Transcript Gender

40 years after the Equal Pay Act. Are there equal opportunities?
The Equality Act 2010
The Equality Act incorporates all previous Equalities legislation. Rights and Responsibilities have either:
Stayed the same. Direct discrimination still occurs when "someone is treated less favourably than another person
because of a protected characteristic".
Changed – for example, employees will now be able to complain of harassment even if it is not directed at them, if they
can demonstrate that it creates an offensive environment for them.
Been extended. associative discrimination (direct discrimination against someone because they associate with another
person who possesses a protected characteristic) will cover age, disability, gender reassignment and sex as well as race,
religion and belief and sexual orientation.
Be introduced for the first time. The legislation will enable employers to favour under-represented groups during the
recruitment process – provided the candidates are of equal suitability – to increase the diversity of their workforces. This is
comparable to the affirmative action programmes of the USA.
The Equality and Human Rights Commission
Trevor Phillips, chair of EHRC
The EHRC is trying to take a more “holistic” approach to issues of inequality
involving gender, race, age, disability and sexual orientation.
It feels the old “single issue” equal opportunities approach meant some
disadvantaged groups could improve better than others, perhaps even pitted
discriminated groups against one another.
The EHRC hopes to “mainstream” equalities law in organisations across the range of
discriminations.
Has the 2010 Equality Act gone too far?
The Equality Bill
Is the new, tougher, legislation necessary to overcome inequalities or has “political
correctness gone too far”?
The Pay Gap
“At the current rate, it will take at least
another two decades to close the pay gap.
Women who work full time will earn on
average £330,000 less than a man over their
working lives – that’s the price of a family
home. It’s amazing that we still think this
is something that a decent society can live with”
Trevor Phillips, Chair of Equality and
Human Rights Commission
The Glass Ceiling
“
Girls and young women are outperforming males at all
educational levels.
They are moving into an expanding range of
occupations, and building successful careers. The
gender pay gap is narrowing.
But for many this all comes to an abrupt halt when
childcare comes into the working week.
Mary Gregory, Oxford University
One of the reasons for gender inequality is
the glass ceiling. A study in 2008 by the
Royal economic Society found that
professional and managerial women who
became mothers moved down the job
ladder after returning from having a child.
2/3 took clerical or lower skilled jobs.
Sexism and the City: Fawcett’s campaign
Straight jacketed: women are disadvantaged
by outdated job structures and attitudes.
Excluded from power: only 11% of FTSE 100
company directors are women.
X chromosome discrimination: every year 30,000
women lose their jobs because they are pregnant.
Impoverishment: two-thirds of low paid workers
are women.
Sexual exploitation: Visiting lap dance clubs has
become an increasing way of entertaining
business clients.
Money gap: Women working full-time earn 17%
less than men.
Gender Stereotyping
Some claim that there is a “pink collar” ghetto of low paid
occupations revolving around the caring professions.
Women are stereotyped as carers and men as “breadwinners”.
Those who break these stereotypes, be it men who take caring
responsibilities for children or women in traditionally “male” jobs,
often encounter social isolation or sexist “banter”.
Work of “equal value”
It is not just women in professional jobs who face inequalities. Women are
overwhelmingly concentrated in low paid jobs.
Under the Equalities Act, a claim for equal pay may be made by either a woman or a man
claiming equal pay with one or more “comparators” of the other sex.
Scottish local authorities have paid out millions to settle claims with female employees
who have carried out work of equal value as men, but did not receive equal pay.
Breaking the glass ceiling: Law
Elish Angiolini is the Lord
Advocate, Scotland top law
officer.
Morag McLaughlin is head
of the Procurator Fiscal
service for Lothian and
Borders.
Baroness Kennedy of
The Shaws, QC FRSA,
She is a barrister,
broadcaster and Labour
member of the House of
Lords.
Breaking the glass ceiling: Business
“It’s easy to let
life’s obstacles
stand in the way
of your success,
instead of seeing
every experience
as something to
learn from.”
Michelle Mone
Co-owner
MJM
International
Michelle Mone: Successful Businesswoman
Breaking the glass ceiling: The Police
“I’ve been involved in policing since
the age of 16 and I have done a
variety of jobs in different roles. At
no time have I felt I have been
subject to any direct or indirect
sexism.”
Norma Graham, Chief Constable,
Fife Constabulary
Breaking the glass ceiling: Transport
“I took on this role because
I am driven to succeed. I am
my own worst critic and have
always worked in a
male-dominated environment
so I don't know any different.”
Mary Grant,
Former Managing Director,
First Scotrail
Breaking the glass ceiling: Politics
Nicola Sturgeon and
Fiona Hyslop are in the
Scottish Cabinet.
Annabel Goldie leads
the Scottish
Conservatives.
Caroline Flint accuses the Prime Minister
But Caroline Flint
resigned from the UK
Cabinet claiming
Gordon Brown used
female members as
“window dressing”.
Louise Bagshawe, Conservative, Corby
Pamela Nash, Labour, Airdrie and Shotts.
Just 21.5% of MPs are female. The number of Labour women has fallen from 94 to below 80 – about 30% of Labour
MPs. The number of Conservative women has risen from 18 to about 48 – about 16% of Conservative MPs. The
number of Liberal Democrat women has fallen from 9 to 7 – about 13% of Liberal Democrat MPs. The number of
SNP MPs stayed the same, 1, 16.7%.