Legal Environment Equal Employment Opportunity and Safety
Legal Environment Equal Employment Opportunity and Safety
2.1 Introduction
Several environmental factors affect an organizations HRM functions, the legal
environment, particularly the laws affecting the management.
One point to make clear aat the outset is that managers often want a list of “dos and
dont’s” that will keep them out of legal trouble. They rely on rules sych as “Don’t ever ask
female applicant if she is married” without understanding the “why” behind these rules.
Clearly, certin practices are ilegal or inadvisable.
Equal employment opportunity refers to the government’s attempt to ensure that all
individuals have an equal chance for employment, regardless of race, color, religion, sex,
age, disability, or national origin. To accomplish this the government has used
constitutional amendments, legislation, and execute orders, as well as the court decisions
the that interpret these laws.
2.2 Enforcement of Equal Employment Opportunity
Equal Employment – refers to the government’s attempt to ensure that all individuals
have an equal chance for employment, regardless of race, color, religion, sex, age,
disability or national origin. To accomplish the government has used constitutional
amendment, legislation and executive orders, as well as court decisions that interprets
laws.
1. Executive Branch
2. Legislative Branch
3. Judicial Branch
The Legislative branch is authorized to make laws, alter, and repeal them through
the power vested in the Philippine Congress. This institution is divided into the Senate and
the House of Representatives.
The Executive Branch carries out laws. It is composed of the President and the
Vice-President who are elected by direct popular vote and serve a term of six years. The
Constitution grants the President authority to appoint his cabinet. These department form a
large position of the country’s bureaucracy.
The Judicial Branch evaluates laws. It holds the power to settle controversies
involving rights that are legally demandable and enforceable. This branch determines
whether there has been a grave abuse of discretion amounting to lack or excess of
jurisdiction on the part and instrumentality of the government. It is made up of a Supreme
Court and lower courts.
❖ Thirteenth Amendment
❖ Fourteenth Amendment
• Legislation
• EXECUTIVE ORDER
2.3 Discrimination
Discrimination – the unjust or prejudicial treatment of different categories of people
especially on the grounds of race, age, or sex and others.
If two people with the same qualifications apply for a job and the employer decides
whom to hire based on one individual’s race, the individual not hired is a victim of
disparate treatment. In the disparate treatment case the plaintiff must prove that there was
a discriminatory motive- that is, that the employer intended to discriminate.
Whenever individuals are treated differently because of their race, sex, or the like,
there is disparate treatment.
For example, if a company fails to hire women with school-age children (claiming
the women will be frequently absent) but hires more men with school-age children, the
applicants are being treated differently based on sex. Another example would be an
employer who checks the references and investigates the conviction records of minority
applicants but does not do so far for white applicants.
Why are managers advised not to ask about marital status? Because in most cases, a
manager will either ask only the female applicants or, if the manager asks both males and
females, he or she will make different assumptions about females( such as “She will have
to move if her husband gets a job elsewhere”) and males (such as “He’s very stable”). In
all these examples. Notice that (1) people are being treated differently and (2) there is an
actual intent to treat them differently.
This is not to imply that simply because a selection practice has disparate impact, it is
necessarily illegal. Some characteristics (such as height) are not equally distributed across
race and gender groups; however, the important question is whether the characteristic is
related to successful performance on the job.
AVOIDING DISCRIMINATION
• Disparate Treatment
• Disparate Impact
❖ Fourth-Fifth Rule
• EEO Policy
• Reasonable Accommodation
❖ Religious Accommodation
❖ Disability Accommodation
Unwelcome sexual advances, requests for sexual favors, and other verbal or physical
contact of a sexual nature constitute sexual harassment when;