Cassummary
Cassummary
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Introduction
1. On 30 April 2019, the Court of Arbitration for Sport (“CAS”) delivered an Award with
respect to the challenges brought by Caster Semenya and Athletics South Africa (“ASA”)
to the validity of the IAAF’s Eligibility Regulations for the Female Classification
(Athletes with Differences of Sex Development) (the “DSD Regulations”). By a
majority, the CAS Panel dismissed the requests for arbitration considering that the
Claimants could not establish that the DSD Regulation were “invalid”. The Panel found
that the DSD Regulations are discriminatory but that, on the basis of the evidence
submitted by the parties, such discrimination is a necessary, reasonable and proportionate
means of achieving the legitimate objective of ensuring fair competition in female
athletics in certain events and protecting the “protected class” of female athletes in those
events. The Panel also expressed serious concerns about the future practical application
of the DSD Regulations. While the evidence has not established that those concerns are
justified, or that they negate the conclusion of prima facie proportionality, this may
change in the future unless constant attention is paid to the fairness of how the
Regulations are implemented.
2. In 2014 the Indian athlete Dutee Chand brought proceedings before the CAS challenging
the IAAF Regulations Governing Eligibility of Females with Hyperandrogenism to
Compete in Women’s Competition (the “Hyperandrogenism Regulations”). In July 2015,
the CAS delivered an Interim Award partially upholding Ms. Chand’s challenge and
suspending the Hyperandrogenism Regulations (CAS 2014/A/3759 Dutee Chand v AFI
& IAAF).
3. In Chand, the CAS had determined that the hormone testosterone was the primary cause
for the increase in lean body mass in males at puberty and that this provided athletic
advantage to male athletes over female athletes. The Panel in that case was not satisfied
as to the degree of that advantage and declined to validate the Hyperandrogenism
Regulations. The IAAF was given the opportunity to provide further evidence to validate
those regulations, which had set the maximum level of testosterone for an athlete in
female competition to 10 nmol/L, this being well above the maximum level in the female
population and slightly above the minimum level in the male population.
4. In March 2018, the IAAF informed the CAS that it intended to withdraw the
Hyperandrogenism Regulations and to replace them with new Regulations.
5. In April 2018, the IAAF enacted the DSD Regulations. In summary, the DSD
Regulations establish new requirements governing the eligibility of women with certain
differences of sex development (“DSD”) to participate in the female classification in
eight events (the “Restricted Events”) at international athletics competitions
(“International Competitions”). The Restricted Events include the 400m, 800m and
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6. During the course of the proceedings before the CAS, the IAAF explained that, following
an amendment to the DSD Regulations, the DSD covered by the Regulations are limited
to “46 XY DSD” – i.e. conditions where the affected individual has XY chromosomes.
Accordingly, no individuals with XX chromosomes are subjected to any restrictions or
eligibility conditions under the DSD Regulations.
7. Athletes with 46 XY DSD have testosterone levels well into the male range. The DSD
Regulations require athletes with 46 XY DSD who have a natural testosterone level of
above 5 nmol/L, and who experience a “material androgenizing effect” from that
enhanced testosterone level, to reduce their natural testosterone level to within the normal
female range (i.e. to a level below 5 nmol/L) and to maintain that reduced level for a
continuous period of at least six months in order to be eligible to compete in a Restricted
Event at an International Competition. There is no requirement for, or suggestion of, any
surgical intervention to achieve this level.
8. The DSD Regulations came into force on 1 November 2018. Prior to that date, however,
Ms. Semenya and ASA (collectively, the “Claimants”) commenced arbitration
proceedings before the CAS challenging the validity of the DSD Regulations.
9. The Claimants contended inter alia that the DSD Regulations unfairly discriminate
against athletes on the basis of sex and/or gender because they only apply (i) to female
athletes; and (ii) to female athletes having certain physiological traits. They submitted
that the DSD Regulations lack a sound scientific basis; are unnecessary to ensure fair
competition within the female classification; and are likely to cause grave, unjustified
and irreparable harm to affected female athletes. Accordingly, the Claimants sought an
award from the CAS declaring the DSD Regulations unlawful and preventing them from
being brought into force on the basis that the Regulations are unfairly discriminatory,
arbitrary and disproportionate and therefore violate the IAAF Constitution, the Olympic
Charter, the laws of Monaco, the laws of jurisdictions in which international athletics
competitions are held, as well as universally recognised fundamental human rights.
10. In response, the IAAF submitted that the DSD Regulations are based on the best available
science; do not discriminate on the basis of any protected characteristic; and are a
necessary, reasonable and proportionate means of pursuing the legitimate aim of
safeguarding fair competition and protecting the ability of female athletes to compete on
a level playing field.
11. Between 18-22 February 2019, a hearing of the Claimants’ challenges was held before
the CAS in Lausanne, Switzerland. The CAS Panel comprised the Hon. Dr. Annabelle
Bennett AO SC (President); The Hon. Hugh L. Fraser (Arbitrator) and Dr. Hans Nater
(Arbitrator). The Panel received detailed written and oral testimony from a large number
of factual and expert witnesses. This included experts specialising in gynaecology,
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andrology and the causes, diagnosis, effects and treatment of DSD; genetics,
endocrinology and pharmacology; exercise physiology and sports performance; medical
and research ethics; sports regulation and governance; and statistics.
12. After setting out the parties’ evidence and submissions, the Panel begins its analysis of
the merits by noting that this case involves a complex collision of scientific, ethical and
legal conundrums. It also involves incompatible, competing rights. It is not possible to
give effect to one set of rights without restricting the other set of rights. Put simply, on
one hand is the right of every athlete to compete in sport, to have their legal sex and
gender identity respected, and to be free from any form of discrimination. On the other
hand, is the right of female athletes, who are relevantly biologically disadvantaged vis-
à-vis male athletes, to be able to compete against other female athletes and to achieve the
benefits of athletic success. The decision is also constrained by the accepted, necessary,
binary division of athletics into male events and female events, when there is no such
binary division of athletes. That binary division has not been challenged.
13. The Panel has not found the issues in this case easy to decide. It is clear from the range
of expert evidence presented on behalf of the parties that there are many scientific, ethical
and regulatory issues on which reasonable and informed minds may legitimately differ.
The Panel is mindful that, in considering these issues, it is not acting as a policy maker
or regulator. It is neither necessary nor appropriate for the Panel to step into the shoes of
the IAAF by deciding how it would have approached issues had it been charged with
making policies or enacting rules itself. Instead, its function is a purely judicial one. The
Panel must adjudicate the disputed legal issues on the basis of the applicable legal tests
and by reference to the arguments and admissible evidence on the record in these
proceedings. While this inevitably requires consideration of arguments and evidence
based on an array of policy and scientific matters, the Panel must be mindful of its judicial
role and the limits of that role. It is also bound to make its decision based upon the
evidence presented to it, taking account of the submissions made by the parties.
Discrimination
14. The Panel unanimously concludes that the DSD Regulations are prima facie
discriminatory since they impose differential treatment based on protected
characteristics. In particular, since the DSD Regulations establish restrictions that are
targeted at a subset of the female/intersex athlete population, and do not impose any
equivalent restrictions on male athletes, it follows that the Regulations are prima facie
discriminatory on grounds of legal sex. Similarly, the DSD Regulations create
restrictions that are targeted at a group of individuals who have certain immutable
biological characteristics (namely a 46 XY DSD coupled with a material androgenising
effect arising from that condition), and which do not apply to individuals who do not
have those characteristics. It follows that the Regulations are also prima facie
discriminatory on grounds of innate biological characteristics.
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15. The conclusion that the DSD Regulations are prima facie discriminatory is merely the
starting point of the Panel’s legal analysis. In particular, it is common ground that a rule
that imposes differential treatment on the basis of a particular protected characteristic is
valid if it is a necessary, reasonable and proportionate means of attaining a legitimate
objective.
Necessity
16. The majority of the Panel concludes that the IAAF has succeeded in establishing the
necessity requirement.
17. The Panel begins its consideration of this question by observing that once it is recognised
that it is legitimate to have separate categories of male and female competition, it
inevitably follows that it is necessary to devise an objective, fair and effective means of
determining which individuals may, and which may not, participate in those categories.
18. The Panel accepts the IAAF’s submission that reference to a person’s legal sex alone
may not always constitute a fair and effective means of making that determination. This
is because the reason for the separation between male and female categories in
competitive athletics is ultimately founded on biology rather than legal status. The
purpose of having separate categories is to protect a class of individuals who lack certain
insuperable performance advantages from having to compete against individuals who
possess those insuperable advantages. In this regard, the fact that a person is recognised
in law as a woman and identifies as a woman does not necessarily mean that they lack
those insuperable performance advantages associated with certain biological traits that
predominate in individuals who are generally (but not always) recognised in law as males
and self-identify as males. It is human biology, not legal status or gender identity, that
ultimately determines which individuals possess the physical traits which give rise to that
insuperable advantage and which do not.
19. Accordingly, the purpose of the male-female divide in competitive athletics is not to
protect athletes with a female legal sex from having to compete against athletes with a
male legal sex. Nor is it to protect athletes with a female gender identity from having to
compete against athletes with a male gender identity. Rather, it is to protect individuals
whose bodies have developed in a certain way following puberty from having to compete
against individuals who, by virtue of their bodies having developed in a different way
following puberty, possess certain physical traits that create such a significant
performance advantage that fair competition between the two groups is not possible. In
most cases, the former group comprises individuals with a female legal sex and a female
gender identity, while the latter group comprises individuals with a male legal sex and
male gender identity. However, this is not true of all cases. Natural human biology does
not map perfectly onto legal status and gender identity. The imperfect alignment between
nature, law and identity is what gives rise to the conundrum at the heart of this case.
20. The Panel considers that, once it is recognised that the reason for organising competitive
athletics into separate male and female categories rests on the need to protect one group
of individuals against having to compete against individuals who possess certain
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insuperable performance advantages derived from biology rather than legal status, it
follows that it may be legitimate to regulate the right to participate in the female category
by reference to those biological factors rather than legal status alone.
21. It was common ground between the parties that there is a substantial difference in elite
sports performance between males and females. It was also common ground that (a) the
normal female range of serum testosterone, produced mainly in the ovaries and adrenal
glands, is 0.06 to 1.68 nmol/L; and (b) the normal male range of serum testosterone
concentration, produced mainly in the testes, is 7.7 to 29.4 nmol/L. On the basis of the
scientific evidence presented by the parties, the Panel unanimously finds that endogenous
testosterone is the primary driver of the sex difference in sports performance between
males and females.
22. The IAAF submitted that all but one of the many different factors that contribute to sport
performance - including training, coaching, nutrition and medical support, as well as
many genetic variations - are equally available to men and women. The only factor that
is available only to men is exposure to adult male testosterone levels. The IAAF
submitted that if the purpose of the female category is to prevent athletes who lack that
testosterone-derived advantage from having to compete against athletes who possess that
testosterone-derived advantage, then it is necessarily “category defeating” to permit any
individuals who possess that testosterone-derived advantage to compete in that category.
The majority of the Panel accepts the logic of the IAAF’s submission.
23. Having carefully considered the expert evidence, the majority of the Panel concludes that
androgen sensitive female athletes with 46 XY DSD enjoy a significant performance
advantage over other female athletes without such DSD, and that this advantage is
attributable to their exposure to levels of circulating testosterone in the normal adult male
range, rather than the normal adult female range. The majority of the Panel observes that
the evidence concerning the performances and statistical over-representation of female
athletes with 46 XY DSD in certain Relevant Events demonstrates that the elevated
testosterone levels that such athletes possess creates a significant and often determinative
performance advantage over other female athletes who do not have a 46 XY DSD
condition.
24. On this basis, the majority of the Panel accepts that the IAAF has discharged its burden
of establishing that regulations governing the ability of female athletes with 46XY DSD
to participate in certain events are necessary to maintain fair competition in female
athletics by ensuring that female athletes who do not enjoy the significant performance
advantage caused by exposure to levels of circulating testosterone in the adult male range
do not have to compete against female athletes who do enjoy that performance advantage.
Proportionality
25. The majority of the Panel concludes that, on the evidence adduced, the DSD Regulations
are on their face reasonable and proportionate. In reaching this conclusion, the majority
notes, amongst other things, that the DSD Regulations do not require any athlete to
undergo any surgical intervention, and envisage that affected athletes can control their
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testosterone levels by using conventional oral contraceptives. The majority has also had
regard to the possible side effects of such oral contraceptives, to the nature of the
examinations that will be undertaken for the purpose of determining whether an athlete
has experienced a “material androgenising effect” from their high testosterone levels, and
the risk of individuals’ medical confidentiality being compromised.
26. While the majority concludes that the DSD Regulations are not disproportionate on their
face, the Panel highlights its serious concerns about aspects of the practical application
of the DSD Regulations when they are implemented. In particular, the Panel expresses
its concerns about the potential difficulty for an athlete in complying with the
requirements under the Regulations (including the possibility that affected athletes may
inadvertently, and through no fault of their own, be unable consistently to maintain a
natural testosterone level below 5 nmol/L). The Panel also notes the paucity of evidence
to justify the inclusion of two events (the 1500m and one mile events) within the category
of Restricted Events. The Panel strongly encourages the IAAF to address the Panel’s
concerns in its implementation of the DSD Regulations. At the same time, the majority
of the Panel observes that it may be that, on implementation and with experience, certain
factors, supported by evidence, may be shown to affect the overall proportionality of the
DSD Regulations, either by indicating that amendments are required in order to ensure
that the Regulations are capable of being applied proportionately, or by providing further
support for or against the inclusion of particular events within the category of Restricted
Events.
27. In its Award the Panel expressly pays tribute to Ms. Semenya’s grace and fortitude
throughout this process. The Panel expresses its profound gratitude for her dignified
personal participation and the exemplary manner in which she has conducted herself
throughout the proceedings.
28. The Panel also stresses that while much of the argument in this proceeding has centred
around the “fairness” of permitting Ms. Semenya to compete against other female
athletes, there can be no suggestion that Ms. Semenya (or any other female athletes in
the same position as Ms. Semenya) has done anything wrong. This is not a case about
cheating or wrongdoing of any sort. Ms. Semenya is not accused of breaching any rule.
Her participation and success in elite female athletics is entirely beyond reproach and she
has done nothing whatsoever to warrant any personal criticism.