Key Amendments Introduced
The 2013 amendment substantially expanded the Sex Discrimination Act 1984. The main changes are:
- New Protected Attributes
- Sexual orientation: attraction to same sex, different sex, or both.
- Gender identity: a person’s self-perceived gender, regardless of sex at birth or medical intervention.
- Intersex status: having physical, hormonal, or genetic features that are not wholly male or female.
- Repeal of Old Definitions
- The previous legal definitions of “man” and “woman” were repealed (no replacement definitions were added).
- This left “woman” and “man” without clear biological/legal meaning in the Act.
- Marriage & Relationship Updates
- “Marital status” was replaced with “marital or relationship status”.
- Recognised categories now include married, single, divorced, de facto, separated, widowed.
- New definition of “spouse or de facto partner” also included.
- Prohibition of Discrimination Expanded
- It became unlawful to discriminate on grounds of sexual orientation, gender identity, or intersex status in areas already covered by the Act (employment, education, accommodation, clubs, services, etc.).
- Religious Exemptions Modified
- Religious bodies retained exemptions, but these do not apply in Commonwealth-funded aged care services.
- This means aged-care providers cannot discriminate against LGBTI people even if religiously affiliated.
- Technical Updates
- “Sexual preference” was replaced with “sexual orientation” across multiple Acts (Fair Work, Broadcasting, Migration).
- Clarification added that agencies are not required to provide “male/female/other” options in forms and records.
Redefinitions (or Removals)
- Sex: Not redefined in the 2013 Act. Still a protected ground, but now blurred by added categories.
- Woman / Man: Both definitions repealed — leaving these categories open to interpretation.
- Spouse: Extended to include de facto partners and surviving partners.
- Marital status: Broadened into “marital or relationship status” to cover a wider set of living arrangements.
How This Changed the Original 1984 Act
- The 1984 Act originally focused on sex discrimination, with sex being tied to male/female biological categories.
- The 2013 amendments shifted the framework from sex-based protections to identity-based protections.
- This effectively placed gender identity and intersex status on equal footing with biological sex.
- It also removed statutory definitions of “man” and “woman,” weakening the clarity of sex-based rights.
Impacts on Women
- Loss of Clear Legal Definition
- With “woman” no longer defined in law, it became harder to argue for sex-specific protections (e.g., single-sex spaces, services, or sports).
- Conflict Between Sex and Gender Identity
- Employers, schools, or service providers must accommodate “gender identity” even when it conflicts with protections for biological women.
- For example, a male who identifies as a woman may legally claim access to women’s facilities, programs, or opportunities.
- Erosion of Sex-Based Exceptions
- The Act allowed some exceptions (e.g., single-sex clubs, competitive sport, services for one sex only).
- After 2013, these exceptions were legally weakened since excluding someone based on their gender identity could be unlawful, even in contexts meant to protect women.
- Impact on Women’s Advocacy & Services
- Women’s refuges, legal centres, or health services may be unable to prioritise biological women if doing so could be seen as discrimination against trans-identified males.
- Religious exemptions don’t apply in aged care, but they do in other contexts—creating inconsistent protections for women.
Comparison of Sex Discrimination Act: Before vs After 2013 Amendments
| Area | Before 2013 (Original Act) | After 2013 Amendments | Practical Effect for Women |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definitions of Sex, Woman, Man | “Man” and “woman” were legally defined terms, tied to biological sex. | Definitions of “man” and “woman” repealed. No replacement definition given. | Removes legal clarity. “Woman” is no longer a fixed category, opening the door for gender identity to override sex in law. |
| Protected Attributes | Discrimination prohibited on the basis of sex, marital status, pregnancy, family responsibilities. | New attributes added: sexual orientation, gender identity, intersex status. | Expands protections but dilutes sex-based rights by equating identity with biological sex. |
| Marital Status | Defined narrowly (married, single, divorced, widowed). | Replaced with “marital or relationship status”, recognising de facto and other partnerships. | Broader recognition of relationships, minimal direct impact on women, but shifts focus from marriage-only framework. |
| Spouse | Meant husband/wife in marriage. | Expanded to include de facto partners and surviving partners. | Provides more inclusive coverage, but also erases sex-based language. |
| Single-Sex Exceptions (clubs, services, sports, refuges, etc.) | Allowed where necessary (e.g., competitive sport, women’s refuges, single-sex schools). | Still allowed on paper, but restricted by new gender identity protections—excluding someone based on gender identity may be unlawful. | Women’s services, sports, and safe spaces face legal risk if they exclude males who identify as women. |
| Religious Exemptions | Religious bodies could discriminate on sex, marital status, pregnancy in certain contexts. | Religious bodies still exempt, but NOT in Commonwealth-funded aged care. | Mixed effect: aged care safer for LGBT people, but women’s services run by religious groups can still exclude based on “beliefs.” |
| Language on Sexuality | Used “sexual preference” (outdated term). | Replaced with “sexual orientation.” | Modernises language, no direct harm to women. |
| Forms and Records | Sex recorded as male/female. | Agencies not required to provide “male/female/other” options, but may. | Weakens sex-based data collection, undermining women’s advocacy (e.g., tracking sex-based violence). |
Conclusion
- The 2013 amendments shifted the Act from sex-based to identity-based protections.
- By repealing the legal definitions of “man” and “woman,” the law blurred who is entitled to sex-specific rights.
- Women’s services, sports, and advocacy have been weakened because self-declared gender identity can now override biological sex protections.
- Sex-based data collection (vital for policy, crime stats, and healthcare) has been eroded.
