Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common Dilemmas

When sex characteristics develop in ways that do not conform to binary models, dilemmas arise regarding how to understand the situation and what terminology to use to describe it. While current medical nomenclature suggests that it should be understood as a disorder of sex development (DSD) promptin...

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Main Authors: Tove Lundberg, Ingrid Dønåsen, Peter Hegarty, Katrina Roen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: PsychOpen 2019-05-01
Series:Journal of Social and Political Psychology
Subjects:
Online Access:http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/1012
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spelling doaj-13c8681c517249a0b1dacd97700ac8202020-11-25T02:58:17ZengPsychOpenJournal of Social and Political Psychology2195-33252019-05-017135437710.5964/jspp.v7i1.1012jspp.v7i1.1012Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common DilemmasTove Lundberg0Ingrid Dønåsen1Peter Hegarty2Katrina Roen3Department of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, NorwayDepartment of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, NorwaySchool of Psychology, University of Surrey, Guildford, United KingdomDepartment of Psychology, University of Oslo, Oslo, NorwayWhen sex characteristics develop in ways that do not conform to binary models, dilemmas arise regarding how to understand the situation and what terminology to use to describe it. While current medical nomenclature suggests that it should be understood as a disorder of sex development (DSD) prompting medical responses, many describe intersex as a human variation in sexed embodiment that should be protected under discrimination laws. These opposing perspectives suggest different principles to employ in responding to dilemmas about gender assignment, early genital surgery and full disclosure of medical information. In this discursive psychological study, we explore how lay people, without prior knowledge or experience of intersex/DSD, make sense of these dilemmas and the underpinning discourses giving rise to how they talk about these situations. By using the discursive framework of ideological dilemmas, we analyse how people make sense of sex and gender (as binary or non-binary), how they deal with difference (as problematic or not), and how they understand who is in a position to make decisions in such situations. We conclude that engaging with dilemmas in-depth is more constructive than favouring one principle over others in moving social science research, reflexive clinical practice, and wider political debates on intersex/DSD forward.http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/1012intersexdisorders of sex development (DSD)human rightsideological dilemmashealth carelegislation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tove Lundberg
Ingrid Dønåsen
Peter Hegarty
Katrina Roen
spellingShingle Tove Lundberg
Ingrid Dønåsen
Peter Hegarty
Katrina Roen
Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common Dilemmas
Journal of Social and Political Psychology
intersex
disorders of sex development (DSD)
human rights
ideological dilemmas
health care
legislation
author_facet Tove Lundberg
Ingrid Dønåsen
Peter Hegarty
Katrina Roen
author_sort Tove Lundberg
title Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common Dilemmas
title_short Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common Dilemmas
title_full Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common Dilemmas
title_fullStr Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common Dilemmas
title_full_unstemmed Moving Intersex/DSD Rights and Care Forward: Lay Understandings of Common Dilemmas
title_sort moving intersex/dsd rights and care forward: lay understandings of common dilemmas
publisher PsychOpen
series Journal of Social and Political Psychology
issn 2195-3325
publishDate 2019-05-01
description When sex characteristics develop in ways that do not conform to binary models, dilemmas arise regarding how to understand the situation and what terminology to use to describe it. While current medical nomenclature suggests that it should be understood as a disorder of sex development (DSD) prompting medical responses, many describe intersex as a human variation in sexed embodiment that should be protected under discrimination laws. These opposing perspectives suggest different principles to employ in responding to dilemmas about gender assignment, early genital surgery and full disclosure of medical information. In this discursive psychological study, we explore how lay people, without prior knowledge or experience of intersex/DSD, make sense of these dilemmas and the underpinning discourses giving rise to how they talk about these situations. By using the discursive framework of ideological dilemmas, we analyse how people make sense of sex and gender (as binary or non-binary), how they deal with difference (as problematic or not), and how they understand who is in a position to make decisions in such situations. We conclude that engaging with dilemmas in-depth is more constructive than favouring one principle over others in moving social science research, reflexive clinical practice, and wider political debates on intersex/DSD forward.
topic intersex
disorders of sex development (DSD)
human rights
ideological dilemmas
health care
legislation
url http://jspp.psychopen.eu/article/view/1012
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