Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities

This paper looks at the structural marginalization of eth-nic, religious, and sexual minorities in six pilot economies (Bulgaria, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Tanzania, and Vietnam) and proposes a new methodology for collecting cross-country c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Panter, Elaine, Primiani, Tanya, Hasan, Tazeen, Calderon Pontaza, Eduardo
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/315281488548151723/Antidiscrimination-law-and-shared-prosperity-an-analysis-of-the-legal-framework-of-six-economies-and-their-impact-on-the-equality-of-opportunities-of-ethnic-religious-and-sexual-minorities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26242
id okr-10986-26242
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-262422021-06-14T10:14:18Z Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities Panter, Elaine Primiani, Tanya Hasan, Tazeen Calderon Pontaza, Eduardo inequality shared prosperity inclusive growth jobs education for all social inclusion minorities indigenous peoples discrimination legal framework human rights This paper looks at the structural marginalization of eth-nic, religious, and sexual minorities in six pilot economies (Bulgaria, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Tanzania, and Vietnam) and proposes a new methodology for collecting cross-country comparable data on antidiscrimination legal frameworks. The data cover six areas of law, ad-dressed by six indicators: (a) access to institutions, (b) access to education, (c) access to the labor market, (d) access to property, (e) access to public services and social protection, and (f) protection from hate crimes and hate speech. The laws, policies, and regulations presented fall under one of these indicators. For each, the paper attempts to identify the minority gap, the difference between the legal treatment of the ruling majority and that of the minority. Data were collected through two sources: first, standardized surveys submitted to ombudsman institutions, lawyers, academics, and civil society organizations; second, public government records on laws and regulations and data from international legal databases and human rights organizations. The idea driving the study is that institutional measures that hamper the access of ethnic, religious, and sexual minorities to the labor market and financial systems directly affect their economic performance and, as a consequence, represent a cost for the economy. Among the findings of the study is that antidiscrimination labor legislation is well developed in all six pilot economies, but many gaps still exist in access to property and in access to public goods and social services. The study also found that, of the three groups covered by the study, the least protected under the law are the sexual minorities. Although data from six economies cannot provide statistical evidence, findings suggest the need for further research. The authors hope to encourage a wider debate on the consequences of systematic discrimination against minorities and to help governments critically review their legal frameworks to ensure equal opportunities for all citizens, regardless of religion, ethnicity, gender identity or sexual orientation. 2017-03-08T21:25:29Z 2017-03-08T21:25:29Z 2017-03 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/315281488548151723/Antidiscrimination-law-and-shared-prosperity-an-analysis-of-the-legal-framework-of-six-economies-and-their-impact-on-the-equality-of-opportunities-of-ethnic-religious-and-sexual-minorities http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26242 English en_US Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7992 CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Policy Research Working Paper Bulgaria Mexico Morocco Netherlands Tanzania Vietnam
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic inequality
shared prosperity
inclusive growth
jobs
education for all
social inclusion
minorities
indigenous peoples
discrimination
legal framework
human rights
spellingShingle inequality
shared prosperity
inclusive growth
jobs
education for all
social inclusion
minorities
indigenous peoples
discrimination
legal framework
human rights
Panter, Elaine
Primiani, Tanya
Hasan, Tazeen
Calderon Pontaza, Eduardo
Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities
geographic_facet Bulgaria
Mexico
Morocco
Netherlands
Tanzania
Vietnam
relation Policy Research Working Paper;No. 7992
description This paper looks at the structural marginalization of eth-nic, religious, and sexual minorities in six pilot economies (Bulgaria, Mexico, Morocco, the Netherlands, Tanzania, and Vietnam) and proposes a new methodology for collecting cross-country comparable data on antidiscrimination legal frameworks. The data cover six areas of law, ad-dressed by six indicators: (a) access to institutions, (b) access to education, (c) access to the labor market, (d) access to property, (e) access to public services and social protection, and (f) protection from hate crimes and hate speech. The laws, policies, and regulations presented fall under one of these indicators. For each, the paper attempts to identify the minority gap, the difference between the legal treatment of the ruling majority and that of the minority. Data were collected through two sources: first, standardized surveys submitted to ombudsman institutions, lawyers, academics, and civil society organizations; second, public government records on laws and regulations and data from international legal databases and human rights organizations. The idea driving the study is that institutional measures that hamper the access of ethnic, religious, and sexual minorities to the labor market and financial systems directly affect their economic performance and, as a consequence, represent a cost for the economy. Among the findings of the study is that antidiscrimination labor legislation is well developed in all six pilot economies, but many gaps still exist in access to property and in access to public goods and social services. The study also found that, of the three groups covered by the study, the least protected under the law are the sexual minorities. Although data from six economies cannot provide statistical evidence, findings suggest the need for further research. The authors hope to encourage a wider debate on the consequences of systematic discrimination against minorities and to help governments critically review their legal frameworks to ensure equal opportunities for all citizens, regardless of religion, ethnicity, gender identity or sexual orientation.
format Working Paper
author Panter, Elaine
Primiani, Tanya
Hasan, Tazeen
Calderon Pontaza, Eduardo
author_facet Panter, Elaine
Primiani, Tanya
Hasan, Tazeen
Calderon Pontaza, Eduardo
author_sort Panter, Elaine
title Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities
title_short Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities
title_full Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities
title_fullStr Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities
title_full_unstemmed Antidiscrimination Law and Shared Prosperity : An Analysis of the Legal Framework of Six Economies and Their Impact on the Equality of Opportunities of Ethnic, Religious, and Sexual Minorities
title_sort antidiscrimination law and shared prosperity : an analysis of the legal framework of six economies and their impact on the equality of opportunities of ethnic, religious, and sexual minorities
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/315281488548151723/Antidiscrimination-law-and-shared-prosperity-an-analysis-of-the-legal-framework-of-six-economies-and-their-impact-on-the-equality-of-opportunities-of-ethnic-religious-and-sexual-minorities
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26242
_version_ 1764461251032776704