Men earn nearly $10,000 more than women in bonuses and overtime pay, fuelling the gender pay gap: new data

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Men are earning on average A$9,753 more than women each year in the form of performance bonuses, allowances and overtime pay.

That’s according to the latest gender pay gap data released on Thursday by the Workplace Gender Equality Agency. It covers more than 8,000 private companies for 2024–25, employing more than 5.4 million workers across Australia.

The overall gender pay gap fell to 21.1%, compared to 21.8% in 2023–24. But the gap in discretionary pay makes up a big chunk of the total gender pay gap of $28,356.

The share of all parental leave being taken by men grew to 20% in 2024-25, a rise of three percentage points from the year before.

Source: Men earn nearly $10,000 more than women in bonuses and overtime pay, fuelling the gender pay gap: new data

Calls for independent legal representatives for victim-survivors of sexual violence in Australia – ABC News

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

A new report by victim-led advocacy organisation With You We Can makes the case for all victim-survivors of sexual violence to have access to independent legal representation, like Ms Rowe did.

Executive director Sarah Rosenberg started the organisation after learning first-hand how traumatising navigating the criminal justice system can be for victims.

“It’s difficult to put into words just how demeaning and belittling being just a prop in the pursuit of justice for your own rape feels,” Ms Rosenberg said.

The report, What No One Told Us, highlights low reporting rates of sexual violence across the country and the fact that of those who do report, 85 per cent of cases do not progress to a perpetrator being charged.

“Of the 15 per cent of reports that result in charges, two out of five defendants have all charges withdrawn by prosecution, dismissed due to mental health or otherwise disposed of before verdict,” the report states.

The report recommends a national rollout of independent legal representation for all victim-survivors to address those damning statistics, to be funded by the federal government.

That would mean all victims have early access to an independent referral point, where they are provided a lawyer who is independent of the prosecutor and prioritises the victim’s interests during criminal prosecution.

“Giving victim’s lawyers is not ground-breaking, it’s really nothing new — Australia lags behind so many jurisdictions that give victims independent legal representation for criminal proceedings,” she said.

The ACT, Victoria and Western Australia have introduced independent legal representation pilot programs, with all other jurisdictions to follow suit next year.

Victims are entitled to independent legal representation in some European countries, including Italy, Germany and Sweden, parts of the UK, the United States and Japan.

Greg Barns, a barrister and former president of the Australian Lawyers Alliance, has significant hesitation about allowing an additional legal representative in cases of sexual violence.

Mr Barns said he was supportive of victims having an advocate as an extension of the prosecution team in the pre-trial period, but to add a third lawyer to the bar table “had dangers attached to it”.

Source: Calls for independent legal representatives for victim-survivors of sexual violence in Australia – ABC News

The two appalling crimes that won’t disappear from NSW | SMH

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Murders, assaults, burglaries and robberies in NSW were at the lowest, or among the lowest, rates in the nation.

But sexual assault and domestic violence rates remained at about the national average, the data suggests.

Sexual violence is notoriously under-reported, criminologists and police say, because of social stigma, an adversarial legal system, and a lack of awareness about what constitutes an offence.

Sexual assault reports surged in NSW when police overhauled the sexual assault reporting option in January 2023, allowing people to more easily make anonymous disclosures without initiating a criminal investigation.

The aim is to create a record of an offence, as well as helping police gather information to identify repeat offenders or vulnerable communities.

Domestic and family violence remains a national scourge with similar rates nationwide, though BOCSAR notes the estimated rates from an ABS survey have “limited precision”.

Queensland had the highest victimisation rate at 0.95 per cent of residents, Victoria the lowest at 0.6, and NSW on 0.72, similar to the national average.

But women report violence from an intimate partner or family member at much higher rates: 3.8 per cent of women in NSW, slightly above the national average of 3.5 per cent.

 

Source: The two appalling crimes that won’t disappear from NSW

World’s Strongest Woman winner stripped of title as organisers claim athlete was ‘biologically male’ – ABC News

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

In short:

Britain’s Andrea Thompson has been crowned World’s Strongest Woman after the original winner was disqualified from the championships.

Official Strongman stripped American Jammie Booker of the title, stating Booker had violated the rules after claiming she was “biologically male”.

Australian Allira-Joy Cowley has been promoted to second in the championships.

 

Source: World’s Strongest Woman winner stripped of title as organisers claim athlete was ‘biologically male’ – ABC News

Father Ted writer cleared of harassing transgender activist | Evening Standard

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Father Ted co-creator Graham Linehan has been cleared of harassing a transgender activist on social media but found guilty of criminal damage of their mobile phone outside a conference in London last year.

The 57-year-old flew in from Arizona to appear at Westminster Magistrates’ Court in person on Tuesday where judgment was delivered by District Judge Briony Clarke.

Linehan denied harassing Sophia Brooks on social media between October 11 and October 27 last year, and a charge of criminal damage of their mobile phone on October 19 last year outside the Battle of Ideas conference in Westminster.

Reading a summary of her judgment, the judge said she was not satisfied that Linehan’s conduct amounted to harassment or that the complainant was as distressed as they made themselves out to be.

But the judge found that Linehan had taken Brooks’ phone because he was “angry and fed up”, and had damaged it by knocking it to the ground.

She said that while the offence was not aggravated by the fact the complainant is transgender, it was because they were 17 years old at the time.

His lawyer Sarah Vine KC said that they intend to apply for permission to appeal against the conviction.

Source: Father Ted writer cleared of harassing transgender activist

Furious parents sue school after girl, 11, ‘forced to share bed with trans classmate on field trip’ | GB News

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

Four families in Colorado are suing their local school district after it allegedly trried to make an 11-year-old girl share a bed with a male-born transgender student on an overnight school trip.

The families claim the district assigns rooms based on “gender identity” rather than biological sex, without informing parents or obtaining their consent.

The legal action, titled “Wailes v Jefferson County Public Schools”, has reached the US Court of Appeals, with opening arguments submitted on Wednesday.

The first incident occurred in summer 2023 when Joe and Serena Wailes’s daughter, who had just completed fifth grade – or Year Six – travelled on a school excursion to Philadelphia and Washington DC.

She was allocated a twin-bed hotel room with three other pupils – two from her own school and one from another district school.

While getting ready to sleep on the first evening, the girl discovered her “bed partner” was biologically male but identified as female.

District officials had earlier said male and female students would be accommodated on separate hotel floors.

The families say the district provides no mechanism for parents to opt out or request their children share rooms exclusively with pupils of the same biological sex.

Source: Furious parents sue school after girl, 11, ‘forced to share bed with trans classmate on field trip’

The new human rights industry: The business of sexual politics – Athena Forum

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

In 1948, as the Universal Declaration of Human Rights was being drafted, its original title was the Universal Declaration of the Rights of Man. It was only after intervention from women delegates — notably Hansa Mehta of India and Minerva Bernardino of the Dominican Republic — that the final title became the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Over seven decades later, that original impulse — to frame human rights around the priorities and interests of men — has re-emerged under a different name: sexual rights.

In March 2022, Belgium reformed its Criminal Code in a way that legalised pimping. The reform did not decriminalise prostitution — it had never been criminalised — but it removed most third-party offences and redefined exploitation as simply the making of an “abnormal profit”, a term that remains undefined in law.

In 2024, Belgium expanded this framework by adopting a new law that formalised prostitution as a recognised form of employment under the labour code. Individuals in prostitution can now be hired through standard work contracts. Though presented as a protective measure, the law institutionalises pimping as legitimate employment and integrates the exploitation of prostitution — a practice prohibited under international law — into the formal economy.

To call prostitution “work” is to erase the inequality and violence that define it. In Belgium, as across Europe, the overwhelming majority of prostituted persons are migrant women — many undocumented or living in poverty — while buyers are almost exclusively men. Under the guise of protection, the new Belgian law normalises male sexual entitlement and transforms prostitution into a legitimate business.

This shift stands in direct contradiction to binding international standards.

  • CEDAW (Article 6) obliges states to suppress the exploitation of the prostitution of women — in other words, pimping.
  • The 1949 UN Convention recognises prostitution as incompatible with human dignity.
  • The European Parliament has repeatedly identified prostitution as a form of violence against women and an obstacle to equality between women and men (2014 and 2023 Resolutions).
  • UN Special Rapporteur Reem Alsalem has documented prostitution as a grave violation of women’s human rights.

The European Court of Human Rights recently affirmed that France’s Equality Model — which criminalises pimps and buyers while decriminalising prostituted persons — fully aligns with human rights obligations.

In response, nine feminist organisations in Belgium have brought a constitutional challenge against the law. These women’s rights groups argue that the “Law on Sex Work” violates core constitutional and human rights principles.

Following the submission of arguments by both parties, including the Belgian government’s defence, the court is expected to deliver its ruling in the coming months, a decision that will touch directly on the fundamental question of women’s human rights.

On the opposing side, several powerful, corporate-style NGOs — including ILGA-Europe, Transgender Europe (TGEU), Médecins du Monde and the International Planned Parenthood Federation (IPPF), among others — have intervened in support of the Belgian government.

Within this framework, three well-funded lobbying interests converge: the transgender, prostitution and surrogacy lobbies. All three deny the material reality of sex and the structural nature of gender as a hierarchy of male dominance over women. Instead, they reframe systems of male power as matters of identity, expression or personal choice. In practice, this alliance legitimises male access to women’s bodies under the guise of “human rights”.

The case reveals a stark divide. On one side are feminist and frontline organisations providing daily support to women subjected to male violence, including those in prostitution and those trafficked for sexual exploitation. On the other stand influential, donor-fuelled NGOs united by an agenda that seeks to normalise male sexual entitlement — and to repackage it as progressive policy.

Source: The new human rights industry: The business of sexual politics – Athena Forum

FLC Annual Report 2025

The puberty blocker trials cannot be justified | Andrew Doyle

All entries on Feminist Legal Clinic’s News Digest Blog are extracts from news articles and other publications, with the source available at the link at the bottom. The content is not originally generated by Feminist Legal Clinic and does not necessarily reflect our views.

why is the UK government now embarking on trials of puberty blockers for the treatment of children who believe that their identity is misaligned with their body? Approximately 250 children will be involved in the study to be conducted by researchers at King’s College London. Because they are too young to consent, permission will be sought from parents who may or may not have been deceived by the reckless lie that gender-nonconforming children are more likely to commit suicide if not medicated.

The Cass Review confirmed that the evidence for the efficacy of puberty blockers in such cases is remarkably weak, but we do know of the likely harms. Documented cases include an increased risk of osteoporosis, testicular atrophy, cancer, brain damage, and impaired future sexual function. And all of this to prescribe medication to children who are fit and well, and whose problems are clearly the result of a mental-health condition. Why would any conscientious doctor take such risks for a problem that requires a psychotherapeutic approach?

In order to justify this trial, which could potentially ruin many children’s lives, we should surely first establish beyond doubt that such a thing as a ‘gender identity’ exists. In spite of its confidence about the trials, our government cannot even define the term ‘gender identity’. When its spokesperson for equalities in the House of Lords, Jacqui Smith, was asked for a working definition, she simply could not answer. Not that she is alone; even those who believe in a ‘gender identity’ and claim to possess one cannot tell us what it means without resorting to circular (and therefore useless) definitions.

We need to be honest about what is happening here. An unevidenced and pseudoscientific claim is being assumed to be true, and innocent children will almost certainly be injured as a result. This is wholly unethical. Medical trials are initiated on the principle that the potential benefits outweigh the potential risks. But, as Tavistock whistleblower Dr David Bell has pointed out, these trials will ‘introduce a known risk of systemic physical harm to a physically healthy child. To put it mildly, this is a divergence from normal clinical practice’.

Source: The puberty blocker trials cannot be justified

Women of the World Challenge You | Women’s Platform for Action International

 

Source: Women of the World Challenge You | Women’s Platform for Action International