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Equal Opportunities (3): Discrimination because of your religion or beliefs

Discrimination because of your religion or beliefs

Under the Employment Equality (Religion or Belief) Regulations 2003, it is unlawful to discriminate against people at work because of their religion or belief. The regulations also cover training that is to do with your work.

The regulations cover any religion, religious belief, or ‘similar belief’. ‘Similar belief’ includes such beliefs as paganism, atheism, humanism and pacifism, but it does not include political beliefs.

However, the regulations do not protect you against discrimination if an employer refuses to employ you because he or she is of a particular religion and you are not. You would have a case only if he or she did not employ you because of your own religion.

Religious discrimination can be closely connected with racial discrimination. For example, if you are discriminated against because you are Jewish, this may be either because of your race or your religion. In this type of case, you may want to rely on both the regulations and the Race Relations Act. For information about racial discrimination see the Community Legal Services Direct leaflet, ‘Racial discrimination’.

When discrimination is against the law

The regulations say it is against the law to discriminate against you by:

  • deciding not to employ you;
  • dismissing you;
  • giving you worse terms and conditions at work;
  • not giving you training or a promotion; or
  • not giving you the same benefits that people of a different religion or with different beliefs have.

An example of direct discrimination would be to refuse you a job because you are a Hindu even though you have all the necessary skills.

An example of indirect discrimination would be having a dress code that does not allow men to wear ponytails or headwear. This policy would disadvantage Sikh workers who wear turbans for religious reasons and Hindu men who wear a small knot of hair at the back of the head as a symbol of their belief.

Also, an employer may not discriminate against or victimise you after you have left your job.

Job duties that conflict with religious beliefs

Employers do not have to employ you if your beliefs mean you cannot do essential parts of the job. But it may not be reasonable to reject you if it is possible to allow you to work in a way that does not conflict with your beliefs. For example, if you are a Muslim or Jew and your work brings you into contact with food, you may not want to handle pork products. But there may be a way that you can still do your job without this.

What you wear at work

Your religion may mean that you have to dress in a certain way. For example, a Jewish woman may want to wear a shirt or blouse outside her skirt to avoid emphasising her body shape, or a Hindu man may want to wear neck beads to indicate his faith.

A dress code at work which wouldn’t let you dress this way may be discrimination unless your employer could show there was a good reason, for example, on health and safety or other similar grounds.

Religious observance

Your religion or beliefs may mean you have to pray at set times of day.

Your employer does not have to provide a prayer room or give you time during the working day to do this.

However, if there is a quiet place at your work, and using it wouldn’t cause problems for your co-workers or the organisation, it may be discrimination if your employer didn’t let you use the space for this.

You may ask to take your rest breaks to coincide with your obligation to pray at certain times of day. If your employer refuses to let you, without a good reason, this may be discrimination.

It may also be discrimination to:

  • make you work on holy days;
  • refuse to give you leave to celebrate festivals or attend ceremonies;
  • force you to take annual leave at set times.

Whether it is discrimination or not will depend on all the circumstances and whether your employer can justify the arrangements. For example, your employer may be justified in closing down for a time each year for maintenance work. If many workers ask for time off at the same time, it may be difficult to balance the needs of the business with those of the workers. In a small organisation, it may be difficult for an employer to allow several workers to have time off at the same time; but in a large organisation, an employer would have less reason for not allowing several people time off.

When an employer is allowed to discriminate

In a very few cases, an employer is allowed to discriminate if it is a ‘genuine occupational requirement’ that the jobholder has a particular religion or belief. For example, a hospital may want to appoint a chaplain to tend to the needs of patients who are mainly Christian.

It is important that each post is considered separately. An employer can claim a genuine occupational requirement only if the work must be done by someone of a particular religion or belief, not just because the employer would prefer it.

An employer may not claim a genuine occupational requirement when recruiting if they already have enough employees who can do those parts of the job that need someone of a particular religion or belief. For example, if only a small part of the job qualifies for a genuine occupational requirement, then the employer may be able to adapt the duties of the job in question so that it does not have a genuine occupational requirement – and therefore discrimination would not be allowed.

To make sure it is still valid, a genuine occupational requirement should be looked at each time a post becomes vacant.

If an organisation has an ethos or philosophy based on a particular religion or belief, it may be able to apply a genuine occupational requirement to jobs where in other circumstances such a requirement would not apply.

Examples of ethos-based organisations include religious institutions, faith schools or faith-based care homes. To apply a genuine occupational requirement, an organisation must show that it is:

  • a requirement of the job to keep to the ethos of the organisation; and
  • ‘proportionate’ to apply the requirement. For example, a Church of England faith school may want to employ a religious education teacher who is a member of the same church. However, it would not be lawful for the school to insist on its maintenance and administrative staff being members of that church.

Harassment because of your religion

Harassment is unwanted behaviour that:

  • violates your dignity (humiliates you); or
  • creates an intimidating, hostile, humiliating or offensive environment at work.

Harassment may be targeted at you because of your religious convictions, or it may be part of a general culture that tolerates teasing and jokes about religion, or it may be about the religion or belief of your close family or friends. For instance, if you are constantly teased at work because of your partner’s religious convictions, this is harassment even though it is not about your religion or belief.

Non-believers may also be the targets of harassment. For instance, if a religious member of staff continually refers to non-believers as ‘heathens’, this may be harassment too. Harassment does not have to be deliberate to be unlawful. Whether unintentional harassment is unlawful will depend on whether what happened could be reasonably considered to have caused offence.

Further help

Community Legal Service Direct

Provides free information, help and advice direct to the public on a range of common legal issues.

Call 0845 345 4 345

Speak to a qualified legal adviser about benefits and tax credits, debt, education, housing or employment or find local advice services for other problems.

Click www.clsdirect.org.uk

Find a quality local legal adviser or solicitor and links to other sources of online information and help.

Equal Opportunities Commission

phone: 08456 015 901

www.eoc.org.uk

Advisory Centre for Education (ACE)

For advice on discrimination in schools

Helpline open Monday to Friday 2 to 5pm

phone: 0808 800 5793

www.ace-ed.org.uk

The Advisory, Conciliation and Arbitration Service (ACAS)

To find your nearest public enquiry point

phone: 08457 474747

www.acas.org.uk

Age Concern

phone: 0800 00 99 66

www.ace.org.uk

Employment Tribunal Service

Employment Tribunal enquiry line

08457 95 9775

www.employmenttribunals.gov.uk

The Gender Trust

For transgender people

phone: 0700 0790 347

www.gendertrust.org.uk

Stonewall

For lesbians, gay men and bisexual people

phone: 020 7881 9440

www.stonewall.org.uk

Terrence Higgins Trust

For people living with HIV or AIDS

phone: 0845 1221 200

www.tht.org.uk

Third Age Employment Network

phone: 020 7843 1590

www.taen.org.uk

For the Code of Practice on Age Diversity in Employment, contact the Age Positive Team within the Department for Work and Pensions

phone: 08457 330 360

www.agepositive.gov.uk

This leaflet is published by the Legal Services Commission (LSC). It was written in association with Sara Leslie of LeslieOwen

This document was provided by Community Legal Service Direct, December 2005, www.clsdirect.org.uk