PART TWO: CONTENT OF COMPREHENSIVE ANTI-DISCRIMINATION LAW
to recruitment and promotion) at least every three years. To ensure “fair participation in employment”,
employers are empowered to take “affirmative action” and may be required to implement positive action
measures by the Equality Commission, which may issue sanctions for non-compliance.
The Order has proved to be a significant driver of change in terms of equality in employment in the
Northern Ireland workforce. In 2004, an evaluation of the fair employment framework in Northern
Ireland553 found evidence of:
(a) A substantial improvement in the employment profile of Catholics;
PART TWO – I
(b) A considerable increase in the numbers of people working in integrated workplaces, in contrast
to continuing segregation in public housing;
(c) Employers indicating that strong legislation has helped change practices and evidence suggesting
that affirmative action agreements have helped to redress workplace underrepresentation.554
Equality engagement under the Order has also worked to strengthen diversity and correct internal
obstacles to inclusion and advancement for women, minorities, persons with disabilities, persons living
with HIV/AIDS, non-citizens and others.
In conceptual terms, such orders supplement the existing “fire alarm” (i.e. dependent on a complaint
from a victim) system of response to discrimination, with an additional “police patrol” (i.e. regular
review of equality and diversity issues in individual companies) system. Experience indicates that, for the
purposes of tackling the exclusion of stigmatized or marginalized groups, both “fire alarm” and “police
patrol” control systems are needed.555 As a result of the success of the model, other countries have also
included similar powers in national comprehensive anti-discrimination laws and have extended powers
to the supervision of diversity in local authorities.556
(c) Mainstreaming duties
Mainstreaming duties regulate the actions of public authorities and aim to integrate equality planning
into all levels of public decision-making, including in the development of “legislation, budgets, policy and
programmes”.557 Both the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women and the Committee
on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities have recognized an obligation on States to mainstream equality
considerations into the policy process.558
553
Robert D. Osborne and Ian Shuttleworth, eds., Fair Employment in Northern Ireland, A Generation On (Belfast, Blackstaff Press, 2004).
554
Ibid.
555
On “police patrol” and “fire alarm” administrative oversight mechanisms in the area of equality law, see Ayelet Shachar, “Privatizing
diversity: a cautionary tale from religious arbitration in family law”, Theoretical Inquiries in Law, vol. 9, No. 2 (2008).
556
See, for example, Act CXXV of Hungary of 2003 on equal treatment and the promotion of equal opportunities, as amended.
Section 14 (1) (a) of the law stipulates in the list of its tasks that the Commissioner for Fundamental Rights “shall carry out an
investigation, on the basis of an application, as to whether or not employers who were required to do so adopted an equal opportunities
plan, and take a decision based on the investigation”. Section 17/A (6) of the Act (about the legal consequences of violation) stipulates that:
“If the Authority establishes that an employer who was required to adopt an equal opportunities plan failed to do so, it shall invite the
employer to rectify the omission, and it may apply the legal consequences specified in paragraph (1) c) to e) while applying paragraphs (3)
to (4) accordingly.” Available at https://njt.hu/translation/J2003T0125P_20210301_FIN.PDF.
557
Crowley, Making Europe More Equal, p. 30.
558
In both its general recommendations and concluding observations, the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women has
recognized States’ gender mainstreaming obligations. See, for instance, Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women,
general recommendation No. 24 (1999), para. 31 (a); and CEDAW/C/BGR/CO/8, para. 14 (a). See also Convention on the Rights of Persons
with Disabilities, art. 4 (1) (c); and Committee on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities, general comment No. 6 (2018), paras. 14–15.
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