NAIA bans trans women from women’s sports

The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics has passed a new policy that effectively bans trans women from competing

The National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) has effectively banned trans women from competing in most of its women’s sports programs.

A smaller organization similar to the NCAA, the NAIA governs college sports for more than 200 small colleges and universities. The organization voted this week to adopt a new policy mandating the majority of its women’s sports programs are only open to people assigned female at birth—effectively banning trans women from participating. Only cheerleading and dance are excluded.

Trans men can compete in women’s NAIA divisions if they have not begun testosterone-based HRT. If they have started HRT, they are able to participate in “all activities that are internal to the institution, including workouts, practices,” but individual schools will decide if they can compete.

Senior editor Mel Woods breaks down how the ban fits into the larger context of the attack on trans people’s participation in sports.

Read More About:
Power, Identity, Video, Video, Sports, Trans

Keep Reading

Book ban lists from Edmonton, Calgary school districts released

The Alberta government has mandated that school libraries remove titles with “inappropriate” content

Advocates mount new challenge to Alberta anti-trans law

Skipping Stone and Egale Canada are headed back to court to try and overturn Alberta’s youth gender-affirming-care ban

Dylan Mulvaney’s Broadway debut is about more than the backlash

Mulvaney’s casting in “SIX: The Musical” is the latest example of Broadway platforming trans stars
A side by side of Radclyffe Hall and her lesbian novel The Well of Loneliness, with was subject to censorship and obscenity laws

Inside the censorship campaign against this 20th century lesbian novel

Radclyffe Hall’s “The Well of Loneliness” was the target of obscenity laws in 1928