From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Gender policing is the imposition or enforcement of normative gender expressions on an individual who is perceived as not adequately performing, through appearance or behavior, their gender or sex that was assigned to them at birth (see gender performativity). According to Judith Butler, rejection of individuals who are non-normatively gendered is a component of creating one's own gender identity. Gender mainstreaming is a public policy concept, whereas gender policing is a more general social phenomenon.
It is common for normative gender performances of gender to be
encouraged and rewarded, while non-normative performances are
discouraged through punishment or generally negative reactions. Policing
of non-normative performances ranges in intensity from relatively minor
discouraging comments to brutal acts of violence. Tactics of gender
policing also vary widely, depending in part on the perceived gender of
the individual target.
Heteronormativity and the gender binary
Gender policing aims to keep gender roles rigid and aligned according to the gender binary. The gender binary is the idea that gender exists as the opposition between man and woman. Heteronormativity,
as an institution, is an extension of this belief that posits that
gender and sexuality are expressions of biology. This functionalism of
biology asserts that male and female genitalia only serve the purpose of
procreation, which creates gender roles that manifest from a perceived
innate desire, giving sexuality a specific purpose within society.
Gayle Rubin's
writing in "The Traffic in Women" links the creation of the gender
binary to the subordination of women in western society. Rubin studied
the works of Karl Marx, Sigmund Freud, and Claude Lévi-Strauss
to gain a better understanding of the creation of the "sex/gender
system". Rubin found that "woman" was a role created in opposition to
"man" and served the purpose of building power, trade relationships, and
mutual aid through the exchange of women by marriage. These Kinship
systems necessitated rules, which had to be policed to ensure their
continued survival. These rules crystallized into heteronormativity,
culturally instilling the rules for accepted sexuality in western
society.
The gender binary in western society was formalized from the interpretations of men and women during the hunter-gatherer ages. During this Mesolithic
or Middle Stone Age in North-West Europe, hunting and gathering food
was a prominent survival strategy. Early interpretations of these
survival techniques is one of the main reasons for the current idea of
the gender binary within western society. In his review of the
ethnography of gathering shellfish, Clive Bonsall incorrectly presumed
that women and children were primarily gatherers and men were the
hunters due to their stronger skill set. These assumptions of past
societies shaped the current structure of western society into the
beliefs that men are the providers and women are the supporters.
Additionally in the idea of heterosexual marriage as the societal norm
came from the analysis of the interactions between different Mesolithic
populations.
Another mentality that strengthens the idea of binary gender
within western society is the warrior-breeder relationship. In this
mentality, masculinity is characterized by the traits of the model
warrior: strong and fearless, yet disposable. Meanwhile, femininity and
womanhood revolve around reproduction. In this relationship, there are
only two types of people; therefore, two genders. This dichotomy is
valued because it keeps society safe in times of war. The warriors fight
and protect while the breeders replace the fallen warriors.
From the works of LGB activism during the late 1980s to 1990s, the queer theory was created along with the influential work of Michel Foucault and Eve Kosofsky Sedgwick.
The queer theory creates a space outside the gender binary. This theory
deconstructs and discredits the idea of a gender binary. Disregarding
the gender binary caused fears within the western society, ultimately
leading to gender policing in order to maintain the idea of binary
gender.
Man and woman as categories can not exist without the other to
enforce what they are and are not. The same can be said of
heterosexuality and homosexuality. These categories are created out of
their opposition, forming power dynamics. Michel Foucault
referred to this creation of identities, through creating discourse
surrounding the ideal, as reverse discourse. This antagonistic
relationship between identities is the basis for gender policing.
Deviation from normative expression, of either gender or sexuality, is
often met with varying degrees of violence.
Patriarchy and hegemonic masculinity
Patriarchal
societies perpetuate masculine dominance in all aspects of life.
Patriarchy privileges masculine thought and expression creating a gender
hierarchy where women and the feminine are subordinated. The concept of
hegemonic masculinity
describes a hierarchy even within masculinity itself. Hegemonic
masculinity allows for the terms and expression of masculinity to be
renegotiated according to time, culture, and class status, allowing for
the rationalization of its continued dominance.
Sociologist Raewyn Connell
created the theory of hegemonic masculinity in order to explain the
relationships between men and women and between the class of men within a
patriarchal system. This theory is based on Antonio Gramsci's concept
of hegemony –– conformity or subordination of one group which creates
class-based domination. Connell's theory explains the ways in which
ideal or normalized masculine traits have the highest values in western
society. These masculine attributes include wealth, control over
resources, fertility, attractiveness, heterosexuality, physical
strength, and emotional detachment.
Demetrakis Z. Demetriou further divided hegemonic masculinity into two
types: external and internal. External hegemonic masculinity refers to
the subordination of women under men. Internal hegemonic masculinity is
the spectrum of masculinity seen within men. This spectrum is defined by
the amount of power and masculinity a man holds. The patriarchy needs
hegemonic masculinity in order to maintain power. In order to keep this
power, men must be policed and women must be dominated.
Since the ideal form of masculinity is seen by patriarchal power, men
that fit in this norm are seen as what a human should embody.
The gender hierarchy created by patriarchy and hegemonic
masculinity creates competition for dominance resulting in the policing
of gender and sexuality. Policing of masculinity in a heteronormative
society reinforces the gender binary. Individuals seeking to reaffirm
their position in a masculine hierarchy seek out and police individuals
performing inadequately. Sexual minority men are more likely to be
identified as gender nonconforming than heterosexual men and may be more
vulnerable to societal messages intended to pressure men to behave in
ways that are traditionally masculine.
Those performing inadequately must either conform to the accepted forms
of gender and sexual expression or risk violence and ostracism.
Fathers are more likely than mothers to enforce gender
boundaries, or police the gendered expressions of their children.
Second, both fathers and mothers enforce gender boundaries more
frequently with sons than with daughters.
Research on the topic of parental gender policing has shown that female
children who display traditionally masculine traits or behaviors
receive more social and parental acceptance than male children who
exhibit traditionally feminine tendencies.
Many scholars on the subject argue that this is due to the greater
value assigned to "masculine" traits or behaviors compared to "feminine"
ones, and/or beliefs that "tomboyism" is temporary.
At least one study indicates that parents across various social
locations celebrate and encourage their preschool age daughters to
engage in gender nonconformity, such as wearing sports-themed clothing
and participating in traditionally male activities.
However, other research indicates that in part due to peer and parental
pressures, "tomboys", or female children with "masculine" traits or
behavioral tendencies, frequently either abandon these tendencies in
adolescence, or adopt a more feminine performance but retain many
masculine skills and traits.
Pressures to conform to gender norms increase with age, and often
manifest in these children being "instructed or shamed to conform to
traditional femininity – in dress, appearance, posture, manner,
interests, and dating."
Femmephobia
According to R. A. Hoskin, femmephobia, a type of discrimination and oppression
towards people with feminine gender expression, often functions as
gender policing. Femmephobia lays down narrow rules for women of an
"ideal femininity", which in any case, however, will be seen as inferior
to masculinity.
Psychoanalysis
Fields
of knowledge that claim to be universal are still created within
societal frameworks that have their own rules and biases. A patriarchal
society gives privilege to masculine thought and excludes other points
of view and histories. All discourse created in a patriarchal society
can be said to acquiesce to hegemonic masculinity.
Michel Foucault viewed psychoanalysis
as a secular confession concerned with finding our natural sexual
selves. The problem, Foucault argued, is that sexuality is cultural and
any narrative created around it gives the subject the illusion of
identity rather than experience. Psychoanalysis conducted in a
hetero-normative society would view any deviation as a failing to
achieve that ideal. Rather than someone being seen as performing an act,
they would be seen as embodying that which society deemed inadequate.
Gayle Rubin wrote about Sigmund Freud's psychoanalytic theory in "The Traffic In Women". Rubin states that Jacques Lacan's analysis of Freud views the Oedipus complex
as the crisis experienced by a child when internalizing kinship rules.
The child becomes aware of the sex/gender system and organizes itself
accordingly. Neurosis is seen as having an understanding of this system yet failing to adapt to it. Lacan's separation of the Phallus
from the physical penis elucidates societies privileging of the
masculine and gender's separation from biology. In Rubin's view
psychiatry further policed accepted gender and sexual expression by
deeming non normative behavior as mentally and emotionally stunted.
Rubin also saw that this system of internalizing norms privileged
heterosexual masculinity while outlining the psychic oppression society
inflicts on women and femininity.
Intersectionality
Gender
policing affects different social identifications in different ways.
Along with gender, characteristic attributes such as race, gender identity, class, sexual orientation, age, religion, creed,
and disability interact with each other and are affected differently by
gender policing. The effect of intersection of these social categories
are studied in intersectionality theory.
Understanding intersectionality within gender policing can be done by
tracing back and analyzing the relation between race and gender in
history. Race and gender over time produced hierarchies within
themselves. Similar to the way the classification of "man" cannot exist
without "woman", "white" people cannot exist without "black" people.
Race as a classification arose from European capitalist colonialism.
European colonists deemed those who weren't "white", primitive and
deserving of domination and "civilizing". Global colonialism by European
capitalists imposed European ways of knowing and being on the peoples
they colonized. This included a racialized and patriarchal conception of
gender. The view of colonized peoples as primitive created a
distinction between "white" (human) and "black" (property or inhuman).
The view of "black" as other than human excluded "black" people from
classifications of gender. In western society, being "white" and middle
class continue to inform gender norms, leaving "non-white" people unable
to perform accepted femininity or masculinity.
In modern-day times, intersectionality now touches upon various
other forms of human characterizations, affecting people in countless
different ways. How a white transgender woman may experience gender
policing is going to differ greatly from how an Asian heterosexual woman
might (etc.).
Socialization
An
individual's expression of gender is often first policed by their
parent(s), as well as other elder authorities such as teachers and day
care providers, at a very young age. Gender policing is part of the
process of "gendering" children, or socializing them in a way considered
conventionally appropriate to their assigned sex. Once children are
taught gender norms and experience their enforcement, they are likely to
begin policing others – both their peers and their elders.
Early childhood
Gender
policing begins with gender enforcing from parents teaching their
children what is "masculine" and what is "feminine" in the traditional
sense of these terms. These traditional ideas of gender are reinforced
through practices such as referring to children as "boys" and "girls"
which "makes sex/ gender the central component of how kids think of
themselves, understand their social group, and view themselves through
their parents’ eyes."
As Jane Ward, professor of Gender and Sexuality Studies at University
of California, Riverside, writes in her chapter of the book Chasing Rainbows: Exploring Gender Fluid Parenting Practices,
even parents who hope to redefine "boyhood" or "girlhood" (such as
through allowing a "tomboy" daughter, or dressing a son in dresses, for
example), still reinforce the concept of gender as a binary which is
biologically determined. The gender binary is already enforced in obvious places, such as in the segregation of toys in stores, for example.
Ethnographic research in preschools has also contributed to the
body of knowledge related to gender policing. This research has
suggested that teachers give their students gendered instructions about
what to do with their bodies. Across several schools, teachers gave boys
explicit bodily instructions more frequently than girls, indicating
that boys' bodies are policed more often than girls'.
However, this may be because teachers were more forceful with their
instructions to girls, who were also usually quicker to follow
instructions, thus teachers did not need to repeat themselves as often.
Teachers were also more likely to direct boys to cease behaviors (e.g.
running, throwing objects), whereas they were more apt to instruct girls
to alter them. For example, girls were given directive bodily
instructions such as "talk to her, don't yell, sit here, pick that up,
be careful, be gentle, give it to me, put it down there."
As a result, a wider range of potential activities is available to boys
than girls, because although they are dissuaded from some, they are not
directed to engage in specific activities as often as girls are.
According to Martin, the scholar and sociologist who conducted this
research, "Gendering of the body in childhood is the foundation on which
further gendering of the body occurs throughout the life course. The
gendering of children's bodies makes gender differences feel and appear
natural, which allows for such bodily differences to emerge throughout
the life course."
Relatively recent efforts have been made to limit gender
policing, particularly in childhood. Sweden's reformation of their
school system in 1962 resulted in a new curriculum which included
objectives to limit gender policing in early education. Within this new
curriculum it was determined that "Pre-schools should work to counteract
traditional gender and gender roles. Girls and boys in pre-schools
should have the same opportunities to try and develop their abilities
and interests without being limited by stereotyped gender roles."se preschools, elementary, and secondary schools aim to reduce the
gender policing placed onto children, but through doing this must show
how teachers and other pedagogical adults may accidentally reinforce
gender stereotypes. Tools teachers use to combat this include practices
such as keeping journals and videotaping classroom interactions (a
practice proposed by Susanne Rithander). A general pedagogical practice
in these Swedish schools in called compensatory pedagogy, which
plays off the idea that, per traditional gender roles, boys are
encouraged to maintain autonomy while girls are encouraged to maintain
closeness with others. Compensatory pedagogy challenges these traditional gender roles by encouraging girls to maintain autonomy and boys to build closeness with others.
Some parents have attempted to limit gender policing through
their parenting styles, as is the case with Storm's parents, who chose
not to gender their child but instead to wait until their child could
decide for themself. Unlike the relative success so far of Swedish
schools in limiting gender policing, individual efforts by Kathy and
David, Storm's parents, faced huge media backlash. In the chapter titled
Get Your Gender Binary Off My Childhood!: Towards a Movement for Childrenʹs Gender Self-Determination,
Ward shows how Storm's parents were often called deceitful and
manipulative, as Ward puts it, "For not revealing what they knew about
Storm’s genitals, Kathy and David were accused of hiding Storm’s very
selfhood."
Adolescence
Adolescence is a developmental stage in which peer groups
are especially important, and peer relationships take primacy over
familial relationships. It is also a stage during which gender policing
amongst peers becomes increasingly common. Adolescents have already been
introduced, during childhood, to normative gender expressions and
social expectations therein by elders. These expectations are then
reinforced during adolescence, largely by peers gender policing one
another. In this (and every) stage of development, gender policing is
especially prevalent in explicitly gendered environments, such as
bathrooms, locker rooms, and sports teams.
Dude, You're a Fag, a book by CJ Pascoe, examines masculinity and gender policing in high schools through ethnographic research. Pascoe largely focuses on high school boys' use of the fag epithet
to establish their own masculinity by questioning or challenging
others'. In this context, the use of the fag epithet is a form of gender
policing, frequently applied to boys who lack heterosexual prowess or
are deemed inadequately masculine or strong. According to Pascoe, "[the
fag identity] is fluid enough that boys police their behaviors out of
fear of having the fag identity permanently adhere and definitive enough
so that boys recognize a fag behavior and strive to avoid it".
A study of male students of a co-educational, Catholic high
school demonstrates insights from adolescent males themselves in regard
to gender policing. This study highlights the gender policing of males
by each other through exploring the types of bullying being practiced.
Forms of bullying (and gender policing) come from accusations of males
being homosexual. One participant in the study explains that he was
bullied for dancing ballet and described his bullying as "Just a lot to
do with being a woman", thus showing an association of specific
activities with a specific gender (and that deviance from typical gender
roles proves a perceived grounds for bullying).
Through the practice of conducting interviews, the study briefly
explores an observed policing of male behavior by females. One
interviewee "appears to be drawing attention to the different norms for
governing the conduct of girls who police boys’ bullying practices
through a condemnation of violent behaviors".
Interviewees also draw attention to the confirmation and reinforcement
of attitudes and practices considered "masculine" within males. In
addition, these "masculine" identifiers are further enforced through
female interaction and confirmation. In conducting these interviews, it
is also found how adolescents view the stereotypical concept of
masculinity as a concept which is ingrained early on in their lives and
“passed on from their fathers".
Intersectionality also plays a role in understanding the policing
of gender during the socialization process for adolescence. It has been
noted that the controlling images of Black women are often applied to
young Black girls, and they are punished and policed accordingly, such
as being punished for their anger in schools.
Additionally, there are many ways that a person's intersecting
identities affects how they are treated and how their masculinity and
feminity is censored and policed.
Adulthood
During adulthood, gender policing generally becomes more subtle.
However, for an individual whose gender is perceived as ambiguous,
blatant forms still exist. These range from curious inquiries by
children (e.g. "Are you a boy or a girl?") to gender policing in
bathrooms (discussed in the following section). People who are
gender-normative in appearance experience primarily behavioral gender
policing, such as reminders to act in a more (or less) feminine or
masculine manner. Men are more often dissuaded and shamed for feminine
behavior than women are for masculine behavior. It is theorized that
this is due, at least in part, to the higher societal value of
masculinity.
Gender policing has been reinforced in adults for many years. As Angela Y. Davis
points out, early women's prisons relied on gender policing as a means
of reformation. The first women's reformatory in the U.S. opened in
Indiana and included areas designed as kitchens, living rooms, and
nurseries. The idea was to train women about domesticity through
activities such as cooking, sewing, and cleaning.
Sex testing
and verification in sports and athletics shows gender policing as a
practice still relevant to many countries and athletic organizations in
recent history. In the case of the nineteen-year-old Missouri runner
Helen Stephens in the 1936 Berlin Olympics,
who finished first place in the 100-meter race, many questioned her sex
because they could not fathom the concept of a woman running so
quickly. Sex testing and verification has existed throughout human
history, even being traced back to practices in ancient Greek contests.
Within these Greek traditions, women were deterred from participation
and even spectatorship at times. In the examples of both Greek practices
and the story of Helen Stephens of Missouri, it can be seen how women
are often more likely to be subject to sex verification processes and
accusations of deceit (i.e. women are often accused of actually being
men disguised as women; men are not often accused of being women
disguised as men).
Transgender, androgynous, and gender non-conforming individuals
The severity of gender policing is often proportional to the extremity of non-normativity. For example, transgender individuals are likely to be victims of the most extreme and violent forms of gender policing. Research regarding conformity pressures and gender resistance among transfeminine
individuals (those who are assigned the male sex at birth but identify
as more feminine than masculine) indicates that these persons
experienced "intense and pervasive" pressures to conform to traditional
masculinity, and feared exposure of their gender identity would result
in physical danger or loss of legal, economic, or social standing. Thus, transgender individuals must often choose between self-preservation and expressing their self-identified gender.
Gender policing is especially prevalent in bathrooms due to the
increased salience of gender in explicitly gendered environments (and
the forced binary of "men" and "women"). While this issue is frequently encountered by transgender and genderqueer individuals, to a lesser extent, it is also experienced by persons with androgynous
or gender ambiguous appearances. For individuals with non-normative
gender identities, the choice of which bathroom to use is often laden
with "anxiety, ambivalence, and anticipated harassment."
It is not uncommon for gender-normative people to alert security of the
presence of transgender (or androgynous) individuals in a bathroom,
regardless of whether the bathroom they are using conforms to their sex
or to their gender identity. According to Jack Halberstam,
the main distinction between gender policing in the women's room and in
the men's room is that in the former, not only trans women, but all
gender ambiguous females are scrutinized, whereas in the latter,
biological males are less frequently deemed out of place.
Further, compared to trans women in the women's room, trans men in the
men's room are likely to be less scrutinized because men are less
vigilant about intruders than women. However, a trans man in the men's room is more likely to be met with violence if he does not succeed in passing.
Trans women and trans men are "six times more likely to experience discrimination" than non-trans people. Over 2,000 incidents of anti-LGBT hate crimes were reported to the National Coalition of Anti-Violence Programs
in 2013. In 2014, there was a national study of trans violence
discovered with the results of “53% of respondents reporting verbal
assault and 8% physical assault in a place of public accommodation”.
As a site where gender norms are policed, bathrooms are the most common
public accommodation where trans people and gender non-conforming
people experience hate violence. People tend to believe that there is a
connection between genitals and gender.
Therefore, the gender segregation of bathrooms is based on genital
configuration. Because of this "match" between genitals and gender,
trans people often are labeled as "deceivers" and blamed for the
violence.
When a trans or androgynous person is questioned in the bathroom, the
reaction is “not to reassess the arbitrary nature of segregating
bathrooms by sex but to violently eject the trans or gender
non-conforming person”. Using a public bathroom is no longer a simple matter for trans and gender non-conforming people.
As of March 2017, 19 states (California, Nevada, Hawaii, New
York, etc.), the District of Columbia and over 200 cities have enforced
the anti-discrimination law toward transgender people allowing them to
use any public restroom that corresponds to their gender.
Also, most public accommodations changed their restroom signs where
there are both genders and the text "Gender Neutral Restroom" or
"Inclusive Restroom". This law was passed because of the March 2016 “Bathroom Bill”
in North Carolina. The bill argued that banning people from using
public restrooms of their choice due to the biological sex listed on
their birth certificates (genitals vs. gender) was unreasonable,
therefore, it launched transgender rights into the national spotlight.
Fashion and modern opposition to gender policing
In
1924, gender norms accepted and reinforced ideologies that shadowed
Freud's hegemonic thesis that "biology is the key determinant of gender
identity".
These norms were imbedded into cultural regularity, affecting gender
identity in everyday life, law, and politics. Gender policing strategies
enforced these norms, and a prevalent tactic was to use culturally
obligatory dress codes
as a tool in forcing people into gender binaries. However progressive
movements throughout history have worked vigorously to defy policing,
combating restrictive norms through disregard and reformation of policed
gender standards. Following of Freud's theory has steadily begun to
dwindle and new studies are beginning to reveal a popular uprising
theory that individuals make their own decisions as to which gender
distinctions apply to them. Modern opposition of gender norms are
erasing the aged policing of conforming to the standards of one's sex.
According to a study by Intelligence Group, a consumer insights
company, "More than two-thirds of people ages 14 to 34 agree that gender
does not have to define a person in the way that it used to… and 6 in
10 say that men and women do not need to conform to traditional gender
roles or behaviors anymore."
Gendered clothing laws and ordinances
Older
fashion protocols systematically enforced normative gender binaries,
confining people to dress and accessorize in a way that connected to
their sex. Society would use gender policing tactics to enforce cultural
and societal acceptance of a gendered dress code. The earliest gendered
clothing ordinance in the United States was enacted in Columbus, Ohio
in 1848.
The ordinance forbade someone from appearing, "in a dress not belonging
to his or her sex." In the 19th century, forty American cities passed
anti-drag and anti-crossdressing ordinances.
These ordinances often adopted language invoking public indecency, such
as St. Louis's 1864 law which stated: "Whoever shall, in this city,
appear in any public place in a state of nudity, or in a dress not
belonging to his or her sex, or in an indecent or lewd dress... shall be
deemed guilty of a misdemeanor."
Other ordinances were couched in terms of public safety. An 1845 New
York state statute, for example, defined an unlawful vagrant as “[a]
person who, having his face painted, discolored, covered, or concealed,
or being otherwise disguised, in a manner calculated to prevent his
being identified, appears in a road or public highway.”
Many gendered clothing laws from the early 20th century focused
particularly on forbidding people assigned male at birth from dressing
in women's clothing. Such sex-specific laws were passed in Detroit,
Michigan in 1944, in Denver, Colorado in 1954, and in Miami, Florida in
1965.
In the latter half of the 20th century, some crossdressing laws
were challenged on the basis of their ambiguity and difficulty of
enforcement. The Supreme Court of Ohio saw the 1975 case Columbus v Rogers,
which challenged and overturned the city's ordinance. Ohio Supreme
Court Justice O'Neill wrote that the ordinance was, "unconstitutionally
void for vagueness, because it does not provide adequate standards by
which activity can be determined as legal or illegal." He clarified
later in his opinion, "Modes of dress for both men and women are
historically subject to changes in fashion. At the present time,
clothing is sold for both sexes which is so similar in appearance that a
person of ordinary intelligence might not be able to identify it as
male or female dress."
Using fashion in modern opposition
This
reformation campaign against gender policed conformity has found a
focus in developing cultural acceptance for fluidity in modern cultural
dress codes. Nowadays decisions on gender identity are seen as self made
and a form of "self expression". A prevalent way of expressing one's
identity and not conforming to gender norms is through personal choice
in style. These choices include apparel, accessories, and beauty habits.
Style has a "symbolic meaning" of self expression, "giving us a means
to cultivate our own visions of the culture we experience around us".
Therefore, fashion nonconformity has become embraced by a number of
millennials who believe in bending past policed gendered binaries. They
do this by ignoring the dress codes that were previously used to confine
someone to their gender. In disregarding a dress code that has been
used as a weapon in enforcing gender binary, these millennials have
found a powerful opposition to gender policing.
Modern gender-specific fashion has become more flexible to
personal preference, becoming visibly more directed against old gendered
style constraints. The refusal to conform to the rules of outdated
fashion protocol is being embraced by a la mode
fashion and mainstream style. A recent pattern in clothing and
accessories that transcend gender style norms has become steadily vogue
and evidently pioneering fashion trends have increasingly grown
accepting to the fusion of normally gender specific style details.
Trendy nonconforming styles empower women to dress in an inclusively
"masculine" manner and enable men to adapt "feminine" attributes in
their style, for example women choosing to wear suits to work, or men
wearing nail polish, etc.
Health
Gender policing of boys can increase the risk of alcoholism, anxiety, and depression.