The UK’s Supreme Court has ruled that “man”, “woman” and “sex” in the Equality Act 2010 refer to sex, not self-ID or paperwork (gender-recognition certificates). This agreed with our legal interpretation. We have published new guidance and are in the process of updating our publications to reflect the judgment. We are also working to provide answers to the questions we're hearing from supporters and the media. We will publish these as soon as possible.

Anya Palmer

Trustee

Anya Palmer is a barrister at Old Square Chambers, practising employment law. She represented Maya Forstater in the ground-breaking belief-discrimination case of Forstater v CGD. She also represented Denise Fahmy in her successful harassment case against the Arts Council, and Sonya Appleby in her whistleblowing case against the Tavistock clinic. 

She also does advisory work, such as helping employers review their policies so they don’t discriminate on gender reassignment or on philosophical belief.

Before she became a barrister, she spent eight years at Stonewall, where she was its second employee, among other things working on test cases on the unequal age of consent for gay sex and the ban on lesbians and gay men serving in the armed forces. She was a co-founder of Sex Matters.