MmowWScribe Blog › workplace-discrimination-prevention-guide
BUSINESS GUIDE · PUBLISHED 2026-05-17Updated 2026-05-17

Workplace Discrimination Prevention for Employers

TS่กŒๆ”ฟๆ›ธๅฃซ
Expert-supervised by Takayuki SawaiGyoseishoshi (่กŒๆ”ฟๆ›ธๅฃซ) โ€” Licensed Administrative Scrivener, JapanAll MmowW content is supervised by a nationally licensed regulatory compliance expert.
Prevent workplace discrimination with clear policies and documentation. MmowW Scrib๐Ÿฎ helps employers create compliant equality frameworks across UK, AU, FR, SE, CA, NZ, and US. Workplace discrimination is not merely an ethical concern โ€” it carries significant legal liability. Across the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States, employers can face substantial financial penalties, reputational damage, and management time lost to tribunal or court proceedings when discrimination goes unchecked.
Table of Contents
  1. What You Need to Know
  2. How It Works: A Practical Overview
  3. Country-by-Country Comparison
  4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
  5. Next Steps: Get Started Today
  6. Frequently Asked Questions

TL;DR: Employers have a legal duty to prevent workplace discrimination across all protected characteristics โ€” from recruitment to dismissal. A proactive approach through clear policies, training records, and robust complaints procedures is both legally required and commercially essential.

What You Need to Know

Workplace discrimination is not merely an ethical concern โ€” it carries significant legal liability. Across the UK, France, Sweden, Australia, New Zealand, Canada, and the United States, employers can face substantial financial penalties, reputational damage, and management time lost to tribunal or court proceedings when discrimination goes unchecked.

The employer's duty is not passive. In most jurisdictions, there is an expectation โ€” and in some cases a legal requirement โ€” that employers take proactive steps to eliminate discrimination, not simply react to complaints after they arise. This means having clear written policies, delivering regular training, and maintaining records that demonstrate a commitment to equality.

This guide explains the protected characteristics, the types of discrimination, and the practical steps employers should take to build a compliant, inclusive workplace.

How It Works: A Practical Overview

Protected Characteristics

While the specific list varies by jurisdiction, the following characteristics are protected in some form across all seven countries covered:

In addition, some jurisdictions include further protections โ€” political opinion in Northern Ireland, language in some Canadian provinces, and social origin in France. Employers operating across multiple countries must map their policies to the broadest applicable protections.

Types of Discrimination

Understanding the different forms of discrimination is essential for prevention:

Direct discrimination: Treating someone less favourably because of a protected characteristic. Example: refusing to promote someone because they are pregnant.

Indirect discrimination: Applying a policy that appears neutral but disproportionately disadvantages people with a protected characteristic. Example: requiring all employees to work Sundays in a role where this disadvantages certain religious groups, unless justified by business need.

Harassment: Unwanted conduct related to a protected characteristic that has the purpose or effect of violating dignity or creating an intimidating, hostile, degrading, humiliating, or offensive environment.

Victimisation: Treating someone unfairly because they have raised a discrimination complaint or supported someone else who has.

In the UK and Australia, employers can be held vicariously liable for acts of discrimination committed by their employees in the course of employment โ€” even if management was not aware. Having policies and training in place is a key defence.

The Prevention Framework

An effective discrimination prevention framework has five components:

  1. Written equality policy โ€” setting out the organisation's commitment and prohibited conduct
  2. Anti-harassment policy โ€” specifically addressing sexual harassment and bullying
  3. Recruitment procedures โ€” structured interviews, diverse panels, objective criteria
  4. Training โ€” regular equality and diversity training, documented for each employee
  5. Complaints procedure โ€” a clear, accessible, confidential process for raising concerns

In the UK, the Worker Protection (Amendment of Equality Act 2010) Act 2023 introduced a new duty on employers to take "reasonable steps" to prevent sexual harassment โ€” making the prevention framework a legal obligation, not just best practice.

Reasonable Adjustments for Disabled Workers

A distinct strand of discrimination law concerns disability. In most jurisdictions, employers have a duty to make "reasonable adjustments" (or "accommodations" in US/Canadian terminology) to enable disabled employees to work. This might include:

Failure to make reasonable adjustments is itself a form of disability discrimination, even without any malicious intent.

Use our free tool: Employment Checker

Try it free →

Country-by-Country Comparison

Country Main Legislation Protected Characteristics (count) Key Source
๐Ÿ‡ฌ๐Ÿ‡ง UK Equality Act 2010 9 gov.uk/discrimination-your-rights
๐Ÿ‡ซ๐Ÿ‡ท France Labour Code + Loi Gรฉnisson 25+ travail-emploi.gouv.fr
๐Ÿ‡ธ๐Ÿ‡ช Sweden Discrimination Act (2008:567) 7 do.se
๐Ÿ‡ฆ๐Ÿ‡บ Australia Fair Work Act + state/territory laws Variable by state fairwork.gov.au/discrimination
๐Ÿ‡ณ๐Ÿ‡ฟ New Zealand Human Rights Act 1993 13 hrc.co.nz
๐Ÿ‡จ๐Ÿ‡ฆ Canada Canadian Human Rights Act 13 (federal) chrc-ccdp.gc.ca
๐Ÿ‡บ๐Ÿ‡ธ USA Title VII, ADA, ADEA + state laws Many (varies by state) eeoc.gov/laws

France has one of the broadest lists of protected characteristics in the world, including appearance, place of residence, and vulnerability arising from economic deprivation.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Having a policy but not enforcing it. A discrimination policy that exists only on paper โ€” not embedded in hiring, promotion, and discipline decisions โ€” offers limited legal protection and signals to employees that it is not taken seriously. Regular audits of decision-making against policy criteria are essential.
  2. Not training managers. Mid-level managers make the day-to-day decisions most likely to give rise to discrimination claims โ€” hiring choices, promotion decisions, performance management. Without specific training, they may act on unconscious biases without realising it.
  3. Failing to investigate complaints promptly. Delayed or superficial investigation of discrimination or harassment complaints can itself constitute a breach of duty. In the UK, the ACAS Code of Practice on Disciplinary and Grievance Procedures is a benchmark โ€” failure to follow it can increase any tribunal award by up to 25%.
  4. Treating flexible working requests differently based on who makes them. A pattern of refusing flexible working requests made by women (particularly those with caring responsibilities) while granting them to men can constitute indirect sex discrimination.
  5. Applying dress codes that indirectly discriminate. Dress codes must be justifiable and applied consistently. A blanket ban on headwear may indirectly discriminate against Sikhs, Muslims, or Jewish employees. Policies should be reviewed for disparate impact.

Next Steps: Get Started Today

Document your equality framework and training records with our tools:

MmowW Scrib๐Ÿฎ is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For advice specific to your situation, consult a qualified employment solicitor or attorney.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: Can I ask candidates about their health or disability status during recruitment?

A: In the UK, France, and most other jurisdictions, pre-employment health or disability questions are prohibited or heavily restricted. You can only ask about health in specific circumstances โ€” for example, to determine whether reasonable adjustments are needed to attend the interview, or after a conditional offer has been made. Asking about health before making a job offer risks a disability discrimination claim.

Q: What is "positive action" and is it lawful?

A: Positive action involves taking steps to support individuals from underrepresented groups โ€” for example, targeted recruitment campaigns or mentoring programmes. This is generally lawful and in some jurisdictions encouraged. "Positive discrimination" โ€” selecting someone purely because of a protected characteristic โ€” is generally unlawful in the jurisdictions covered by this guide (with some exceptions in Northern Ireland regarding community balance).

Q: How long do employees have to bring a discrimination claim?

A: Time limits vary. In the UK, employment tribunal claims must generally be brought within three months of the act complained of. In the US, a charge with the EEOC must be filed within 180 or 300 days depending on the state. Prompt investigation of complaints is therefore important โ€” delays can prejudice both employer and employee.

Loved for Safety. MmowW Scrib๐Ÿฎ โ€” Document preparation made simple across 7 countries.

Free tools to help you get started:

TS
Takayuki Sawai
Gyoseishoshi
Licensed compliance professional helping businesses navigate regulatory requirements worldwide through MmowW.

Ready for complete document preparation?

MmowW Scribe prepares your formation documents, compliance filings, and business paperwork across 7 countries.

Start 14-Day Free Trial →

No credit card required. From $149/month.

Loved for Safety.

Important disclaimer: MmowW Scrib🐮 is a document preparation service, not a law firm. We do not provide legal advice. For legal questions, consult a qualified attorney in your jurisdiction.
Loved for Safety.

Don't let regulations stop you!

Ai-chan๐Ÿฃ answers your compliance questions 24/7 with AI

Try Free