It's not working: Barriers to the inclusion of workers with mental health issues

This article examines the judicial treatment of complaints of discrimination from workers with mental health issues. Equality protections promise full inclusion in social, work and community life. The principle of inclusion is understood in three inter-related parts: inclusion in the workforce, incl...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Windsor yearbook of access to justice 2011-01, Vol.29 (1), p.163-193
1. Verfasser: Sheldon, C Tess
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container_title The Windsor yearbook of access to justice
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creator Sheldon, C Tess
description This article examines the judicial treatment of complaints of discrimination from workers with mental health issues. Equality protections promise full inclusion in social, work and community life. The principle of inclusion is understood in three inter-related parts: inclusion in the workforce, inclusion in decision-making and, in the most broad and prospective sense, inclusion in Canadian society. The current framework of equality protections has not effectively addressed these core values of inclusion for workers with mental health issues. The workplace continues to be a site of discrimination and harassment. Barriers prevent workers with mental health issues from getting or keeping employment, discourage their participation in decision-making, and entrench the devaluation, isolation and exclusion of persons with mental health issues. Accommodative measures must be alive to the concrete and attitudinal barriers experienced by workers with mental health issues.
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source Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; Elektronische Zeitschriftenbibliothek - Frei zugängliche E-Journals; HeinOnline Law Journal Library; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Canada. Supreme Court
Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms (Canada)
Constraints
Discrimination
Emigration and immigration
Employment discrimination
Equality
Legal studies
Mental disorders
Mental health
Mental health services
Workers
title It's not working: Barriers to the inclusion of workers with mental health issues
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