Threats by transgender rights activists to disrupt an academic conference on prison reform over the organiser鈥檚 allegedly 鈥渢ransphobic鈥 views on how inmates should be segregated have led to its cancellation.
More than 300 people were expected to attend a two-day conference on prison abolition in the UK at the Open University鈥檚 campus in Milton Keynes at the end of May, but delegates have been notified that the event has been called off.
The organisers, the Centre of Crime and Justice Studies (CCJS), an educational charity, did not explain the exact reason for the sudden cancellation to delegates, but聽Times Higher Education聽has learned that it was scrapped after activists vowed to target the event over the group鈥檚 policy that transgender prisoners should be incarcerated聽聽from cis-gender female offenders.
Its advice,听聽in February, follows the case of transgender prisoner Karen White, who was jailed in October 2018 for sexually assaulting inmates in a women鈥檚 prison while on remand for rape charges.
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However, campaigners have claimed that the centre鈥檚 recommendations support 鈥渟tate-sanctioned murder鈥, given the suicides of several transgender prisoners in male prisons.
A leaflet distributed by the Trans Liberation Assembly 鈥撀燼 collective of militant feminist groups 鈥 describes the 鈥渁bhorrent transphobia [of] so-called respectable academics at the Centre for Crime and Justice Studies鈥 as a 鈥渟inister factor in this increasingly violent treatment enacted against trans women who are victims of the prison estate鈥.
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That literature, which criticised 鈥渕easures [that] demonise trans women as posing an inherent threat to 鈥榬eal鈥 women鈥, was handed out as 50 protesters occupied the Ministry of Justice on International Women鈥檚 Day on 8 March.
With reports that the same protesters intended to target the OU聽event in May, organisers emailed delegates on 6 March to say that the conference had been cancelled after one of its partners [the OU] had been 鈥渟ubjected to concerted pressure by those intent on disrupting the conference鈥.
In a statement, the Open University suggested, however, that it had cancelled the event over 鈥渃oncerns that discussion around this conference was moving away from its main, originally intended, focus 鈥 to debate the past, present and future of prison abolition鈥.
The event鈥檚 cancellation is the latest in a series of flashpoints over academics鈥 views on gender self-identification and whether transgender women should have access to areas, such as prisons, where vulnerable women are housed. In December, Rosa Freedman, professor of law, conflict and global development at the University of Reading,听聽how her office door had been covered in urine and how she had received threatening anonymous phone calls after debating proposed gender law changes.
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One activist group, the Incarcerated Workers Organising Committee, has聽聽that the CCJS鈥 director Richard Garside, a senior visiting research fellow at the OU, is guilty of propagating 鈥渟ustained transmisogynist pressure鈥 in the media by supporting 鈥渢ransphobic measures to segregate incarcerated trans women鈥.
Kathleen Stock, professor of philosophy at the University of Sussex, who has faced hostility from students over her views on gender identification, said that the cancellation was the latest example of how pressure from transgender campaigners was having a 鈥渃hilling effect on the richness of discussion鈥 in this area.
鈥淩ichard Garside鈥檚 views on this are incredibly moderate and well-considered, so if you can鈥檛 make statements like these, then something is really up,鈥 said Professor Stock.
鈥淧eople have stuck things to my office saying I am not welcome on campus and students have held placards on campus saying that I am transphobic,鈥 Professor Stock added. 鈥淚 think the worry about no platforming can be exaggerated, but it is happening in this area.鈥
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