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  • Written by George B. Cunningham, UAA Endowed Professor of Sport Management, University of Florida
Biases behind transgender athlete bans are deeply rooted

In 2023, 24 states[1] had laws or regulations in place prohibiting transgender students from participating on public school athletic teams consistent with their gender identity. These bans mean that a person whose sex assigned at birth was male but who identifies as a girl or woman cannot play on a girls or women’s athletic team at a public school in that state.

The topic has spurred many debates about fairness[2], the science behind sports performance[3], civil rights[4] and sports as a human right[5].

As researchers[6] who study[7] diversity, equity and inclusion in sport, we were interested in understanding what prompted such bans. Though not a surprise, we showed for the first time through an in-depth study[8] set to be published in the peer-reviewed Journal of Sport Management[9] that state-level politics and public biases against transgender people are largely to blame.

Our research

We collected two years of data in 2021 and 2022 on states that passed[10] legislation prohibiting transgender athletes from participating in sports on teams that connect with their own gender identities.

To determine the political leanings of a state’s population, we collected data[11] about the share of Republican state senators and the party affiliation of the governor.

Finally, we collected information about the biases people had toward transgender individuals. The data came from responses to the Project Implicit website[12]. People visiting the site can take tests aimed at measuring their biases toward different groups, including transgender people. Administrators then remove identifying information and make the data[13] freely available. For our study, we aggregated the responses to have transgender bias scores for each state.

The politics of transgender bans

States whose residents have conservative political leanings tend to have more restrictive views on civil rights issues such as immigration[14], health care[15] and the use of the death penalty[16].

These patterns hold for transgender rights[17], too.

In our work, we found that states with conservative-leaning legislatures such as in Wyoming[18] and West Virginia[19] were most likely to enact transgender athlete bans. As were states with Republican governors, such as Ron DeSantis[20] in Florida and Greg Abbott[21] in Texas.

These statewide patterns are consistent with national political actions.

In 2023, the Biden administration proposed a change[22] to Title IX, the federal law that bans sex discrimination at K-12 schools and colleges that receive federal funds. Under Biden’s proposed changes[23], Title IX would also ban discrimination based on sexual orientation and gender identity.

In response, nearly all – 25 of the 26 Republican governors[24] – called on Biden to delay or withdraw the rule change. To date, Biden has not made[25] a final decision and has delayed the change.

Bias against transgender people

But politics tells only part of the story.

We found that conservative political leanings spurred collective biases against transgender people, which in turn prompted the bans.

Political scientists have previously shown that politicians craft narratives and frame their arguments in ways that help shape people’s attitudes about social issues[26]. In fact, people will sometimes adjust their perspectives[27] to align with those held by their political representatives.

That’s what we found.

Impact on sports and athletes

Biases that are prevalent in a community or state represent systemic forms[28] of oppression. Coupled with laws that limit rights, collective biases serve to stigmatize transgender people[29], hurting their overall health and well-being[30].

The impact is far-reaching.

Transgender athletes face the real possibility of participating in a sport one day, only to be prohibited from doing so the next. Ending a career in sports, regardless at what age, can harm[31] the mental health of some athletes, something only likely to be magnified given the reason for the end.

Four sprinters run at an indoor track meet.
Bloomfield High School transgender athlete Terry Miller, second from left, wins the final of the 55-meter dash over transgender athlete Andraya Yearwood, far left, at a Connecticut girls Class S indoor track meet in 2019. AP Photo/Pat Eaton-Robb[32]

Coaches and sport administrators living in conservative states might find themselves having to navigate laws affecting who can play on their teams. They can do so by partnering with campus counselors[33] and ensuring their athletic departments are inclusive spaces[34].

What’s next?

The links among conservative politics, collective biases against transgender people and transgender rights are unlikely to diminish any time soon. National political reporters Adam Nagourney and Jeremy Peter[35] explained that social conservatives have targeted transgender rights as a way of galvanizing their constituents. The GOP efforts came about after planning by national conservative organizations to “harness the emotion around gender politics.”

Proponents of transgender inclusion have offered counterarguments[36], showing that transgender athletes are not a threat to women’s sports, nor have they ever been.

This data is important but will go only so far when combating biases.

Education and the chance to be around transgender people in everyday life also help curb prejudice[37]. These collective factors, when combined with compelling stories[38] about transgender inclusion in sports, may be what’s needed to overcome the biases in place.

References

  1. ^ 24 states (www.lgbtmap.org)
  2. ^ debates about fairness (www.cato.org)
  3. ^ sports performance (www.espn.com)
  4. ^ civil rights (www.aclu.org)
  5. ^ human right (doi.org)
  6. ^ researchers (scholar.google.com)
  7. ^ study (www.diversityinsport.com)
  8. ^ in-depth study (static1.squarespace.com)
  9. ^ Journal of Sport Management (doi.org)
  10. ^ states that passed (www.lgbtmap.org)
  11. ^ collected data (www.ncsl.org)
  12. ^ Project Implicit website (implicit.harvard.edu)
  13. ^ make the data (osf.io)
  14. ^ immigration (doi.org)
  15. ^ health care (doi.org)
  16. ^ death penalty (doi.org)
  17. ^ transgender rights (doi.org)
  18. ^ Wyoming (www.npr.org)
  19. ^ West Virginia (www.pbs.org)
  20. ^ Ron DeSantis (www.politico.com)
  21. ^ Greg Abbott (www.cbsnews.com)
  22. ^ proposed a change (www.cnn.com)
  23. ^ proposed changes (www.nytimes.com)
  24. ^ 25 of the 26 Republican governors (www.cnn.com)
  25. ^ has not made (www.edweek.org)
  26. ^ social issues (doi.org)
  27. ^ adjust their perspectives (doi.org)
  28. ^ systemic forms (doi.org)
  29. ^ stigmatize transgender people (doi.org)
  30. ^ health and well-being (doi.org)
  31. ^ can harm (csri-jiia.org)
  32. ^ AP Photo/Pat Eaton-Robb (newsroom.ap.org)
  33. ^ campus counselors (doi.org)
  34. ^ inclusive spaces (doi.org)
  35. ^ Adam Nagourney and Jeremy Peter (www.nytimes.com)
  36. ^ have offered counterarguments (doi.org)
  37. ^ curb prejudice (doi.org)
  38. ^ compelling stories (hbr.org)

Authors: George B. Cunningham, UAA Endowed Professor of Sport Management, University of Florida

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