The Growing Visibility of Intersex Demands at the United Nations: A Review of the Treaty Bodies' Concluding Observations
Creators
- 1. Andalusian School of Public Health, 18011 Granada, Spain and Doctoral School in Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, University of Granada, 18071 Granada, Spain
Description
Abstract
In recent years, there has been an increasing visibility of intersex people’s issues and experiences of human rights violations amongst international human rights institutions and monitoring bodies. At the United Nations, to date, there are more than 500 treaty bodies’ concluding observations taking notice of human rights abuses against intersex persons and calling member states to fulfil their human rights obligations. This paper follows the inclusion and visibility of intersex issues in the text of the United Nations treaty bodies’ concluding observations. I looked for explicit mentions of the word “intersex” in treaty bodies’ report documents and reviewed how the concluding observations and recommendations of these bodies resonate with demands coming from intersex activist groups. I found that the main issues included in the treaty bodies’ reports concern intersex genital surgeries (IGS), autonomy claims, and demands for redress and support mechanisms, and while these issues have gained visibility, there are also a number of demands by intersex activists that remain less visible, if not invisible altogether. This paper aims at providing evidence of the increasing visibility and awareness of human rights monitoring bodies have over intersex people’s rights.
Files
Soc Sci Zelayandia 2023.pdf
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(3.2 MB)
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