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Why Can't Dutee Run?

Women's 200 meters respective silver and bronze medal winners from India Dutee Chand, left, and Asha Roy wave to the crowd after their race on the final day of the 2013 Asian Athletics Championship.
Manjunath Kiran
/
AFP/Getty Images
Women's 200 meters respective silver and bronze medal winners from India Dutee Chand, left, and Asha Roy wave to the crowd after their race on the final day of the 2013 Asian Athletics Championship.

The case of Dutee Chand — the Indian sprinter who has been banned from competing as a woman because she has naturally high levels of androgen — casts international sport in a bad light.

Great athletes always have an unfair advantage, at least over the rest of us. Life isn't a level playing field. Sure, training, education, opportunity, make a big difference. But if you think you could be in the NBA, but for a lack of opportunity, chances are pretty good you're kidding yourself.

So the claim that it's not fair that Dutee Chand should be allowed to compete with other women just because she's got naturally occurring high levels of hormones associated with improved performance is like saying that taller than normal basketball players should not be allowed to play because they enjoy a competitive advantage.

Doping is banned by and large because it's dangerous and because it gives an unfair advantage. But the Athletics Federation of India, acting in conformity to the rules of track's governing bodies, is telling Dutee Chand that she can compete only if she undergoes potentially harmful surgeries or hormonal therapies that might diminish her performance.

Why?

When pressed, regulators insist that the problem is a large one in the sport. The rate of this sort of elevated hormone profile is much higher among elite athletes than it is among the general population. As quoted in The New York Times, Arne Ljungqvist, chairman of the International Olympic Committee's medical commission, says, "People who say, 'This is nothing; we don't need this rule,' don't know sports or are at some distance from sport." He adds, "This is not an easy matter. It's an evolving matter. We just can't bury our heads in the sand and pretend these conditions do not exist."

But this gets things backwards. Sport selects for better, faster, stronger athletes. In the case of female athletes, this means that it will tend to select for those with hyperandrogenism. It shouldn't be any more surprising that elite athletes will tend to have high levels of the relevant hormones than it is that basketball players will tend to be tall. That's a not a bad thing. That's a good thing. That's not an uneven playing field. It's what we call competition.
So what is the problem, finally?

Dutee Chand's fault, it seems, is that she isn't sufficiently deficient — lacking in androgen — to count as female for the purposes of competition. And this, in turn, suggests a conception of the female, as, in effect, the deficient male.

This is why the rules say that anyone found to have failed "the gender test" as a women is free to compete as a man. If (s)he can qualify that is.

Isn't there something seriously wrong here?


You can keep up with more of what Alva Noë is thinking on Facebook and on Twitter: @alvanoe

Copyright 2021 NPR. To see more, visit https://www.npr.org.

Alva Noë is a contributor to the NPR blog 13.7: Cosmos and Culture. He is writer and a philosopher who works on the nature of mind and human experience.
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