The UK Supreme Court is set to deliver a landmark ruling on Wednesday that will determine how the word “woman” is defined in law—a decision with sweeping implications for sex-based rights and gender recognition across Britain.
The judgment concludes a years-long legal battle between the Scottish government and women’s advocacy group For Women Scotland. At the heart of the case is a question with deep societal, legal, and political consequences: should the legal definition of a woman be based on biological sex or include those with a Gender Recognition Certificate (GRC)?
The Scottish government argues that under the 2004 Gender Recognition Act, individuals with a GRC should be legally recognised in their acquired gender “for all purposes.” That interpretation would allow transgender women to be counted as women in laws involving sex-based protections.
However, For Women Scotland contends that such rights must apply exclusively to those born female, citing the original intent of the 2010 Equality Act. Their legal team argues that sex is “an immutable biological state,” warning that blurring legal definitions could undermine women’s rights, particularly in single-sex spaces such as hospital wards, refuges, prisons, and public boards.
The ruling will clarify how “sex” is interpreted in the Equality Act 2010, which protects against discrimination on grounds including sex and gender reassignment. This outcome may influence areas such as maternity policy, equal pay, sports participation, and access to women-only services.
The legal row originated in 2018, when the Scottish Parliament passed a bill to ensure gender balance on public boards. The inclusion of trans women in the quotas triggered the legal challenge, escalating to the Supreme Court after multiple appeals.
The case arrives amid intensifying national debate over gender identity, rights, and freedoms. While transgender advocates fear a ruling that excludes legal recognition will erode their protections, women’s rights groups argue that redefining “woman” could dilute the legal basis for hard-won sex-based protections.
The verdict, expected at around 9:45am, could reshape the legal landscape of equality law in the UK—and set a precedent for how the country balances rights in a time of cultural and legal reckoning.




