Responsive image
Назва статті The Need for the Minimum Standard Requirement in the Protection of Freedom of Religion and Belief at the Workplace: the Case of Wabe and Mh Mueller Handels Gmbh V. Mj
Автори TAMARA HORBACHEVSKA
Назва журналу Юридичний журнал «Право України» (україномовна версія)
Випуск 11 / 2022
Сторінки 162 - 178
Анотація

Legal disputes around freedom of religion or belief (FoRB) and the right not to be discriminated against at the workplace have arisen in many countries in Europe. While developing their approaches to the ratio of freedom from discrimination and the ability of private employers to restrict the manifestations of employees’ identity, legislators, courts, and business communities of those countries have to follow or take into account standards and recommendations developed by international organizations they participate in, and the relevant courts, including the Council of Europe (CoE), the European Union (EU members), European Court of Human Rights (ECtHR), Court of Justice of the European Union. However, the approaches to FoRB, non-discrimination, and Employment developed by those entities are vague and sometimes contradict each other.

The purpose of the article is to analyze the legal frameworks of the abovementioned institutions to ensure the freedom of religion and beliefs in the workplace, and the inconsistency between them, which causes its incorrect applications used by state and private employers. The work proposes a possible approach to solving the problems of different judicial interpretations of international acts, namely the implementation of the requirement of the minimum standard for the protection of human rights, which will set general and basic criteria that employers must be observed when creating certain restrictions on expressing employees’ religious identity.

Resolution 2318 (2020) adopted by CoE on “The protection of freedom of religion or belief in the workplace” calls to “promote a “living together” in a religiously pluralist society”. Recently, the CJEU concluded that only an absolute prohibition on all visible forms of expression of political, philosophical, or religious beliefs which also concerns religious clothing at work can ensure a policy of neutrality at the workplace without discrimination. Hence, the concepts of “living together” and “living environment” take on different meanings in EU and CoE regulations and judicial decisions and are interpretednot as the original idea of religious pluralism, but as an excuse to restrict the right to freedom of religion to ensure a policy of neutrality and non-discrimination. This line of argumentation is sometimes supported by gender-equality arguments but this approach often completely eliminates the consideration of the needs of religious people and, especially religious women, which are an integral part of their identity, and, thus, can significantly restrict or deprive them of access to the employment market.

These concerns and complexities also invigorate the role of corporate responsibility in protecting FoRB and non-discrimination at the workplace. In this context, a coherent doctrine of the interpretation of these categories by international institutions is important, as can ensure exclude the possibility of employers implementing “absolute neutrality policies” that automatically forbid any manifestations of religious identity.

 

Ключові слова the minimum standard in human rights protection; right to freedom of religion and belief; gender equality; business and human rights; discrimination
References

Bibliography

Authored books

1. Alidadi K, Religion, Equality and Employment in Europe: The Case for Reasonable Accommodation (Bloomsbury Publishing 2017) (in English).

2. Kelly M, The divine right of capital: Dethroning the corporate aristocracy (Berrett-Koehler Publishers 2001) (in English).

3. Len L, Minimum contract justice: a capabilities perspective on sweatshops and consumer contracts (Bloomsbury Publishing 2017) (in English).

4. Norton J, Freedom of religious organizations (Oxford University Press 2016) (in English).

 

Journal articles

5. Alidadi K, ‘Reasonable accommodations for religion and belief: adding value to article 9 ECHR and the European Union’s anti-discrimination approach to employment?’ (2012) European Law Review 37.6 (in English).

6. Bader V, Alidadi K and Vermeulen F, ‘Religious diversity and reasonable accommodation in the workplace in six European countries: An introduction’ (2013) International journal of discrimination and the law 13.2-3 (in English).

7. Bell M, ‘Bridging a Divide: A Faith-Based Perspective on Anti-Discrimination Law’ (2020) Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 9.1 doi: 10.1093/ojlr/rwaa020 (in English).

 8. Corsalini M, ‘Religious Freedom, Inc: Business, Religion and the Law in the Secular Economy’ (2020) Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 9.1 https://doi.org/10.1093/ojlr/ rwaa008 (in English).

9. de Albuquerque P, ‘The rights of workers, migrant workers and trade unions under the European Convention on Human Rights’ (2020) European Human Rights Law Review 1 (in English).

10. González-González M, ‘Reconciling spirituality and workplace: Towards a balanced proposal for occupational health’ (2018) Journal of religion and health 57.1 https://doi. org/10.1007/s10943-017-0476-z (in English).

11. Lemmens P, ‘The Relation between the Charter of Fundamental Rights of the European Union and the European Convention on Human Rights–Substantive Aspects’ (2001) Maastricht Journal of European and Comparative Law 8.1 (in English).

12. Meyersfeld B, ‘Business, human rights and gender: a legal approach to external and internal considerations’ (2013) Human rights obligations of business: beyond the corporate responsibility to respect (in English).

13. Monciardini D, Bernaz N, and Alexandra A, ‘The organizational dynamics of compliance with the UK Modern Slavery Act in the food and tobacco sector’ (2021) Business & Society 60.2 (in English).

14. Orr J, ‘Beyond belief: defending religious liberty through the British bill of rights’ (2016).

15. Paré C, ‘Selective solidarity? Racialized othering in European migration politics’ (2022) Amsterdam Review of European Affairs 1.1 (in English).

16. Quek J, ‘A View from across the Water: Why the United Kingdom Needs to Sign, Ratify and Incorporate Protocol 12 to the European Convention on Human Rights’ (2011) UC Dublin L. Rev. 11 (in English).

17. Raza F, ‘Limitations to the right to religious freedom: rethinking key approaches’ (2020) Oxford Journal of Law and Religion 9.3 (in English).

18. Ronald A, ‘Balancing Employee Religious Freedom in the Workplace with Customer Rights to a Religion‐free Retail Environment’ (2012) Business and Society Review 117.3 doi:10.1111/j.1467-8594.2012.00407 (in English).

19. Thompson B, ‘Determining criteria to evaluate outcomes of businesses’ provision of remedy: Applying a human rights-based approach’ (2017) Business and Human Rights Journal 2.1 (in English).

20. Van Drooghenbroeck S, and Cecilia R, ‘The ECHR and the essence of fundamental rights: searching for sugar in hot milk?’ (2019) German Law Journal 20.6 (in English).

21. Vickers L, ‘Achbita and Bougnaoui: One Step Forward and Two Steps Back for Religious Diversity in the Workplace’ (2017) 8(3) European Labour Law Journal (in English).

 

Websites

22. Bribosia E and Rorive I, ‘ECJ Headscarf Series (4): The Dark Side of Neutrality’ (Strasbourg Observers, 14.09.2016) <https://strasbourgobservers.com/2016/09/14/ecjheadscarfseries-4-the-dark-side-of-neutrality/> (accessed 20.07.2022) (in English).

23. Malik A, Qureshi H, Abdul-Razakq H, et al ‘“I decided not to go into surgery due to dress code’: a cross-sectional study within the UK investigating experiences of female Muslim medical health professionals on bare below the elbows (BBE) policy and wearing headscarves (hijabs) in theatre’ <https://bmjopen-bmj-com.ezproxy.library. wur.nl/content/9/3/e019954> (accessed 20.07.2022) (in English).

24. Ouald-Chaib S, David V, ‘European Court of Justice keeps the Door to Religious Discrimination in the Private Workplace Opened. The European Court of Human Rights could Close it’ (Strasbourg Observer, 27.03.2017) <https://strasbourgobservers. com/2017/03/27/european-court-of-justice-keeps-the-door-to-religious-discriminationinthe-private-workplace-opened-theeuropean-court-of-human-rights-could-close-it/> (accessed 21.07.2022) (in English).

25. Sharpston E, ‘Shadow Opinion of former Advocate-General Sharpston: headscarves at work (Cases C-804/18 and C-341/19)’, (2021) EU Law Analysis <http://eulawanalysis. blogspot.com/2021/03/shadow-opinion-of-former-advocate.html> (accessed 20.07.2022) (in English).

26. Young Y, ‘Fighting subtle forms of employment discrimination against Muslim refugees’ <https://scholars.org/contribution/fighting-subtle-forms-employment-discriminationagainstmuslim-refugees> (accessed 20.07.2022) (in English).

 

Електронна версія Завантажити