Foxie, here it is:
jme.bmj.com/content/medethics/early/2025/12/14/jme-2025-110961.full.pdf
I've not got time to read/digest it just now but here's the abstract:
Abstract
Traditional female genital practices, though long-standing in many cultures, have become the focus of an expansive global campaign against ‘female genital mutilation’ (FGM). In this article, we critically examine the harms produced by the anti-FGM discourse and policies, despite their grounding in human rights and health advocacy. We argue that a ubiquitous ‘standard tale’ obscures the diversity of practices, meanings and experiences among those affected. This discourse, driven by a heavily racialised and ethnocentric framework, has led to unintended but serious consequences: the erosion of trust in healthcare settings, the silencing of dissenting or nuanced community voices, racial profiling and disproportionate legal surveillance of migrant families. Moreover, we highlight a troubling double standard that legitimises comparable genital surgeries in Western contexts while condemning similar procedures in others. We call for more balanced and evidence-based journalism, policy and public discourse—ones that account for cultural complexity and avoid the reductive and stigmatising force of the term ‘mutilation’. A re-evaluation of advocacy strategies is needed to ensure that they do not reproduce the very injustices they aim to challenge.
It sounds, to me, like a plea for respect, nuance and less simplistic representation in the media.
I can't say much about it though until I actually read it!
Funding - The Swedish research council Forte (2023-01165).
Competing interests - None
Provenance - Not commissioned, externally peer reviewed.