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Title: INCLUSION POLICIES: LEGAL FRAMEWORKS AND EVALUATION


1
INCLUSION POLICIES LEGAL FRAMEWORKS AND
EVALUATION
  • INFORMATION SOCIAL EXCLUSIONModule code
    SM1061N Lecture 5 4 March, 2008
  • Maykel Perez

2
OBJECTIVES
  • Examine the legal frameworks for inclusion
    policies.
  • Discuss general aspects of inclusion policy
    evaluation

3
UMBRELLA FRAMEWORKS FOR INCLUSION POLICY
  • Human Rights Act 1998
  • Equal Pay Act 1970
  • Sex Discrimination Act 1975
  • Race Relations Act (1976 2000)
  • Local Government Act 1988
  • Disability Discrimination Act 1995

4
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 1998
  • Article 9 Freedom of conscience declares that
    everyone has the right to
  • freedom of thought, conscience and religion.
  • Freedom to manifest religion or belief in
    worship, teaching, practice and observance.
  • Freedom of conscience rights only subject to
    limitation in the interest of public safety,
    public order, health or morals, or the protection
    of rights and freedoms of others

5
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 1998
  • Article 9 translates into specific regulations.
    Employment regulations, for instance
  • Employment Equality (Religion or belief)
    Regulations (2nd December 2003) made unlawful to
    discriminate against workers because of religion
    or similar belief.
  • Applies to vocational training and employment,
    including recruitment, terms and conditions,
    promotions, transfers, dismissals and training

6
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 1998
Employment Equality (Religion or belief)
Regulations (2nd December 2003)
  • MAKES UNLAWFUL
  • Treat anyone less favourably because of religion
    or belief
  • Victimise someone because they have made or
    intend to make a complain or allegation of
    discrimination on the ground of religion
  • Discriminate or harass someone after the work
    relationship has ended.
  • There may be circumstances where people most
    comply with the belief ethos of the organisation

7
HUMAN RIGHTS ACT 1998
ARTICLE 14 DISCRIMINATION
  • Enjoyment of rights and freedoms set forth in the
    Human Rights Act most be secured without
    discrimination on the grounds of
  • Religion
  • Political opinion
  • National or social origin
  • Association with a national minority
  • Sex
  • Race
  • Colour
  • Language

8
Equal Pay Act 1970
  • Makes it unlawful for employers to discriminate
    between men and women in terms of their pay and
    conditions
  • Payment most be the same where
  • Work that is the same
  • Work rated as equivalent
  • Work of equal value

9
Equal Pay Act 1970
  • Men and Women have the right to equality in terms
    of contract of employment.
  • It covers terms and conditions such as
  • Output and bonus payments
  • Holidays and sick leave
  • Redundancy payments
  • Travel concessions
  • Employers pension contribution, etc.

10
Sex Discrimination Act 1975
  • Makes unlawful to discriminate on the grounds of
    sex.
  • Sex discrimination is not allowed in employment,
    education, advertising or when providing goods,
    services, and facilities
  • Applies to direct discrimination
  • And Indirect discrimination setting unreasonable
    conditions that appear to apply to everyone, but
    in fact discriminate against one sex

11
Sex Discrimination (Gender Reassignment)
Regulations
  • Came into force in 1999
  • Makes it illegal to discriminate against
    transsexuals

12
Employment Equality (sexual orientation)
Regulations
  • New concept included in the sex equality debate
    (sexual orientation)
  • Came into force 1st December 2003
  • Means that lesbians, gay men and bisexuals are
    entitled to protection from harassment and
    discrimination

13
Employment Equality (sexual orientation)
Regulations
  • Employers face legal claims from staff who
  • Have been treated less favourably in, for
    example, recruitment, promotion, training or
    dismissal, than others on the grounds of sexual
    orientation.
  • Are disadvantaged as a group by workplace
    practice and policy because of their sexual
    orientation, for instance, they fail to qualify
    for certain benefits
  • Have been offended, either intentionally or
    unwittingly, by homophobic actions or comments
  • The Guardian Most gay teachers suffer abuse,
    poll finds
  • http//education.guardian.co.uk/schools/story/0,,1
    776991,00.html

14
Race Relations Act (1976 2000)
  • Outlaws discriminating against anyone because of
    their race, colour, nationality (including
    citizenship), ethnic or national origins.
  • Applies to
  • Jobs and training
  • Housing
  • Education
  • Providing goods, facilities and services

15
Race Relations Act (1976 2000)
  • Employers are bound by law to prevent
    discrimination in
  • Recruitment and appointment
  • Terms of employment
  • Access to opportunities for training
  • Access to benefits, facilities and services
  • Discipline and dismissal

16
Race Relations Act (1976 2000)
  • The Race Relations Act is supported by codes of
    practice that the former Commission for Racial
    Equality (CRE) publish.
  • http//www.equalityhumanrights.com/en/Pages/defaul
    t.aspx
  • It was amended in 2000 to widen and strengthen
    anti discrimination provision
  • The Local Government Act 1988 allows authorities
    to consider race relations matters in the
    recruitment process as selection criteria
    (positive discrimination)

17
Disability Discrimination Act 1995
  • DISABILITY
  • A physical or mental impairment which has a
    substantial and long term effect on a persons
    ability to carry out normal day to day activities
  • It is against the law to discriminate against a
    person, or treat less favourably than another
    person, for a reason that relates to disability.

18
Disability Discrimination Act 1995
  • This include people with
  • Mobility, visual or hearing difficulties
  • Heart disease
  • Disfigurement
  • Difficulty speaking
  • Diabetes
  • Epilepsy or mental illness
  • Progressive conditions (e.g. cancer, HIV)

19
Disability Discrimination Act 1995
  • There can also be discrimination if an employer
    or service fails to make reasonable adjustments
    or changes in relation to a disabled person
  • Disabled toilet facilities
  • Disabled access ramps, elevators, etc.
  • Space for wheelchair users
  • Etc.

20
Disability Discrimination Act 1995
  • This applies to
  • Recruitment and training.
  • When a disabled person applies to a job,
    employers most consider the changes they could
    make to the workplace, the cost of such changes,
    and decide what is reasonable.
  • e.g. moving an office or workstation to the
    ground floor.

21
Disability Discrimination Act 1995
  • This applies also to
  • Providing the same standard of service to all.
  • It is illegal
  • To refuse to serve someone who is disabled
  • To offer a disabled person a service or lower
    standard than the service offered to other people
  • To run a service or provide goods or facilities
    which makes it impossible or unreasonably
    difficult for a disabled person to use it.

22
Employment Equality (Age) regulations
  • Came into force on 1st October 2006
  • Sets a default retirement age of 65
  • Employers have the right to request working
    beyond a compulsory retirement age, which
    employers have a duty to consider
  • Monitoring of the retirement age provisions
    becomes compulsory so that evidence is available
    for formal reviews.
  • Allow employers to justify earlier retirement
    ages if they prove it to be appropriate and
    necessary

23
Employment Equality (Age) regulations
  • Allows differences of treatment based on a
    persons age.
  • Applies to employment and vocational training.
  • Direct or indirect age discrimination is
    prohibited, and all harassment and victimisation
    on grounds of age
  • Removes upper limit for unfair dismissal and
    redundancy rights.
  • Remove the age limits for Statutory Sick Pay,
    Maternity Pay, Paternity Pay. It applies to all.

24
Evaluating Inclusion Policies in Organisation X
  • TIP 1 Policy Evaluation is a constitutive part
    of the policy-making process. Therefore, it is
    very likely that the organisation of your choice
    already have a framework for monitoring and
    evaluating its inclusion or equal opportunity
    policy. Make enquiries on how such policy is
    evaluated.
  • If no evaluation framework is set-up, then
    criticisms can start right there.

25
Evaluating Inclusion Policies in Organisation X
  • TIP 2 Identify policy outputs but also consider
    policy outcomes.
  • Distinguish between POLICY OUTPUTS and POLICY
    OUTCOMES.
  • Policy Outputs The things actually done by
    agencies in pursuance of policy decisions and
    statements
  • Number of employers that belong to a certain
    category (disabled, from a given race, ethnic
    minority, religion, sexual orientation..)
  • Changes made to services / products or facilities
    to cater for disability needs.
  • Policy outcomes consequences, for society,
    intended or unintended, that stem from policy
    action or inaction.
  • Excessive number of complaints or allegations of
    discrimination
  • Problems persist despite legal provisions (e.g.
    female employees becoming mothers do slip down
    the career ladder)

26
Evaluating Inclusion Policies in Organisation X
  • Policy outputs do they make real changes or are
    merely symbolic policy outputs?
  • Inclusion policies are categorised among the most
    difficult public policies to evaluate. They are
    sometimes called toothless tigers because they
    appear to promise more symbolically than their
    implementation actually yields. Is this the case?

27
Evaluating Inclusion Policies in Organisation X
  • TIP 3 You are already familiar with social
    exclusion definition, levels, dimensions,
    indicators. A fair question to ask in evaluating
    inclusion policies is whether their scope and
    reach covers at least key aspects of social
    exclusion. What aspects of social exclusion are
    omitted in the inclusion policy under evaluation?

28
Evaluating Inclusion Policies in Organisation X
  • TIP 4 Assess the impact of inclusion policies in
    all its levels if possible
  • Impact on the public problem at which they are
    directed and the people involved.
  • Effects on situations or groups other than those
    at which they are directed
  • Impacts on future as well as current conditions
  • The cost of policies
  • Indirect benefits for the community

29
POLICY IMPACT DIMENSIONS
  • Impact on the problem and the people involved.
  • Policy outputs and outcomes in relation to its
    original goals
  • (e.g. Describe the outputs and outcomes of an
    Equal Opportunity Recruitment Policy)
  • I

30
POLICY IMPACT DIMENSIONS
  • Effect on situations or groups other than those
    at which they are directed
  • E.g.
  • Implications of a positive discrimination policy
    for applicants that does not meet that criteria.
  • How the working environment have changed as a
    result of having people from different categories
    working together (positive, negative, both ?)

31
POLICY IMPACT DIMENSIONS
  • Impact on future conditions
  • The inclusion policy and strategies, are they a
    short term solution to the problems it aims to
    solve or can be viewed as long-range strategies
    to eradicate the source of the problem?

32
POLICY IMPACT DIMENSIONS
  • Cost of policies
  • E.g. Inclusion policies that tackle disability.
    How much do they cost? How much does it cost to
    change facilities, services and products to cater
    for disabled peoples needs?

33
POLICY IMPACT DIMENSIONS
  • Indirect benefits of the policy
  • Social Benefit. Very difficult to measure. E.g.
    Disability Provision.
  • It may be costly in financial terms. But the
    social benefit of enforcing these kind of
    provision exceeds all financial consideration.

34
SEMINAR WEEK 6
  • Identify the inclusion policy you wish to
    evaluate.
  • Describe its aims and scope
  • What exclusion problems does it identifies and
    attempts to tackle?
  • What social groups are the target beneficiaries?
  • What is its reach? ( National, Local,
    Organisational?)
  • What legal frameworks inform the chosen policy?
  • Etc.
  • Produce a preliminary evaluation framework. How
    do you plan to evaluate it?

35
Discussion Topic
  • Inclusion Policies Life changers or Toothless
    Tigers?
  • Discuss whether inclusion policies or strategies
    you are familiar with make a real difference or
    have symbolic outputs
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