The recent European Court of Justice case of Coleman v Attridge
Law demonstrates the potentially radical changes the Tribunal System
can affect in day-to-day life. Sharon Coleman worked as a legal
secretary for a firm of solicitors called Attridge Law. Her son
was disabled within the meaning of the Disability Discrimination
Act 1995. She was not. His disability required that she take more
time off and consequently more paid leave to care for her son. Attridge
Law refused to grant her the same flexibility in her working arrangements
as those of colleagues with non-disabled children. She was then
subjected to disciplinary action and Attridge Law failed to deal
properly with a formal grievance she lodged against her ill-treatment.
Sponsored by the Commission for Equality and Human Rights she brought
a claim for constructive dismissal and disability discrimination
against the firm.
At
the prehearing review the tribunal chair decided that the question
of whether discrimination by way of association with a disabled
person is prohibited by the Equal Treatment Framework Directive
should be referred for a preliminary ruling. On 17th July 2008 the
ECJ decided that the Directive and, in particular, Articles 1 ,
2(1) and (2)(a) had to be interpreted as meaning that the prohibition
of direct discrimination laid down by those provisions was not limited
only to people who were themselves disabled. Moreover, Articles
1 and 2(1) of the Directive had to be interpreted as meaning that
the prohibition of harassment laid down by those provisions was
not limited to applicants who were themselves actually disabled.
Sharon Coleman, as an associate, was found to have an action against
Attridge Law for disability discrimination and harassment.

On
2nd April 2009, nearly a year on, Harriet Harman’s Equality
Bill if enacted will extend the law on direct discrimination to
include discrimination by association and perception to disability,
sex, gender reassignment and age in both the employment field.
This
article considers where a Coleman claim might emerge and the difficulties
posed by existing arrangements which associates will still need
to overcome in order to bring their cases to tribunal.
2. WHO BENEFITS?
ASSOCIATED CARERS
The
first group of beneficiaries are associates. But where is the greatest
incidence of association? There are currently 6 million people providing
unpaid care in Britain, most of which are women. Moreover 2.6 million
employees juggle the role of unpaid carer with their job . Carers
UK have raised the profile of carers who find themselves in the
same position as Sharon Coleman. In the context of an ageing population,
greater medical recognition of psychological and anxiety related
conditions, cultural diversification and changes in government policy
pertaining to schooling for the mentally disabled and the shift
from care in the community to care in the home are all factors contributing
to the need to re-assess the rights of carers and associates of
disabled individuals.
Progress
in the understanding of disability
The
status quo before Coleman arguably saw disability discrimination
law in the UK fail to keep pace with our understanding of disability
as society has evolved. The great majority of disability discrimination
claims turn on whether someone actually succeeds in being classified
as being disabled. Now if someone is sacked from work owing to absences
related to depression, then their claims no longer exist purely
in unfair dismissal alone, now they also arise under disability
discrimination.
Discrimination
based on perception
This
is an area that still needs clarity. If there is a perceived disability,
how do you prove this? This issue is especially relevant to cases
which concern perceived illness. Instances of discrimination against
an individual on the basis of perceived disability is also complicated
because barristers are dealing with the infliction of an act which
in itself tends to cause an illness in the form of stress. These
situations might also involve religion and belief for instance there
may be cases where in a civil marriage one party is a Muslim, the
other is not and adopts and Islamic surname. However issues of association
and perception occur far more frequently in cases of disability’
.
Sale
of goods and service cases
A
major source of such claims in associative discrimination will be
sale of goods and services cases. These are situations such as where
someone tries to enter a cafe attended by a disabled person and
is turned away because of their disabled partner. Similarly one
can imagine the scenario of a disabled person trying to get into
a nightclub and his or her associates being turned away because
of their disabled partner.
INTERSECTIONAL
DISCRIMINATION
Claims
of an intersectional nature have the potential to multiply the likelihood
of discrimination by association. In Bahl v The Law Society , an
Asian woman claimed that she had been subjected to discriminatory
treatment both on the grounds that she was Asian and also on the
grounds that she was a woman. The Court of Appeal preferred to try
discrimination in this case under separate heads. The powerful minority
judgment of Madame Justice L’Heureux Dubé in the case
of Canada (A.G.) v Mossop stated: ‘...categories of discrimination
may overlap, and individuals may suffer historical exclusion on
the basis of both race and gender, age and physical handicap, or
some other combination’.
Sexually
transmitted diseases
Discrimination
law practitioners might anticipate claims of an intersectional nature
involving those
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who cared for people with HIV and groups with
whom HIV is associated in the public mind such as gay men, black
Africans, injecting drug users, family members of those injected
with HIV, carers and health professionals working in the field.
Cultural
differences
Associative
Discrimination claims may arise in different measures across different
cultural groups. It is an established fact that because of social
changes, an increasing proportion of single mothers in the UK are
of Afro Caribbean origin. Furthermore, another cultural factor at
work here is the number of Asian families and households where there
are more than one generation live under the same household’
.
Women
There
is also talk of the ‘Sandwich’ phenomena. This concerns
women in their 30s and 40s who have young kids and elderly parents.
Poverty
Viewing
discrimination law in its proper social context, the state of being
a carer is in a large part a correlative of being poor. Instances
of associative discrimination are going to hit the most vulnerable
people first. There is a practical question to be asked here: What
length does a parent go to support their disabled child? Do they
go as far as to lose their job?
YES
WE CAN?
The
press made much was made of the general phenomenon of floods of
claims resulting not from changes in the statute but changes in
the case law. This generated the impression that Coleman had granted
the right to reasonable adjustments to carers of disabled children.
In reality Sarah Coleman was found to have rights in direct discrimination
and harassment. Coleman is therefore limited to old fashioned prejudice
cases, direct and indirect discrimination cases and harassment.
Moreover the irony might be that in all probability Coleman actions
will make up only a small number of disability discrimination cases.
Practical difficulties
Referral
agencies
Community
Advice Bureaus and Law Centres will have little involvement here
precisely because there is no legal aid funding for discrimination
law claims. Moreover the financial incentive for referral agents
to take up volume cases creates difficulties for claimants in associative
disability discrimination cases. Associative discrimination cases
will make up a much smaller proportion of cases overall. These cases
may prove to be too complex and require the attention of committed
practitioners.
Employment
law Bar
How
prepared is the employment law bar? There is no legal aid for discrimination
law work. People suffering this form of discrimination are going
to be poor people, vulnerable people. It is very rare then that
these cases are going to be picked up by solicitors and barristers.
If Sarah Coleman had a sufficiently high paid job she would have
paid for a nanny and there would have been no problem in the first
place. The most important practitioners in this field will turn
out to be those who will feel that associative discrimination needs
to be pushed as part of the wider social landscape.

Tribunals
Associative
discrimination is like any legal development. The effectiveness
of a legal right depends on how receptive a judge is to it. Judges
will need to act fairly and speedily. If a claimant in Sharon Coleman’s
position was faced with a hectoring cross examination, this would
have to be stopped by a tribunal chair acting within the Overriding
Objective.
General
awareness
Frequently
somebody who is mentally disabled will not be aware that they are
subject to acts that are intended to cause injury and hurt to feelings.
People in the caring professions are potentially very vulnerable.
In many situations, claims will be a last resort. Sarah Coleman
had the benefit of good advice at an early stage.
Employers
At
the end of the day it is employers who will drive changes in this
area. This is a question of accommodation. Employers will want to
stay ahead of the game because they want a compliant workforce.
Employers will address associative discrimination and orientate
their policies appropriately irrespective of what the law says.
HOPE
SPRINGS ETERNAL
The
emergence of rights against discrimination for associates highlights
the extent to which discrimination law can be conceptualised as
a social weapon. It will be interesting to see how intersectional
and associative discrimination develop in terms of the language
used before tribunals. How long will it be before we start thinking
of employment law in terms of human rights? It could be argued that
human rights could well encapsulate intersectional and associative
discrimination.
Equality
meaningfully understood consists of human dignity and personal autonomy.
One way of undermining the dignity and autonomy of people who belong
to a certain group is to target not them, but third persons who
are closely associated with them and do not themselves belong to
the group. A robust conception of equality entails that these subtler
forms of discrimination should also be caught by anti-discrimination
legislation. In the words of Sharon Coleman, “we are one step
nearer to stopping people with caring responsibilities like me from
being badly treated and harassed at work. It has taken a lot of
courage to fight this case, but no-one should have to choose between
caring for disabled relatives or their job” .

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