Sorcha Rosa

Sorcha Rosa is a queer feminist activist working at the intersections of gender, sexuality, and human rights. Her activism focuses on advancing feminist and LGBTQIA+ equality, with particular commitment to trans and intersex justice. She is involved in grassroots organising, advocacy, and community-building, amplifying the voices of those too often left unheard. Sorcha’s work combines personal storytelling with political action, highlighting the importance of solidarity, inclusion, and transformative change.

  • Ann Lovett: The Forgotten Mother of Modern Irish Feminism

    Ann Lovett: The Forgotten Mother of Modern Irish Feminism

    A Sorcha-Rosa reflection on Ann Lovett, the 15-year-old girl whose death at a grotto cracked open Catholic Ireland, exposed decades of misogynistic silence, and lit the first spark of modern Irish feminism. Her legacy has been buried for decades. This is us remembering.

    read more

  • Ireland Under Scrutiny: ECRI and the Fight for Trans & Intersex Rights

    Ireland Under Scrutiny: ECRI and the Fight for Trans & Intersex Rights

    By Sorcha Rosa (Simply Sorcha / Intersex Ireland) Last November, as part of a small Irish delegation, and representing Intersex Ireland, I met the ECRI delegation as they prepared their Sixth-Cycle Report on Ireland. That meeting in November 2024 offered a rare chance to press home what intersex and transgender communities have long been saying:

    read more

  • Defending Trans Health: Challenges, Responses, and Solidarity with Intersex Health

    Defending Trans Health: Challenges, Responses, and Solidarity with Intersex Health

    By Sorcha Ní Fhaoláin (Simply Sorcha / Intersex Ireland / ROSA) “Intersex children are operated on to ‘normalise’ us. Trans people are blocked from hormones unless they jump through humiliating hoops. Different practices, same logic: control.” Last week at the ILGA-Europe Conference, I spoke at the workshop “Defending Trans Health: Challenges, Responses, and Solidarity with

    read more

  • When Misogyny Marches in Uniform: The Case of Terence Crosbie

    When Misogyny Marches in Uniform: The Case of Terence Crosbie

    There is a rot in our culture – a rot that disguises itself in uniforms, flags, and “protect women” slogans. That rot is misogyny – and it has no problem walking hand-in-hand with transphobia and far-right nationalism when it serves the purpose of controlling women’s bodies and silencing survivors. A guilty verdict — and a

    read more

  •  Bodies in Motion: Why Inclusion Must Mean Everyone

     Bodies in Motion: Why Inclusion Must Mean Everyone

    When TENI launched the Transgender & Intersex Sports Inclusion Policy Guide, for the first time, intersex inclusion was not an afterthought, not a side note, but named. That word alone,  intersex – appearing in a national policy on sport is a small act of defiance in a country that still hides behind silence when it

    read more

  • Resisting Control, Reclaiming Care — ILGA Europe 2025

    Resisting Control, Reclaiming Care — ILGA Europe 2025

    Comrades, friends, siblings – whose bodies are seen as worthy of care? That’s how I opened my solo session at the ILGA Europe Conference, and the question still hangs in the air. Because in Ireland, and across Europe, the truth is brutal: not all bodies are treated as worthy. My workshop, Resisting Anti-Rights Attacks: Inclusive

    read more

  • Why So Many Trans Women in Ireland Are Going DIY

    Why So Many Trans Women in Ireland Are Going DIY

    In 2024 representatives of Irish LGBTQIA+ Organisations met with their Grassroots counterparts for a weekend of talks behind closed doors. A Trans activist used her talk to highlight the prevalence of DIY Trans healthcare across the island. She grabbed attention by applying HRT Patches, rubbing on Gel, taking estrogen pills and then injecting EEN on

    read more

  • Who Should Queer Ireland Vote For? Why Catherine Connolly Represents Us, and Heather Humphreys Does Not

    Who Should Queer Ireland Vote For? Why Catherine Connolly Represents Us, and Heather Humphreys Does Not

    By Sorcha Rosa Ireland’s presidential election is already drenched in hypocrisy, media spin, and the false respectability of those who posture as moderate voices. With the withdrawal of religious extremist Maria Steen and the disgraced rapist Conor McGregor – legally found liable for rape in a civil case – you might think the biggest threats

    read more

  • Ten Years On – Ireland’s Gender Recognition Act Still Leaves Us Behind

    Ten Years On – Ireland’s Gender Recognition Act Still Leaves Us Behind

    Ten years ago, the Gender Recognition Act (GRA) was heralded as a landmark. It was won in the shadow of Dr Lydia Foy’s long legal battle – a victory forged in courts, not in communities. For those who had the privilege, the time, and the medical resources to transition in ways the State deemed respectable,

    read more

  • BEYOND THE BINARY

    BEYOND THE BINARY

    In recent months, the definition of sex as biologically male or female has been used in a bid to restrict the rights of trans people. However, as Intersex Ireland explains, sex is not binary, and defining it as such leaves out a significant portion of the population. GCN Magazine Feature Intersex — Activism — Healthcare We

    read more