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Equality and Discrimination Law in Australia: An Introduction

Equality and Discrimination Law in Australia: An Introduction

Equality and Discrimination Law in Australia: An Introduction

Beth Gaze, University of Melbourne
Belinda Smith, University of Sydney
December 2016
Available
Paperback
9781107432253

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$126.00
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    Equality and Discrimination Law in Australia: An Introduction explores four decades of anti-discrimination laws in Australia. Beth Gaze and Belinda Smith argue that effective laws protecting against and deterring discrimination are vital for a fair future, and emphasise the theoretical and social contexts that underpin this area of the law. The text is divided into three sections: the first addresses the social and conceptual context, history and framework of anti-discrimination laws; the second analyses the main elements of the law and the processes of enforcement; and the third explores broader avenues for pursuing equality beyond simply prohibiting discrimination. Written in a clear and concise style, Equality and Discrimination Law in Australia: An Introduction is a vital resource for students.

    • A concise, student-friendly textbook that offers an overarching conceptual approach to understanding the context, content and application of equality and discrimination laws in Australia, including in contexts such as employment

    Reviews & endorsements

    'Equality and Discrimination Law in Australia is a modern textbook for the field that encourages the reader to develop independent thought about the concepts presented. The examples and cases provided are dynamic and stimulating, especially when presented with some drier aspects of the law.' Shalini Nataraj, Australian Journal of Human Rights

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    Product details

    December 2016
    Paperback
    9781107432253
    355 pages
    247 × 174 × 20 mm
    0.66kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I:
    • 1. Equality, discrimination, and law
    • 2. Historical background to anti-discrimination law
    • 3. Basic framework of legislation
    • Part II. Anti-Discrimination Legislation:
    • 4. The attributes
    • 5. Prohibited conduct
    • 6. Areas
    • 7. Making rights effective: institutions, procedures and remedies
    • Part III:
    • 8. Positive action
    • 9. Employment discrimination and the Fair Work Act
    • 10. Government action to advance equality: human rights and positive measures
    • 11. Equality rights into the future.
      Authors
    • Beth Gaze , University of Melbourne

      Beth Gaze is a Professor in the Law School at the University of Melbourne. She has researched and taught Australian anti-discrimination law for over twenty years, and contributes regularly to the media on anti-discrimination law issues. She has been involved in anti-discrimination law reform processes at both state and federal level, including acting as an expert adviser to the Review of Exceptions and Exemptions in the Equal Opportunity Act by the Victorian Parliament in 2009. She has held several major research grants to conduct empirical research into the operation of anti-discrimination law in Australia, including a project that is analysing the impact of provisions in the Fair Work Act that appear to make a discrimination type claim available in the Australian federal labour law system for the first time. Beth also teaches administrative law and has been a member of several state and federal tribunals.

    • Belinda Smith , University of Sydney

      Belinda Smith researches primarily in the areas of anti-discrimination law, gender equality, and work-family integration. After working at the Australian Industrial Relations Commission, and a major Australian law firm, Belinda completed her doctoral degree in law at Columbia Law School in New York. She joined Sydney Law School in 2002. In articles and chapters published in Australia, the United States and Japan, she has explored alternative regulatory tools and frameworks for promoting equality. She has worked extensively on promoting reform of Australian anti-discrimination laws, served on the board of the Disability Discrimination Law Centre and is a member of the editorial boards of the Australian Journal of Labour Law and the Anti-Discrimination Law Review.