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Discrimination

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Title: Mistakes in Moral Reasoning Author: Ron Nusenoff Last modified by: Ron Nusenoff Created Date: 2/5/1996 1:58:44 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Discrimination


1
Discrimination
  • Decisions made on the basis of characteristics
    which are not relevant to the position,
  • which result in harm suffered by persons
  • on the basis of membership in a protected
    class--group which has historically been
    discriminated against.

2
Forms of Discrimination
  • Intentional
  • Deliberate and conscious, based on negative
    stereotypes about group
  • Unconscious
  • Not deliberate, but unconsciously based on
    negative stereotypes

3
Forms of Discrimination
  • Individual
  • Committed by an individual or group of individual
    either deliberately or unconsciously
  • Institutional
  • The result of institutional practices of an
    organization
  • .e.g., nomination by current member,
    organizational culture, merit defined in terms of
    factors that are not equally represented in all
    affected groups.

4
Federal Discrimination Law Prohibits
  • Unfair treatment because of your race, color,
    religion, sex (including pregnancy), national
    origin, age (40 or older), disability or genetic
    information.
  • Harassment by managers, co-workers, or others in
    your workplace, because of factors above.
  • Denial of a reasonable workplace accommodation
    that you need because of your religious beliefs
    or disability.
  • Retaliation because you complained about job
    discrimination, or assisted with a job
    discrimination investigation or lawsuit.
  • http//www.eeoc.gov/employees/index.cfm

5
Federal Law
  • Civil Rights Act of 1964, 1991 prohibits
    discrimination on the basis of
  • Race, color, religion, sex or national origin
  • Age Discrimination Act of 1967 prohibits
    discrimination on the basis of age (over 40)
  • Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 prohibits
    discrimination on the basis of disability.

6
Federal Pregnancy Discrimination Act (1978)
  • women affected by pregnancy, childbirth, or
    related medical conditions shall be treated the
    same for all employment-related purposes,
    including receipt of benefits under fringe
    benefit programs, as other persons not so
    affected but similar in their ability or
    inability to work. http//www.eeoc.gov/laws/statut
    es/pregnancy.cfm

7
Evidence of Discrimination
  • Statistical
  • Numerical analysis that suggests that groups are
    treated or affected differently.
  • Problem- one must rule out other explanations.
  • Evidence showing deliberate intention in a
    particular case
  • Various documents, conversations, compensation
    patterns etc.
  • Problem-this evidence is often not available and
    this places a heavy burden on victims.

8
Problems proving a federal discrimination case
  • Supreme Court has usually required plaintiffs to
    show deliberate discrimination-that the employer
    was consciously motivated by racial or other
    bias.
  • Supreme Court has usually rejected cases where
    the plaintiff does not provide such evidence.

9
Problems proving a case
  • Employers know the law and suppress evidence of
    disparate treatment.
  • Bias is likely to be unconscious rather than
    deliberate and conscious.

10
California Law
  • Prohibits harassment and discrimination on the
    basis of
  • Age (40 and over), ancestry, color, creed, denial
    of Family and Medical Care Leave, disability,
    medical condition (cancer and genetic
    characteristics), national origin, marital
    status, race, religion, sex, sexual orientation,
    and gender expression. http//www.dfeh.ca.gov/equa
    lrights101.htm

11
Pregnancy Discrimination
  • California Fair Employment and Housing Act
  • explicitly prohibits employers from harassing,
    demoting, terminating, or otherwise
    discriminating against any employee for becoming
    pregnant, or for requesting or taking pregnancy
    leave.
  • California Pregnancy Disability Leave Law
    ("PDLL")
  • requires California employers to provide up to 4
    months of leave for employees actually disabled
    by pregnancy or pregnancy-related conditions,
    even if the employer's policies do not grant
    employees suffering from other short-term
    disabilities a similar amount of leave.

12
Compliance
  • Compliance consists of making sure your
    organization is not violating any laws or
    regulations
  • Reasons for caring about compliance
  • Risk management
  • Lawsuits
  • Penalties can include fines, bad publicity,
    ongoing oversight, being cut off as government
    contractor

13
Inclusiveness
  • Inclusiveness means going beyond mere compliance
    to creating a workplace that
  • Is open to all,
  • nurtures individual talent,
  • is harmonious,
  • is effective and cohesive.

14
Why value inclusiveness?
  • It has good consequences.
  • It increases the pool of talented people.
  • It is good for morale.
  • It improves interaction with diverse
    stakeholders e.g. suppliers, customers.
  • It respects each person.
  • It is the basis for a harmonious, caring
    organization.

15
Why value inclusiveness?
  • It encourages virtuous action by
  • Allowing each person to take responsibility
  • Encouraging people to treat each other with
    kindness
  • Encouraging people to develop pride in their
    accomplishments
  • rather than in their place in the organization.
  • It is fair.

16
Responding to Discrimination
  • Compensation
  • Punishment
  • Prevention

17
Affirmative Action
  • Action taken to compensate victims of
    discrimination.
  • victims must provide evidence of discrimination
  • direct evidence vs. numerical evidence
  • Action taken to prevent future discrimination.
  • potential victims must be identified
  • procedures to measure effectiveness of actions.

18
Affirmative Action Plan
  • Employers are required to develop and file AAP
    with U.S. and State governments, depending on
    number of employees.
  • AAP typically includes
  • Workforce analysis
  • Availability
  • Identification of problems
  • Solutions
  • Strategy and structure for implementation

19
Summary
  • Discrimination is illegal and risky.
  • Compliance is everyones job.
  • Inclusiveness is in everyones interest.
  • Creating an inclusive workplace requires on-going
    efforts.
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