Daily Mail

All-woman Cambridge college to let in students ‘who live as a female’

- By Eleanor Harding Education Correspond­ent

AN all-women Cambridge University college has announced it will let in students who are ‘living as female’ even if their new gender has not been legally recognised.

Murray Edwards college said it has taken the step to help transgende­r students because it has ‘sympathy with the idea that gender is not binary’.

It believes ‘narrow gender identities and the expectatio­ns associated with them’ are ‘damaging both to individual­s and to wider society’.

Until this year, students had to have legally changed their gender to female under the Gender Recognitio­n Act in order to be admitted to the college.

But critics said this was unfair since only over-18s are allowed to change their gender, while many of those applying to Cambridge are only 17.

Murray Edwards – of which alumnae include Sue Perkins, Claudia Winkleman and Tilda Swinton – has now changed its policy so those born male who have ‘taken steps’ to live as a woman will be able to apply as well, without having to provide legal documentat­ion.

Students praised the decision, but feminist Germaine Greer, who attended another womenonly Cambridge college, Newnham, said it was ‘ridiculous’. She told the Daily Telegraph: ‘It’s a difficult relationsh­ip, having a transgende­r person in an allfemale environmen­t.

‘If Murray Edwards really don’t believe that gender is binary, then they really shouldn’t be a single sex college. Their position is ridiculous. The only sane thing for them to do is to cease discrimina­ting on the basis of assigned gender of any kind.’

Murray Edwards, which was founded as New Hall in 1954 and renamed in 2008, said: ‘We will consider any student who, at the point of applicatio­n, identifies as female and, where they have been identified as male at birth, has taken steps to live in the female gender (or has been legally recognised as female via the Gender Recognitio­n Act).’

It added that if an applicant feels ‘their case does not fall within the parameters set out, the College will consider their case on an individual basis’. The new rules apply to undergradu­ates wishing to transfer from another college as well as prospectiv­e students applying to join the college in their first year.

Murray Edwards also said it would be ‘fully supportive’ of any current students born female who are transition­ing to male or ‘rejecting a binary gender category’. It said it would help them transfer to a mixed sex college if the student service so Ucas wished. replaced Admissions ‘legal sex’ with ‘gender’ on the university applicatio­ns form in 2015 to allow students to identify as a different gender to the one they were born with. Following this, Murray Edwards took legal advice and held a consultati­on with students. The policy change was passed by the College Council, a group of academics and teaching fellows.

Newnham and Cambridge’s third women-only college, Lucy Cavendish, still have the old policy. One Murray Edwards undergradu­ate told student website the Tab: ‘I’m thrilled the college is finally revising its previous totally exclusiona­ry policy and I hope Newnham and Lucy Cavendish will follow suit.

‘You cannot be considered as a women’s college until you accept all women.’

Dame Barbara Stocking, president of Murray Edwards, said: ‘Society is changing and there is now a greater understand­ing of the complexiti­es of gender.

‘In order that we remain true to our mission of being open to all outstandin­g young women, we recognise it is right for anyone who identifies as female, regardless of their born gender, to be able to apply to study with us.’

In July, Education Secretary Justine Greening announced a consultati­on on reforming the Gender Recognitio­n Act to make the process less intrusive.

Currently those who want to change gender have to be diagnosed with gender dysphoria by a doctor and provide evidence that they have been transition­ing for at least two years.

A former women-only Oxford college, St Hugh’s, has been criticised for having an all-male team for University Challenge. Men were first admitted in 1986.

‘Society is changing’

 ??  ?? Former student: Sue Perkins, right, pictured with partner Anna Richardson
Former student: Sue Perkins, right, pictured with partner Anna Richardson

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom