Home GDPR About Contact Terms Privacy Menu

Dashed Dreams: The Tokyo Olympics, Sex Testing and Biology

Share it with your friends Like

Thanks! Share it with your friends!

Close

Leading up to the recent Tokyo Olympics. athletes Annet Negesa of Uganda and Maximila Imali of Kenya both had their Olympic dreams crushed because of rules set by the track and field global governing body, World Athletics. They are just two—of many—elite women athletes who have been told their natural testosterone levels, if not lowered through medication or surgery, disqualify them from competition at the highest levels of sport.

Join us for an in-depth conversation about intersex biology and the history of sex testing in women’s athletics ahead of the Tokyo Olympics.

About the Speaker

In February 2021, Eliza Anyangwe became the editor of As Equals, CNN’s ongoing gender inequality project. She began her career working for nongovernmental organizations Action Against Hunger and then the Pesticide Action Network, where she was Organic Cotton Officer, but has spent more than a decade in media, working for The Guardian, The Bureau of Investigative Journalism, and most recently The Correspondent, where she was managing editor. The Guardian Opinion series she commissioned and wrote for, a “Week in Africa,” was longlisted for a One World Media award.

In 2016, Eliza founded The Nzinga Effect, a media project focused on telling the stories of African and Afro-descendant women, and delivered that work through partnerships with organizations such as The Serpentine Galleries and The British Council. In 2018 she was awarded a development reporting grant by the European Journalism Centre to tell stories about the African women breaking taboos and carving out space to talk about sex and sexuality.

Eliza has written for The Independent, Financial Times, Al Jazeera and Open Democracy; has appeared on broadcast programs, including “Newsnight,” “BBC World Service,” PRI’s “The World,” and the podcast “Our Body Politic”; and has spoken at events, among them SXSW, D&AD Festival, The Google News Initiative Summit, the International Journalism Festival, Africa Utopia, The Web We Want Festival and the Next Einstein Forum. Eliza is a contributing author to Africa’s Media Image in the 21st Century, published by Routledge.

NOTES

OCTOBER 4, 2021

SPEAKERS

Eliza Anyangwe
Journalist; Editor, As Equals, CNN Gender Inequality Project; Twitter @elizatalks; Instagram @Elizatookthis

Michelle Meow
Producer and Host, “The Michelle Meow Show,” KBCW TV and Podcast; Member, Commonwealth Club Board of Governors; Twitter @msmichellemeow—Co-Host

John Zipperer
Producer and Host, Week to Week Political Roundtable; Vice President of Media & Editorial, The Commonwealth Club—Co-Host

💯SUBSCRIBE for more VIDEOS: https://www.youtube.com/user/commonwealthclub
📆 UPCOMING EVENTS: https://www.commonwealthclub.org/events
🎉 BECOME a MEMBER: https://www.commonwealthclub.org/membership
💰 DONATE NOW: https://support.commonwealthclub.org/sslpage.aspx?pid=298
📺➕📻 Watch & Listen https://www.commonwealthclub.org/watch-listen

CWC Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/thecommonwealthclub/
CWC Instagram https://www.instagram.com/cwclub/
CWC Twitter https://twitter.com/cwclub

The Commonwealth Club of California is the nation’s oldest and largest public affairs forum 📣, bringing together its 20,000 members for more than 400 annual events on topics ranging across politics, culture, society and the economy.

Founded in 1903 in San Francisco California 🌉, The Commonwealth Club has played host to a diverse and distinctive array of speakers, from Teddy Roosevelt in 1911 to Hillary Clinton in 2010. Along the way, Martin Luther King, Ronald Reagan and Bill Clinton have all given landmark speeches at the Club.

Comments

Comments are disabled for this post.