Selina Todd (born 1975) is an English historian and writer. From 2015, she has been Professor of Modern History at the University of Oxford. Todd's research focuses on the history of the working-class, women and feminism in modern Britain. Since 2017, Todd has also been president of the Socialist Educational Association.[1]
Todd and over 30 other academics signed a public letter sent to The Sunday Times published on 16 June 2019 which claimed that universities paying for LGBT diversity training by Stonewall stifled academic debate because "tendentious and anti-scientific claims are presented . . . as objective fact".[12][13]
In January 2020, Todd revealed that she had been warned of threats against her on social media; after an investigation at her request, Oxford University arranged security guards to accompany her to lectures.[14] Todd received threats from trans rights activists for making public her views on the need to protect female single-sex spaces - such as women's refuges and rape crisis centres - which they deemed transphobic.[neutrality is disputed] She said: "In the world today democracy is under threat and therefore we all have to defend the right of people to have freedom of speech and freedom of debate."[15]
In February 2020, Todd was no platformed at a celebration in Oxford, which she had helped organise, of the 50th anniversary of the National Women's Liberation Conference of 1970.[16][17][18][19] An invitation to speak, which had been accepted by Todd, was withdrawn on the eve of the event. When another event speaker, Lola Olufemi, withdrew in protest at Todd's association with the campaign group Woman's Place UK,[20] which Olufemi accused of transphobia,[19] Todd wrote in response: "I refute the allegation that I am transphobic, and I am disappointed that the organisers have refused to uphold our right to discuss women's rights – one that the original organisers had to fight hard for."[21]
In November 2021, Todd wrote to The Times to criticise the Athena Swan scheme provided by the educational charity Advance HE as promoting a "controversial view of sex and gender".[22][23]
Select bibliography
Todd's research focuses on the history of the working-class, gender and feminism in modern Britain.[8] Her 2005 book Young Women, Work and Family in England 1918–1950 won the Women's History Network Annual Book Prize.[3]