Freedom of religion and the manifestation of religious belief can clash with working life in a number of ways, including time away from work for religious observance, conflicts over religious clothing and jewellery in an employer’s dress code or a request for a variation of duties based on a particular religious belief. Guidance issued by the Equality and Human Rights Commission (2013) following Eweida and others v. UK [2013] 57 EHRR 8 seems to suggest that employers in Great Britain should consider the ‘reasonable accommodation’ of religion in the workplace and, in particular, how an individual chooses to manifest that religious belief. Subsequently, there has been much debate about whether this is a better way of dealing with religious di...
Anti-discrimination in the UK is largely based on a ‘one size fits all’ approach, and this has creat...
An increasing diverse workforce and 24/7 manufacturing demands are contributing to religious conflic...
This article explores the extent to which the jurisprudence of the European Convention on Human Righ...
Freedom of religion and the manifestation of religious belief can clash with working life in a numbe...
Religion, belief and the right to manifest a religious belief can clash with working life in a numbe...
Whilst freedom of religion is well established as a fundamental right internationally and within Eur...
This article argues that religious manifestation, like disability, requires an individual model of d...
Freedom of religion is a fundamental right enshrined in and protected by section 15 of the Constitut...
Freedom of religion is a fundamental right enshrined in and protected by section 15 of the Constitut...
The exceptions to the principle of equality in employment for employers in Britain with a religious ...
This thesis addresses the question how best to interpret the exceptions to the equality in employmen...
The Court of Appeal’s decision in Mrs Mba’s case is notable because: (a) it rejects the qualitative ...
This article examines restrictions on the right to manifest one’s religion which are held to be just...
Because the primary purpose of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was the elimination of racial discrimina...
This paper considers discrimination in the workplace on the grounds of religion, as a matter of Engl...
Anti-discrimination in the UK is largely based on a ‘one size fits all’ approach, and this has creat...
An increasing diverse workforce and 24/7 manufacturing demands are contributing to religious conflic...
This article explores the extent to which the jurisprudence of the European Convention on Human Righ...
Freedom of religion and the manifestation of religious belief can clash with working life in a numbe...
Religion, belief and the right to manifest a religious belief can clash with working life in a numbe...
Whilst freedom of religion is well established as a fundamental right internationally and within Eur...
This article argues that religious manifestation, like disability, requires an individual model of d...
Freedom of religion is a fundamental right enshrined in and protected by section 15 of the Constitut...
Freedom of religion is a fundamental right enshrined in and protected by section 15 of the Constitut...
The exceptions to the principle of equality in employment for employers in Britain with a religious ...
This thesis addresses the question how best to interpret the exceptions to the equality in employmen...
The Court of Appeal’s decision in Mrs Mba’s case is notable because: (a) it rejects the qualitative ...
This article examines restrictions on the right to manifest one’s religion which are held to be just...
Because the primary purpose of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 was the elimination of racial discrimina...
This paper considers discrimination in the workplace on the grounds of religion, as a matter of Engl...
Anti-discrimination in the UK is largely based on a ‘one size fits all’ approach, and this has creat...
An increasing diverse workforce and 24/7 manufacturing demands are contributing to religious conflic...
This article explores the extent to which the jurisprudence of the European Convention on Human Righ...