
Human Rights Council in June 2024. She says
prostitution is a consequence of
patriarchal structures, economic inequalities, and conflict situations. She also highlights the intersection of
racism and prostitution, saying that women and girls from marginalised groups, particularly those facing multiple forms of
discrimination, are disproportionately affected and often enter the sex trade due to
socioeconomic precarity. Alsalem supports implementing the
Nordic model approach to prostitution across the United Kingdom. Alsalem believes that the widespread availability of pornography perpetuates gender stereotypes and violence against women. She says that pornography teaches boys that committing violence and degrading girls is a normal part of sexual relations.
October 7 attack and Gaza War Alsalem was criticised in 2023 by Claire Waxman, London's Victims' Commissioner, as she did not speak out on reports of
sexual and gender-based violence in the 7 October attack on Israel against Israeli women during and following the
Hamas-led attack. In 2024, Alsalem said that "grave violations of international human rights and humanitarian law" had been committed in Gaza by Israeli troops. Israel denied the allegations. In August 2025, in an interview with
The New Arab, Alsalem accused Israel of
targeting Palestinian women and girls in Gaza, stating, "What is happening to Palestinian women and girls is the intentional destruction of their existence and bodies, for being Palestinian and for being women." She also called what is happening in Gaza as a "femi-genocide".
Other topics In August 2021, Alsalem emphasised that any Afghanistan party that say they follow Sharia must uphold and protect the rights of women and girls. She wrote that the Taliban are denying individual freedom of thought, conscience, and religion when they impose their beliefs on the Afghan public. In September 2021, Alsalem criticised the
United States Supreme Court after it refused to enjoin the
Texas Heartbeat Act and accused its majority of exposing women to potential violence. She said that women from vulnerable groups would bear the brunt of the crackdown against abortion. Indigenous women who advocate for human, environmental, or land rights are particularly targeted to stop their activism. They experience systemic discrimination in attempting to access justice in both Indigenous and non-Indigenous justice systems. These barriers reinforce Indigenous women's fear and mistrust in the justice system. In February 2024, Alsalem criticised the UK's strategies for combating violence against women and girls. She said: "Entrenched patriarchy at almost every level of society, combined with a rise in misogyny that permeates the physical and online world, is denying thousands of women and girls across the UK the right to live in safety, free from fear and violence." In October 2025, Alsalem called for a ban on
surrogacy, comparing the practice to prostitution. Her UN report stated that little of the profits go to the mothers who bear the physical and emotional risks of surrogacy. == References ==