PART TWO: CONTENT OF COMPREHENSIVE ANTI-DISCRIMINATION LAW
PART TWO – I
The European Court of Human Rights has indicated that the term “other status” should be given “a wide
meaning”,136 and should not be limited to characteristics “which are personal in the sense that they are
innate or inherent”.137 Likewise, the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights has recommended
that the term “any other social condition” established under article 1 (1) of the American Convention on
Human Rights be construed broadly and “interpreted in the context of the most favourable option for
the human being and in light of the evolution of fundamental rights in contemporary international law”.138
SOUTH AFRICA: THE PROMOTION OF EQUALITY AND PREVENTION OF UNFAIR
DISCRIMINATION ACT
The Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act of South Africa provides a test
for identifying additional grounds of discrimination. In addition to those grounds expressly listed under
the legislation, the term “prohibited grounds” is taken to include “any other ground where discrimination
based on that other ground[:] (i) causes or perpetuates systemic disadvantage; (ii) undermines human
dignity; or (iii) adversely affects the equal enjoyment of a person’s rights and freedoms in a serious
manner that is comparable to discrimination on [an explicitly listed] ground”.139 As one of the earliest
comprehensive equality laws, the South African model has proven influential and has informed the
development of subsequent best practice approaches.140 Through their consideration of individual
communications, general comments and concluding observations, the human rights treaty bodies have
identified a broad range of personal characteristics as forms of “other status”. This includes, inter alia, the
grounds of sexual orientation,141 gender identity142 and – in recognition of the particular harms affecting
intersex persons143 – sex characteristics.144 Developments in these areas have been largely captured at the
regional level,145 as well as in national legislation adopted pursuant to States’ human rights obligations.146
The Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights and the Committee on the Rights of Persons with
Disabilities have issued general comments on equality and non-discrimination, which reflect developments
at the international level and provide a (non-exhaustive) list of grounds that have come to be recognized
136
European Court of Human Rights, Carson and others v. the United Kingdom, Application No. 42184/05, Judgment, 16 March 2010,
para. 70.
137
European Court of Human Rights, Clift v. the United Kingdom, Application No. 7205/07, Judgment, 13 July 2010, paras. 56–59.
138
Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, Duque v. Colombia, Case 12.841, Report No. 5/14, Merits, 2 April 2014, para. 64.
139
Promotion of Equality and Prevention of Unfair Discrimination Act, 2000, sect. 1.
140
Equal Rights Trust, Declaration of Principles on Equality, principle 5; and Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe,
resolution 1844 (2011) on the Declaration of Principles on Equality and activities of the Council of Europe, para. 10.
141
See, for example, Committee on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, general comment No. 20 (2009), para. 32; CRC/C/BLR/CO/5-6,
para. 15 (a); Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, general recommendation No. 28 (2010), para. 18;
CRPD/C/IND/CO/1, para. 19 (b); Committee against Torture, general comment No. 2 (2007), para. 21; CERD/C/KGZ/CO/8-10, para. 16;
CMW/C/LKA/CO/2, para. 27 (c); and Human Rights Committee, Young v. Australia (CCPR/C/78/D/941/2000), para. 10.4.
142
See, for example, E/C.12/UKR/CO/7, paras. 10–11; CCPR/C/UZB/CO/5, paras. 10–11; Committee on the Elimination of Racial
Discrimination, general recommendation No. 36 (2020), paras. 18 and 60; CEDAW/C/NZL/CO/8, para. 12 (a); CRPD/C/MMR/CO/1,
para. 12; CMW/C/LKA/CO/2, para. 27 (c); CRC/C/LVA/CO/3-5, para. 27 (c); and CAT/C/UZB/CO/5, para. 64.
143
Member States, United Nations entities, regional mechanisms and civil society organizations use different terms to describe the ground of
discrimination on the basis of which intersex persons face human rights violations, including “sex characteristics”, “intersex status” and
“bodily diversity”. In the present guide, the term generally used is “sex characteristics”.
144
See, for example, E/C.12/ECU/CO/4, paras. 25–26; CRC/C/LVA/CO/3-5, para. 27 (c); CEDAW/C/NZL/CO/8, para. 12 (a);
CRPD/C/IND/CO/1, para. 19 (b); CAT/C/BLR/CO/5, para. 30 (b); CERD/C/ARG/CO/21-23, para. 36; CMW/C/GTM/CO/2, paras. 26 (a)
and 27 (d); and CCPR/C/TUN/CO/6, paras. 19–20.
145
For instance, in relation to the ground of sexual orientation, see African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Zimbabwe Human
Rights NGO Forum v. Zimbabwe, communication No. 245/02, Decision, 11–15 May 2006, para. 169; Inter-American Court of Human
Rights, Atala Riffo and Daughters v. Chile, Case, Judgment, 24 February 2012; and European Court of Human Rights, S.L. v. Austria,
Application No. 45330/99, 2003, para. 37. For further discussion on this point, see African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights
and others, Ending Violence and Other Human Rights Violations based on Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity: A Joint Dialogue of
the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights, Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, and United Nations (Pretoria,
Pretoria University Law Press, 2016). Available at www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Discrimination/Endingviolence_ACHPR_IACHR_
UN_SOGI_dialogue_EN.pdf.
146
See, for instance, Malta, Gender Identity, Gender Expression and Sex Characteristics Act, 2015.
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