If the monitoring data show significant disparities between racial groups, employers should investigate the possible causes, and examine all the arrangements, procedures and practices that give effect to their policies in the field of employment, including recruitment, training, promotion, grievance and discipline, performance assessment and dismissal. The absence of disparities for ethnic minorities as a whole, or for one racial group in particular, should not be taken as evidence that ‘discrimination is not a problem’. The aim should be to make sure none of the rules, requirements, procedures or practices used, formally or informally, put any racial groups at a significant disadvantage...
Employers must not discriminate on racial grounds in the way they respond to grievances, or invoke disciplinary measures. Disciplinary action is an extreme measure and should be taken fairly and consistently, regardless of the worker’s racial group. Equally, allegations of racial discrimination or harassment must always be taken seriously and investigated promptly, not dismissed as ‘oversensitivity’ on a worker’s part.
...It is recommended that employers monitor, by racial group, the number of workers who have brought grievances or been subjected to disciplinary action (public authorities with at least 150 full-time-equivalent workers have a legal duty to do this; and the outcomes of each case. It will also be useful to be able to match the data with information about the workers’ grades, their managers and the areas of the organisation where they work.
...It is recommended that, before taking disciplinary action, employers should consider the possible effect on a worker’s behaviour of the following:
a. racist abuse or other provocation on racial grounds;
b. difficulty in communicating with, or understanding, colleagues; and
c. different cultural norms.
As part of their equal opportunities review, employers should use the monitoring data on grievances and disciplinary action to see if there are significant disparities...
It is recommended that employers monitor all dismissals, by racial group. They will find it useful to be able to match this data with information about the workers’ grades, the areas of the organisation where they work, and their managers...
Responsibilities
A. The governing body - The governors are responsible for:
- making sure the institution stays within the Race Relations Act and meets all its duties, including the general duty and the specific duties; and
- making sure the race equality policy and its procedures are followed.
- giving a consistent and high-profile lead on race equality issues;
- promoting the race equality policy inside and outside the institution; and
- making sure the race equality policy and its procedures are followed.
- putting the policy and its strategies and procedures into practice;
- making sure all staff know their responsibilities, and receive support and training in carrying these out; and
- following the relevant procedures and taking action against staff or students who discriminate for reasons of race, colour, nationality, or ethnic or national origins.
In the midst of experimenting with the following laws I have found that their hypotheses are true at Wolverhampton.
In particular:
• Skorupski's Law: The more vain one's ambition, the more redundant one's grasp of morality.
• Farlie's Law: If in one's professional career one reaches a position way above what is merited, then one can only maintain this position or progress further by surrounding oneself with incompetent people.
Farlie's extensions:
1. If the people surrounding you are not incompetent, filter their every communication so that they appear incompetent and that you've rescued them.
2. If you are/have been the servant of one, then it is reasonable to assume that you will be the one in the future.
Further research and experimentations:
Please, add other locations and subjects observed so that if a significant number of cases are detected they can become published in a relevant conference. ;-)
There are of course 'The Peter Principle', stated as "In a hierarchy every employee tends to rise to his level of incompetence", and
The 'Max Rangers Principle' (a new one), states that when called to account, make up anything spontaneously to fit the needs at that moment.
And an extension to the 'Max Rangers Principle': to be a convincing and practised liar, feign victimhood when held accountable, usually by bursting into tears or claiming you're the one being bullied and harassed.