Because if you do your best to give minorities a fair go and still cant get them for legitimate reasons then you will be ok. opportunity vs outcome
Who decides if you did your best and what a "fair go" is?
Because if you do your best to give minorities a fair go and still cant get them for legitimate reasons then you will be ok. opportunity vs outcome
...can I suggest you read my post again?
Because if you do your best to give minorities a fair go and still cant get them for legitimate reasons then you will be ok. opportunity vs outcome
Some more evidence on women who earn more than their husbdands are less happy on average....
Rather, in examining women's marital quality and men's emotional investments in marriage, we find that dyadic commitment to institutional ideals about marriage and women's contentment with the division of household tasks are more critical.
I did.
What happens if an employer fails to meet these requirements?
By checking your procedures like we do for many other regulations and so on.
...if you did: do you accept I didn't dodge?
why are you refusing to clarify your question?
You can't have your cake and eat it too. Either the laws are enforced and the employers must hire minorities, or the laws are toothless and ineffective. You have to pick your poison here.
Yeah, that's kind of obvious but that's also very vague. I'm genuinely interested in knowing how they'd manage to find out.
Is it even possible to evaluate a CV impartially?Why not email the government department involved in such matters? I am sure they will be able to help you out.
In many UK companies the HR department will be tasked with checking company policies/procedures etc. are being met in regards to hiring (and firing). Most large companies will have HR folk who will, for example, explain how to evaluate CVs impartially, how to conduct interviews that don't (probably unintentionally) discriminate against certain groups etc.
If an interviewee or employee makes a claim of discrimination via an employment tribunal the company will have to provide evidence that they have taken steps to be non-discriminatory (in ways that are not legal - there is no problem with a company discriminating on say matters of talent or skills). A company that can't provide the evidence will more than likely (if the claim itself is found to have merit) be liable for a penalty payment as well as whatever is awarded by the tribunal to the employee.
You can't have your cake and eat it too. Either the laws are enforced and the employers must hire minorities, or the laws are toothless and ineffective. You have to pick your poison here.
Ok I'm all ears: how do they do this without forcing them to do it if they fail to comply?
Is it even possible to evaluate a CV impartially?
Apart from Data out of STNG doing it
...snip...
"But the reality is that people carrying out interviews, at the next stage on from applications, are humans," says Azmat Mohammed, director general of the Institute of Recruiters. "The thing is for them to be able to analyse their own biases. Everybody has them and businesses are working to address this issue."
InterestingYes - many companies will implement a "scoring system" to be used as companies will have set requirements for certain roles and anyone who has those skills should be interviewed - whatever their surname happens to be .....
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-34636464 for what I think is an interesting article that touches on this area and I especially like the last paragraph:
Your post didn't address my point, which I repeated in the post you quoted. How about you do so?
I haven't refused anything. What a strange question.
I have been hearing more people talking about the "Special Rights" that minority groups are getting, and how scary it is. We saw this as part of the so called "push back" in the US elections.
What I am confused about though are what these so-called special rights that groups, such as the LGBTQ community, have, actually are? What rights do they have or have been given that members of those groups don't have? What makes these rights special?
Is it the right to be judged as an employee by your work and qualifications and not your gender identity or sexuality?
Is it the right to be served as a customer at any business regardless of race, gender, or sexuality?
Is it the right to rent a home or a room at a hotel or B&B without being denied because of your race, or sexuality?
Is it the right to form a public and officially, legally, recognised and licensed relationship with the person you love regardless of their race or gender?
Is it the right to go to the bathroom of your choosing without being harassed and threatened because you fail to conform to gender stereotypes?
Is it the right to walk down the street without fear of being harassed, attacked, or worse because of your race, sexuality, or gender?
Is it the right not be be arrested and made into a criminal because of who you are or who you love?
What exactly are these special rights?
Perhaps someone on the Right can explain it to me, cause I don't get it.
Talk about false dichotomy.
They are forced to have procedures in place that make their hiring equatable to anyone that applies.
Why not email the government department involved in such matters? I am sure they will be able to help you out.
You seem to keep missing the aim of most employment anti-discrimination legislation which is to remove the discrimination in the realm of work.
...the post you quoted did address the previous post that you made. It didn't address the question that you asked, because I addressed the question that you asked in another sentence, a sentence that you chose to delete in your response to me.
I asked for clarification.
It is about using the bathroom of your choice, regardless of your biological bits.
Ok now this sequence of sentences confuses me.
...employers are required to "instituting such positive policies and practices and making such reasonable accommodations."
This is the requirement of the employer.
The second sentence is the expected outcome of implementing policies/practices and making reasonable accommodations.
Laws do do something. And this law asks employers to institute positive policies, practices and make reasonable accommodation.
Laws are written and carefully crafted so that they do very specific things. When you change what is written, as you clearly and obviously have, they don't mean the same thing.
That's what laws do: you must do something.
What do you think happens to employers who don't?
Are you asking for the law as you've recontextualized it, or for the law as it is actually written?
No, you didn't. You made a comment phrased as a question.