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Enforcing (EU) Non-discrimination Law: Mutual Learning between British and Italian Labour Law?
Author(s)
Date Issued
2012-01-21
Date Available
2025-08-21T14:29:26Z
Abstract
While substantive EU non-discrimination law has been harmonized in great detail, the enforcement regime for EU non-discrimination law consists merely of a few isolated elements. Thus, the pursuit of unity through harmonization in substantive EU law is accompanied by considerable regulatory autonomy for Member States in securing the efficiency of those laws, reflecting the diversity of national enforcement regimes, and resulting in twenty-seven different national models for enforcing discrimination law in labour markets. This article pursues two connected arguments through a comparison of rules for enforcing non-discrimination law in labour markets in Britain and Italy. First, it argues that enforcing non-discrimination law in labour markets is best achieved when responsive governance, repressive regulation and mainstreaming equality law are combined. Second, the article submits that diversity of national legal orders within the EU is not necessarily detrimental, as it offers opportunities for mutual learning across legal systems. The notion of mutual learning across systems is proposed in order to analyse the transnational migration of legal ideas within the EU. Such migration has been criticized in debates about the 'transplantation' of legal concepts or legal irritation through foreign legal ideas, in particular by comparative labour lawyers. However, EU harmonization policies in the field of non-discrimination law aim to impact on national labour laws. The article develops the notion of mutual learning across legal systems in order to establish conditions for transnational migration of legal ideas, and demonstrates the viability of these concepts by applying them to the field of non-discrimination law.
Sponsorship
European Commission
Type of Material
Journal Article
Publisher
Kluwer Law International
Journal
International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations
Volume
28
Issue
Issue 4
Start Page
489
End Page
511
Copyright (Published Version)
2012 Kluwer Law International
Language
English
Status of Item
Peer reviewed
ISSN
0952-617X
This item is made available under a Creative Commons License
File(s)
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Name
IJCL2012026.pdf
Size
136.59 KB
Format
Adobe PDF
Checksum (MD5)
c90a16b6aa8cfdaf0fa9ccd978336fa8
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