Zusammenfassung der Ressource
The Equality Act 2010
- AIM
- Prevent
discrimination based
on nine 'protected
characteristics'
- Age
- Disability
- Gender Reassignment
- The process (typically
involving a combination
of surgical procedures
and hormone
treatment) undertaken
by a transgender
person in order to alter
their physical sexual
characteristics to
match their gender
identity.
- Marriage and Civil Partnership
- Pregnancy and Maternity
- Race
- Religion or Belief
- Sex/Gender
- Sexual Orientation
- STRENGTHS
- Protection for people
discriminated against because
they are associated with someone
who has a protected
characteristic
- Makes discrimination illegal in
- Education
- Employment
- Access to goods and
services
- Housing
- Gives woman the right to BREAST
FEED in public
- Makes PAY SECRECY clauses illegal
- So you cannot be legally
prevented from disclosing your
income to another
- Sets out THREE different
ways in which it is unlawful
to treat someone
- Direct and
Indirect
Discrimination
- Direct
Discrimination
- Intentionally putting
someone at a disadvantage
or treating them unfairly
based on their differences,
i.e., their 'protected
characteristics'
- Indirect
Discrimination
- When a policy, practice or
rule applies to everybody
but has a detrimental effect
on some people. For
example, a job advert that
states male applicants must
be clean shaven would
discriminate against
individuals who grow facial
hair because of their
religious beliefs
- Harassment
- Unwanted
behaviour that
intends to
intimidate or
humiliate someone
- Victimisation
- Bad treatment
directed towards
someone who has
made a complaint
or has taken action
under the Equality
Act or similar
legislation
- EXAMPLE of DIRECT
discrimination
- SCENARIO: A woman is told she did not get the job as a
Practice Manager because 'she might get pregnant and go
on maternity leave' and 'the setting wants continuity and
doesn't want someone who might take time off'
- Discrimination based on 'sex' (gender'
- The care setting does not want a female
practice manager of child-bearing age
- Staff selection and interview procedures
must always comply with the Equality
Act so that staff are selected on the
basis of the skills they can offer
- How care settings can prevent
discrimination against a protected
characteristic
- SCENARIO: A wheelchair user is unable to visit
his grandmother upstairs in the care home
because there are no lifts in the building
- Disability is a protected characteristic
- Disability discrimination is ILLEGAL
- Service providers must ensure settings
are accessible for all
- Staff
- Service users
- Visitors
- Disability
discrimination must
be avoided by:
- Adapting premises to enable access
for wheelchair users by including
- Ramps
- Automatic Doors
- Providing leaflets/information in
- Braille
- Large Print
- Producing easy-to-understand
information for those with
- Learning
Disabilities
- For those with hearing impairments
- Install hearing loops
- Have staff who know BSL
(British Sign Language)
- Have an equal opportunities policy
- Monitoring the selection and
recruitment of staff to see how any
individuals with a disability apply
for jobs and how many are actually
given a job