Sex (or Gender) Discrimination at the workplace
Sex or gender discrimination in the workplace may come in different forms, but typically means that a person is treated differently or less favorably on the basis of their gender, gender identity or sexual orientation, whether applying for a job or as a current employee.
Unlawful discrimination based on a person’s sex or gender may occur when:
- Not being hired, getting a lower salary, being denied a promotion or training opportunity because of their gender, gender identity or sexual orientation
- Being held to different or higher standards, or being judged more severely because of their gender identity, or for not behaving or presenting themselves in a way that consistent with traditional ideas about femininity or masculinity
- Being subject to unwelcome sexual advances or requests for sexual favors
- Being insulted or called by derogatory names
- Being rejected for a job, forced leave or reduced responsibilities because the person is pregnant.
- conditions for access to employment, including the advertising of opportunities for employment, selection criteria and recruitment conditions, whatever the branch of activity and at all levels of the professional hierarchy, including promotions;
- access to all types and to all levels of vocational guidance, vocational training, advanced vocational training and retraining, including practical work experience;
- employment and conditions of employment, including remuneration and dismissals; and
- membership of, and involvement in, any organization of employees and employers, or any organization whose members carry on a particular profession, including the benefits provided for by such organizations.
- harassment and sexual harassment, as well as any less favorable treatment based on a person’s rejection of or submission to such conduct;
- instruction to discriminate against persons on grounds of sex;
- any less favorable treatment of a woman related to pregnancy or maternity leave
- in so far as the ground of sex is concerned, any less favorable treatment of a person who underwent or is undergoing gender reassignment (where a person is considering or intends to undergo, or is undergoing or has undergone, a process , or a part of a process for the purpose of reassigning the person’s sex by changing physiological or other attributes of sex).
- a person is treated less favourably than another is, has been, or would be, treated in a comparable situation;
- an apparently neutral provision, criterion or practice would put persons of a particular, sex, or sexual orientation at a disadvantage when compared with other persons, without any objective, legitimate and proportionate justification;
