For Women Scotland Ltd (Appellant) v The Scottish Ministers (Respondent)
Lord Reed, Lord Hodge, Lord Lloyd-Jones, Lady Rose, Lady Simler
Today, Wednesday 16th April 2025, the UK Supreme Court issued its ruling following a long-running legal challenge regarding the definition of the term ‘woman’ in law, specifically when understanding the meaning and scope of the term ‘sex’ in the UK’s Equality Act 2010.
You will have noted that the Court ruled that the term “woman” exclusively refers to biological sex, issuing clear guidance following many years of confusion and interpretation of relevant legislation. In issuing its ruling, the Court aimed to clarify this definition explicitly when understanding who receives protection under the protected characteristic of ‘sex’ as well as clarity around protections in place for women (explicitly within the judgement, but notably also extended to men by default) most notably in providing single-sex spaces.
This ruling comes at a time where trans and gender-diverse people are under more scrutiny and suspicion than ever before, as well as being subject to increasing level of prejudice, hate and intolerance. However, the ruling was intended as a way of settling a long-standing and particularly complicated set of contradictions and confusion within UK legislation. This guidance should be read with that context in mind.
What we can immediately interpret this ruling to mean practically is that:
[NOTE: this will require some immediate remedial action from the UK Government to bring the Gender Recognition Act 2004 in line with this ruling.]
However, with this new definition of ‘woman’ enshrined in law, anyone claiming discriminatory practice on the basis of sex against an organisation who is including trans women within their target demographics [for this type of Positive Action activity] have an increased chance of their claim being upheld.
The EHRC (Equality and Human Rights Commission) currently outlines those ‘exceptions’ that allow organisations to “lawfully exclude, modify or limit” access to certain groups could be “for reasons of privacy, decency, to prevent trauma or to ensure health and safety”.
FAIRER Consulting can support you with this activity or provide guidance if you have any concerns or questions.
As a reminder, this ruling relates to the definition of ‘sex’ and ‘women’ in legislation and is not a direction that organisations are now lawfully entitled to discriminate, harass or victimise transgender people. Protections for transgender women (and men) still exist within the Equality Act 2010 under the protected characteristic of ‘gender reassignment’ and therefore organisations are still able (and we would encourage them) to:
Organisations are reminded that Harassment, as defined in the Equality Act 2010 is:
“…unwanted behaviour [related to a protected characteristic] which has the purpose or effect of violating someone’s dignity or which creates a hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment.”
We would suggest that any workplace environment which either encourages or allows transgender employees to be subject to deadnaming, misgendering, intolerance, prejudice or exclusion as a result of an individual’s known or perceived transgender status might constitute creating an environment which does indeed violate transgender employees’ dignity or create such a hostile, degrading, humiliating or offensive environment.
At FAIRER Consulting, we would recommend that organisations continue to create and foster an inclusive environment, with dignity, respect and cohesion at its heart. If you need any further guidance on how to do so in light of today’s UK Supreme Court’s ruling, please contact us at info@fairerconsulting.com.