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Trade unions and the equalities agenda Mark Bell School of Law www.le.ac.uk.

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Presentation on theme: "Trade unions and the equalities agenda Mark Bell School of Law www.le.ac.uk."— Presentation transcript:

1 Trade unions and the equalities agenda Mark Bell School of Law www.le.ac.uk

2 after 40 years of equality law … Women earn 22.6% less per hour than men Ethnic minorities are 13% less likely to find work than white British The employment rate of Pakistani/Bangladeshi women is 30% lower than average For low qualified British men with disabilities the chances of working halved, from 77% to 38%, from the 1970s to the 2000s. Lesbian, gay & bisexual people are twice as likely to report discrimination as heterosexuals. Sources: Government Equalities Office, ‘A fairer future – the Equality Bill and other action to make equality a reality’ (London, Government Equalities Office 2009); The Equalities Review, ‘Fairness and freedom: the final report of the Equalities Review’ (2007); Equality & Human Rights Commission, ‘How fair is Britain?’ (2010): http://www.equalityhumanrights.com/key-projects/triennial-review/online-summary/

3 Recent developments Equality Act 2010 –modernisation and harmonisation of the legislation –(some) new measures to promote equality –reforms to the public sector equality duties

4 The Government’s ‘Equality Strategy’ –‘a new approach to equalities, moving away from the identity politics of the past and to an approach recognising people’s individuality’ (p.6) –‘this strategy … moves away from treating people as groups or “equality strands”’ (p.8) –Public sector duty to reduce socio-economic inequalities abandoned http://www.equalities.gov.uk/news/equality_strategy.aspx

5 Challenges for trade unions 1. Implementation of equality legislation Raising awareness and monitoring how new protections operate: eg s.60: pre-employment health enquiries s.159: positive action in recruitment & promotion s.14: combined discrimination: not in force, still under review Need to monitor the impact of removing the default retirement age

6 2. The new public sector equality duty Covers age, disability, gender reassignment, pregnancy & maternity, race, religion or belief, sex, sexual orientation More detail in the general duty (s.149), but the specific duties have been heavily diluted Enters into force 6 April 2011 Public authorities must define ‘equality objectives’ by 6 April 2012

7 3. Gender pay gap Government has rejected mandatory gender pay reporting (for now) Specific duty on public authorities to have equality objectives on gender pay gaps (& to consult trade unions) disappears in new public sector equality duty Consultation due on gender pay inequalities

8 4. Reconciling work and family life 2011: new provisions on ‘sharing’ parental leave Government plans to extend the right to request flexible working to all –an opportunity to strengthen the content of the right?

9 5. Linking the equalities agenda with wider changes to employment law Enforcement of the Regulations on part- time, fixed-term and agency work Proposals to extend the length of service requirement for protection from unfair dismissal to 2 years


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