Caster Semenya win highlights need for change in athletics: Canadian professor
Champion runner Caster Semenya’s legal victory on Tuesday is a “huge victory for human rights,” says a professor from the University of Toronto.
The European Court of Human Rights decided that Semenya was discriminated against by sport rules that forced her to medically reduce her natural hormone levels to compete.
Bruce Kidd, a professor emeritus of sports policy, says the decision benefits both athletics and the wider world of sports.
Kidd previously helped initiate a successful appeal of a previous attempt to legislate natural testosterone in female athletes by the International Association of Athletics Federations in the case of an Indian sprinter.