Human rights at work: Physical standards for employment and human rights law

Author:

Adams Eric M.11

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Law, University of Alberta, Edmonton, AB T6G 2H5, Canada.

Abstract

This review focuses on the human rights dimensions of creating and implementing physical standards for employment for prospective and incumbent employees. The review argues that physical standards for employment engage two fundamental legal concepts of employment law: freedom of contract and workplace human rights. While the former promotes an employer’s right to set workplace standards and make decisions of whom to hire and terminate, the latter prevents employers from discriminating against individuals contrary to human rights legislation. With reference to applicable human rights legislative regimes and their judicial interpretation in Canada, the United States, the United Kingdom, and Australia, this review demonstrates the judicial preference for criterion validation in testing mechanisms in the finding of bona fide occupational requirements. With particular attention to the Supreme Court of Canada decision in Meiorin, this review argues that an effective balance between workplace safety and human rights concerns can be found, not in applying different standards to different groups of individuals, but in an approach that holds employers to demonstrating a sufficient connection between a uniform physical standard of employment and the actual minimum requirements to perform the job safety and efficiently. Combined with an employer’s duty to accommodate, such an approach to lawful physical standards for employment conceives of worker and public safety and workplace diversity as emanating from a shared concern for human rights.

Publisher

Canadian Science Publishing

Subject

Physiology (medical),Nutrition and Dietetics,Physiology,General Medicine,Endocrinology, Diabetes and Metabolism

Reference23 articles.

1. Adams, E.M. 2009. The Idea of Constitutional Rights and the Transformation of Canadian Constitutional Law, 1930–1960. SJD thesis, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ont., Canada. [Unpublished.]

2. Errors of fact and law: Race, space, and hockey in Christie v York

3. Atiyah, P.S. 1979. The Rise and Fall of Freedom of Contract. Clarendon Press, Oxford, UK.

4. Backhouse, C. 1999. ‘Mesalliances’ and the ‘Menace to White Women’s Virtue’: Yee Clun’s Opposition to the White Women’s Labour Law, Saskatchewan, 1924. In Colour-Coded: A Legal History of Racism in Canada, 1900–1950. The Osgoode Society for Canadian Legal History, Toronto, Ont., Canada. pp. 132–172.

5. Bolan, K. One of British Columbia’s largest forestry companies has agreed to change its hiring practice to give a better chance to women who apply to work in its sawmills. Vancouver Sun, 3 March 2000. p. A7.

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