Abstract
Recently, the so-called Semenya case has brought the problem of gender in sports competitions back into the spotlight. But the fact is that it is not a unique case; rather, it seems a recurrent and inconclusive problem in the history of sports. In this context, the Spanish athlete Martínez-Patiño is an important figure in the history of sport and gender verification, as well as the Indian sprinter Dutee Chand. Martínez-Patiño’s story thus serves as an important case study of the gender-based anxieties that hampered women’s advancement in track and field. Martínez-Patiño’s experience in Spanish athletics demonstrates the difficulties women faced when attempting to compete in track and field, both in Spain and internationally. Moreover, her experience with gender policies shows the inadequacies of the chromosomal check as a sex marker, as well as the harms caused by the technique. Finally, Martínez-Patiño’s protest of the International Association of Athletics Federations’ policy started to dismantle compulsory sex verification used as a criterion for gender eligibility. The publicity surrounding her case pushed the track and field federation to abandon mandatory, on-site testing in 1992. Seven years later, the International Olympic Committee also dropped its compulsory control. Martínez-Patiño became the face of the fight against sex/gender verification in sport and helped dismantle the practice. The case of Martinez-Patiño remains in the collective memory of elite sports and serves as an argument for national and international sporting institutions to reconsider discriminating policies in the context of progress being made for women’s rights.
Highlights
In 1983, the Spanish athlete Maria José Martínez-Patiño travelled to Helsinki, Finland, to compete in the World Championship in Athletics
Chand lodged an appeal with the Court of Arbitration for Sport (CAS) against the Athletics Federation of India and the International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) (Ospina Betancurt et al, 2018)
According to Martínez-Patiño “after the results of the last world championship in Doha 2019, it is unfair to say that Caster Semenya’s superiority is solely due to a hyperproduction of testosterone, when in other cases the superiority and dominance of some female athletes is attributed to natural talent and they are praised for their genetic makeup.”
Summary
In 1983, the Spanish athlete Maria José Martínez-Patiño travelled to Helsinki, Finland, to compete in the World Championship in Athletics. The International Association of Athletics Federations (IAAF) required the control for all women who competed in local, continental, or world championships, arguing that a person’s chromosomal composition determined her sex (Ferez, 2012; Heggie, 2010; Pieper, 2016a, 2016b; Ritchie, 2003; Sullivan, 2011).
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