PROTECTING MINORITY RIGHTS – A Practical Guide to Developing Comprehensive Anti-Discrimination Legislation
INDIA: EQUALITY DUTIES UNDER THE ANTI-DISCRIMINATION AND EQUALITY BILL
Sections 14–16 of the Anti-Discrimination and Equality Bill of India559 establish three duties that duty
bearers identified under the Act are required to fulfil, which are (a) an anti-discrimination duty; (b) a
diversification duty; and (c) a due regard duty.
The anti-discrimination duty is detailed under section 14 of the Bill. This duty would require relevant
duty bearers to refrain from discrimination, and “institute a readily accessible, independent and wellpublicized formal complaints mechanism” in accordance with guidance issued by the Central Equality
Commission (the establishment of which is foreseen under chapter III).
The diversification duty, which is detailed under section 15, would require: “Every public authority,
landlord or housing society managing over fifty residential units, secondary or tertiary educational
institutions, private person performing public functions and employers with more than one hundred
employees [to] calculate, publish and report their Diversity Index to State Equality Commission, in a
form prescribed by the Central Equality Commission.”
Persons and bodies bound by the diversification duty would be required to take “measures to progressively
realize diversification in all aspects of their work” and the discharge of their responsibilities. Public
authorities would further be required to conduct “regular training sessions for their personnel to sensitize
them [to] the importance of equality, anti-discrimination and diversity, and to educate them for carrying
out the purposes of this Act”.
The due regard duty is set out under section 16 and provides that: “All public authorities while making a
rule, regulation, policy or strategic decision shall give due regard to [eliminate] all forms of discrimination
to promote equality and diversity.”
Remedies for breach of the anti-discrimination, diversification and due regard duties are set out under
section 33 and may include “any appropriate order, declaration, injunction, relief or award”. These may
include, inter alia, an order for damages (and the payment of exemplary damages for cases of aggravated
discrimination), an order to apologize and ensure non-repetition and an order to undergo training.
Equinet identifies four approaches to mainstreaming duties adopted in Europe: (a) an “equality plan approach”,
which requires the analysis of the different “situations and experiences of discrimination and inequality
and defining objectives, targets, and measures to address these”; (b) a “coordination approach”, which
requires institutional collaboration between government departments, inter alia, to develop a comprehensive
equality strategy; (c) a process approach, which involves mainstreaming equality within “existing public sector
processes”, for instance, relating to public procurement; and (d) an “equality impact assessment approach”.560
This last approach – which is followed in, for example, Belgium, Estonia, Finland, Great Britain and Northern
Ireland561 – is discussed in more detail below, given the wider role of equality impact assessment in States
meeting their international law obligations.
VICTORIA (AUSTRALIA): GENDER EQUALITY ACT
The Gender Equality Act of Victoria (Australia) was adopted in 2020 and came into force on 31 March 2021.
It applies to public sector bodies and has two main functions.
First, the Act imposes a positive duty on organizations to mainstream gender equality in developing
policies and programmes and delivering public services (sect. 7). The duty requires organizations to (a)
consider and promote gender equality; and (b) take necessary and proportionate action towards achieving
gender equality. While this duty is not directly enforceable, it is the first of its kind in Australia.
Second, the Act establishes a review, reporting, monitoring and enforcement process to advance gender
equality in employment in public sector bodies, with an emphasis on intersectional equality. This process
72
559
For further discussion of the Bill and its legislative background, see section III.D of part one of the present guide.
560
Crowley, Making Europe More Equal, pp. 30–40.
561
Ibid., p. 30.