Transcript Document

The Equality Act 2010
Laura Prince
Timetable
 Enacted 8 April 2010.
 The Equality Act 2010 (Commencement No.4, Savings,
Consequential, Transitional, Transitory and Incidental
Provision and Revocation) Order 2010 brings the majority
of the provisions in the Equality Act into force on 1
October 2010
 The socio-economic inequality duty on public authorities
(S.1), dual discrimination i.e. claims combining two
protected characteristics (S.14), the requirement on
private sector employers to publish gender pay gap
information (S.78), positive action in recruitment and
promotion (S.159), and the single public sector equality
duty (Ss.149-157) have not been included.
Aims
The Protected Characteristics
 Age (s.5)
 Disability (s.6 and Schedule 1)
 Gender reassignment (s.7)
 Marriage and civil partnerships (s.8)
 Pregnancy and maternity (s.17 and 18)
 Race (s.9)
 Religion or belief (s.10)
 Sex (s.11)
 Sexual orientation (s.12)
Age, section 5
 “(1) In relation to the protected characteristic of age –
(a) a reference to a person who has a particular
protected characteristic is a reference to a person of a
particular age group;
(b) a reference to persons who share a protected
characteristic is a reference to persons of the same
age group
(2) A reference to an age group is reference to a group
of persons defined by reference to age, whether by
reference to a particular age or to a range of ages.
 Children are excluded from much of the protection
afforded by the Act (s.28(1)(a)).
Disability, section 6
• Similar definition to that under the Disability Discrimination Act
1995:-
“A person (P) has a disability if(a) P has a physical or mental impairment, and
(b) the impairment has a substantial and long-term adverse
effect on P’s ability to carry out normal day-to-day
activities”
•Keeps requirement for long-term effect (if it has lasted, or is likely
to last at least 12 months) (Schedule 1, paragraph 2(1))
•Does not replicate the list of eight capacities (e.g. Mobility or
speech, hearing or eyesight) – According to the explanatory note
this should make it easier for some people to demonstrate that they
meet the definition of a disabled person.
Gender Reassignment
 Gender Reassignment – the new definition does not
require that the process of reassigning one’s sex is
undertaken under medical supervision as a condition for
protection
 No distinction made between those with, and those without a
gender recognition certificate (under the Gender Recognition
Act 2004).
 Exemptions in the Equality Act affecting discrimination
against transsexual people are arguably not prescriptive
enough having regard to the Gender Recognition Act.
 No explicit acknowledgment of the legal effect of a gender
recognition certificate which may prove problematic.
Race/ Religion or Belief
• Race defined inclusively:-
– “Race includes- (a) colour; (b) nationality; (c) ethnic or national
origins”
– A racial group may be defined by more than one “racial
characteristic” – e.g. “black Britons”.
– Therefore the provisions address some forms of intersectional
discrimination.
– Power to include “Caste”
• Religion and Belief
– Religion means any religion and a reference to religion includes
a reference to a lack of religion
– Belief means any “religious or philosophical belief and a
reference to belief includes a reference to a lack of belief”
– The 2003 regulations contained a definition which was more
limiting “any religion, religious belief, or similar philosophical
belief”. Whether the wider definition will embrace wider political
and social belief systems has yet to be tested.
Dual Discrimination
 Equality Bill: Assessing the impact of a Multiple
Discrimination Provision, identifies 3 forms of multiple
discrimination, the one which wasn’t covered by the
previous legislation and is now covered is the third: “Where the discrimination involves more than one protected
characteristic and it is the unique combination of characteristics that
results in discrimination in such a way that they are completely
inseparable”
 E.g. Black woman treated less favourably because she is a black
woman – different to way a black man would be treated or a white
woman (Bahl v Law Society).
 Only dual discrimination covered, not multiple discrimination –
hard to see how this is justified.
 Remains to be seen if the new coalition government will bring
this provision into force.
Prohibited Conduct (1)
 Direct Discrimination
 wording changed from “grounds of” to “because”; the explanatory
note says this is not intended to have a different meaning.
 Less favourable treatment because of the victim’s association with
someone who has that characteristic is covered
 Duty to make Reasonable adjustments
 Only applies to disability discrimination
 Difficult to reconcile with Coleman v Attridge Law
 Disability related Discrimination
 Reversing the effect of the House of Lords decision in Lewisham v
Malcolm.
Prohibited Conduct 2
 Indirect Discrimination
 First real harmonising provision, now applies to
disability discrimination
 Harassment
 General harmonising provision
 Victimisation
 Largely reflects existing protection
 Provisions now limited to individual victims
(s.27(4))
Pay Secrecy
• Section 78 of the Act confers a regulation making power on
Ministers and regulations may require employers to publish
information relating to the pay of employees for the purpose of
showing whether by reference to factors of such description as
is prescribed there are difference in the pay of male and female
employees.
• Only apply to private sector employers with 250 employees or
more
• Outgoing government did not intend to enact them before 2013
– coalition government may never bring them in
• Inadequate in any event – long way from the equal pay audits
which campaigners sought.
Positive Action (s.159)
• Can treat a person (A) more favourably in connection with
recruitment or promotion than another person (B) because
A has the protected characteristic and B does not.
• This only applies if:– A is as qualified as B to be recruited or promoted
– P does not have a policy of treating persons who share the
protected characteristic more favourably in connection with
recruitment or promotion than persons who do not share it,
and
– Taking the action in question is a proportionate means of
achieving the aim referred to in subsection 2) (i.e.
Overcoming or minimising disadvantage).