1. Introduction
1. It is in our societies’ interest
for everyone to be able to contribute to them and be an active member, including
in the field of employment. Access to the labour market can be a
very powerful factor of integration and social cohesion. Having
a job usually makes it easier for employees to meet their own needs
and those of their family, to have access to a source of income
considered legitimate by others, to strengthen their social networks
and to enjoy a degree of social recognition. Conversely, being barred
from the labour market tends to reinforce exclusion and lead to
a vicious cycle of isolation, rejection and poverty.
2. However, changes in the labour market and the rise in job
insecurity are making it increasingly difficult for individuals
to have access to long-term employment in Europe. The growing variety
of insecure contracts such as fixed-term, temporary and ‟zero hour”
contracts and unpaid or low-paid traineeships, and the increasing
use of such contracts by employers, are exacerbating the situation.
As a result, many people find themselves seeking a job more and
more often and for longer and longer periods of time.
3. For some, these problems are compounded by discrimination.
The various national bodies in charge of promoting equality and
combating discrimination report large numbers of complaints linked
to discrimination in the field of employment. For example, in Germany,
most of the requests for advice and personalised assistance made
to the Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency concern the field of employment,
particularly the recruitment stage.
4. Several other reasons have prompted my decision not to deal
with all forms of occupational inequality in this report but to
focus specifically on the initial problem of access to employment.
Discrimination in hiring is often very difficult to prove and the
candidates who have not been recruited rarely have the means to
take action against an employer. In addition, even when discrimination
has been established, the remedies proposed seldom include hiring
the victim, who receives damages, but remains without work. This
makes it all the more important to eliminate discrimination in hiring.
5. Some groups within our societies have less easy access to
employment and are more frequently unemployed than others due to
unfavourable structural factors. For example, a region’s socio-economic situation
or the level of access to education can have adverse effects in
this area. However, the Parliamentary Assembly has already considered
this type of problem in several reports and resolutions, and made recommendations
to States aimed at remedying the situation.
Similarly,
the Assembly recently made detailed recommendations to States regarding
gender equality in employment
and
will soon debate a report entitled “For a disability-inclusive workforce”.
Therefore,
I have chosen to examine these – important – matters only insofar
as they raise issues of multiple or intersectional discrimination.
6. In this report, I have also chosen to focus on a specific
but important aspect of the fight against discrimination in access
to employment, namely the role of employers’ attitudes, prejudices
and discriminatory behaviour in the recruitment and hiring process.
Regardless of the general measures taken by States to remedy structural
discrimination and promote access to employment for disadvantaged
groups, employers’ attitudes, prejudices and behaviour play a key
role in each decision to recruit or reject a job application. This
is not purely a personal matter: States have many means of influencing
employers’ behaviour and when it comes to eliminating discrimination,
States are under an obligation to take action. This is made all
the more important by the fact that States often invest in large-scale
programmes to eliminate structural inequalities. These investments
will not bear fruit however if nothing is done at the same time
to encourage and help employers change their discriminatory behaviour.
2. Discrimination in access to employment,
a reality
7. There may be countless grounds
giving rise to discrimination in access to employment. In France,
for example, the law explicitly prohibits direct discrimination
based on an individual’s origin, sex, family situation, pregnancy,
physical appearance, particular vulnerability on account of their
economic situation, whether apparent or known to the person committing
the discrimination, family name, place of residence or location
of their bank, state of health, loss of autonomy, disability, genetic
characteristics, moral standards, sexual orientation, gender identity,
age, political opinions, trade union activities or ability to express
themself in a language other than French, or their real or supposed
belonging or not belonging to an ethnic group, nation, presumed
race or particular religion.
8. Whatever the ground for discrimination, it is clear from many
sources that discrimination in access to employment is a reality.
9. Regarding racial discrimination specifically, the reports
of the fourth and fifth monitoring cycles of the European Commission
against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) reveal discrimination in the
field of employment affecting the following groups in particular:
Roma and Travellers;
people belonging
to a national or ethnic minority and/or a minority whose kin-State
is party to a recent conflict;
immigrants
and people from an immigrant background or perceived as such because
of their name;
people
whose mother tongue is not the official or majority language of
the country or region in which they live;
and
discrimination on grounds of religion.
10. Many studies carried out at national level provide telling
information in this regard. In the United Kingdom, in April-June
2018, the unemployment rate was 4% for the general population, but
6.3% overall for ethnic minorities and 9% for Black/African/Caribbean/Black
British people and Pakistanis, and even 12% for Bangladeshis.
In 2016, although the unemployment
rate was 5.4% for the general population in the United Kingdom,
it was 12.8% for Muslims; moreover, 41% of Muslims (and 65% of Muslim
women) were economically inactive, compared with 21.8% for the general
population.
11. In France, the annual report of the Defender of Rights (
Défenseur des droits) for 2016 reveals
that 50.8% of the discrimination complaints received concerned employment,
i.e. discrimination in access to employment and the lack of equal
opportunities at work. The main grounds for discrimination mentioned
in these complaints are those of national origin or ethnic affiliation.
Testing
using CVs also showed that there was a high level of discrimination
on grounds of religion in France. Of all those who practise their
religion, people who say that they are Catholics have 30% more chance
of being contacted for a job interview than people who are practising Jews
and 50% more than people who are practising Muslims.
12. The German Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency recently drew
attention to discrimination during recruitment procedures against
persons with disabilities, elderly people, women and people whose
name suggests that they are of foreign origin.
In
Germany, there is also discrimination in access to employment based
on religious affiliation, in particular affiliation to the Muslim
religion.
In Liechtenstein, while the unemployment
rate is relatively low and dropped overall between 2007 and 2015,
it nonetheless remained consistently higher for non-nationals than
for Liechtenstein nationals: in 2015, it was twice as high for non-nationals
(3.4%) as for nationals (1.7%).
13. In Belgium, of the 357 cases of employment-related discrimination
opened in 2013, 128 concerned discrimination based on “racial” criteria,
66 on grounds of disability, 64 on grounds of religious affiliation
and 56 on grounds of age.
In 2016,
the number of complaints concerning discrimination in the field
of employment rose by 48% compared with 2015. 35% of these cases
concerned recruitment.
In Brussels, 72% of the population
are of foreign origin. Nevertheless, the employment rate of Belgian
workers is 71% whereas that of people of foreign origin is only
35% (2012 figures).
14. Lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender and intersex (LGBTI) people
living in the European Union who were interviewed about the discrimination
they face in all areas of life most often mentioned employment.
13% of the LGBTI people surveyed who had been seeking a job in the
year prior to the survey considered that they were discriminated
against in this process because of their sexual orientation or gender
identity, and the percentage reached 30% for transgender people.
The World Bank is currently carrying
out a similar study of the situation of LGBTI people in the south-eastern
European countries.
15. As stressed by Kimberley McIntosh, our guest at the hearing
held on 26 June 2018 by the Sub-Committee on Disability, Multiple
and Intersectional Discrimination, it is also essential to gauge
the intersectional discrimination which comes into play in this
field. For example, despite improvements in their academic results,
the proportion of equally qualified women belonging to an ethnic
minority who are unemployed is at least twice as high as that of
white women.
The situation is particularly difficult
for Muslim women, who face threefold discrimination, on account
of their sex, religion and membership of an ethnic minority. Although
their situation (for example, the proportion of economically inactive
women) may vary strongly in accordance with their background, religion
is the most important factor affecting access to employment, and
Islamophobia plays a considerable role.
Moreover, in a recent case against
France concerning the dismissal of a childcare worker who wore a
headscarf covering her hair, the United Nations Human Rights Committee
found that there had been intersectional discrimination on grounds
of gender and religion.
16. Finally, I think it is important to point out that discrimination
in access to employment does not relate only to the private sector.
In the Netherlands and Spain,
detailed
studies show that there are risks of discrimination in the public
sector. In France, where a large number of public-sector posts are
filled by means of competitions, it has been shown that women, people
born outside metropolitan France, or those who live in a town or
city with a large number of Sensitive Urban Areas (ZUS) have fewer
chances of passing the written exams and then the interviews. There
is also discrimination in public hospitals and local government
between female candidates whose family name sounds French and those
whose family name suggests that they are of North African origin,
or based on their place of residence.
17. For those affected, these forms of discrimination frequently
have significant consequences, not only on a human level, but also
on their career path, as noted in a recent study by the French Defender
of Rights. For example, years of unsuccessful job-seeking can give
rise to a feeling of having reached a dead end. Skilled applicants
who are repeatedly rejected end up feeling a sense of fatalism,
or even give up a career in a profession for which they are qualified,
or look for employment abroad.
All of these outcomes
have an impact on their country’s economy and represent a regrettable
waste of resources. Once again, this highlights the urgent need
for States to take action to step up the fight against discrimination
in access to employment.
3. International
standards
18. Many international instruments
recognise that the right to work is a fundamental right and establish
that the principle of non-discrimination is applicable in the field
of access to employment. The vast majority of Council of Europe
member States are Parties to such treaties.
3.1. International
treaties
19. The International Covenant
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which has been ratified
by all Council of Europe member States except Andorra, refers in
Article 6 to the right to freely chosen or accepted work – and the
right not to be unjustly deprived of such work – and refers in Article
7 to the right of everyone to the enjoyment of just and favourable
conditions of work (also covering recruitment). The prohibition,
in the exercise of all the rights guaranteed by the Covenant, of
any discrimination based on race, colour, sex, language, religion,
political or other opinion, national or social origin, property,
birth or other status is established by Article 2.2 of this instrument,
while Article 3 points to the equal right of men and women to enjoy all
the rights set out therein.
20. The members of the International Labour Organization (ILO)
to whom the Discrimination (Employment and Occupation) Convention,
1958 (No. 111) applies undertake to implement a national policy
whose aim is to promote equal opportunities and treatment in the
field of employment and occupation so as to eliminate all discrimination
in this sphere; the word “employment” as used here also covers access
to employment (Article 2). The grounds of discrimination covered
by this text are race, colour, sex, religion, political opinion, national
extraction or social origin, along with any other criterion established
in the domestic law of the State Party concerned (Article 1). 175 States
have ratified this convention, 44 of which are Council of Europe member
States.
21. As to the Council of Europe conventions, the European Social
Charter (revised) guarantees the right to earn a living in an occupation
freely entered upon (Article 1) and the right to non-discrimination
on the ground of sex, including in matters of employment (Article
20). These two articles are among the nine articles of which six
must be accepted by the Parties to the treaty, and all the Parties
to the treaty have accepted them. Furthermore, Article E, which
applies to all the provisions accepted by the States Parties, guarantees
the enjoyment of the rights concerned without discrimination on
the grounds of race, colour, sex, language, religion, political
or other opinion, national extraction or social origin, health,
association with a national minority, birth or other status. Thirty-four Council
of Europe member States have ratified the European Social Charter
(revised) and 11 have signed it.
3.2. Other
Council of Europe instruments
22. The Committee of Ministers
has repeatedly highlighted the importance of access to employment
in its recommendations to member States, often emphasising the need
to take specific measures to promote access to employment for various
categories of people. Particular mention should be made of recommendations calling
for improved access to employment for women, young people,
the elderly,
persons with disabilities,
migrants, refugees and asylum
seekers,
along with
people discriminated against on the grounds of their ethnic origin,
sexual
orientation or gender identity,
state
of health
or
social background.
23. In General Policy Recommendation No. 14, the European Commission
against Racism and Intolerance (ECRI) lists a whole series of measures
which States should take to step up the fight against racism and
racial discrimination in employment. Some of these measures relate
specifically to recruitment.
3.3. European
Union directives
24. The 28 member States of the
European Union are also covered by directives establishing a general framework
for equal treatment in employment and occupation (
Directive
2000/78/EC) and on the implementation of the principle of equal
opportunities and equal treatment of men and women in matters of employment
and occupation (recast) (
Directive
2006/54/EC).
4. General
measures to promote access to employment for disadvantaged groups
in this area
25. To promote equal access to
employment effectively, measures to encourage employers to eliminate
any discrimination from their recruitment procedures must be incorporated
into an overall framework. The instruments cited above call on States
to take a series of general measures to promote access to employment for
disadvantaged groups in this area. These measures can be divided
into three main categories.
26. The first goal is to map out the situation precisely so that
we can identify those measures which are most capable of meeting
the specific challenges of the country concerned. For this purpose,
it is recommended that data be collected on access to employment
and on unemployment, broken down according to criteria such as ethnic
origin or membership of a national or ethnic minority, real or presumed
religion, age, sex, gender, social background, place of residence,
sexual orientation or gender identity, disability, physical appearance
or other features.
27. Second, measures to deter employers from engaging in improper
practices and to provide remedies for victims of discrimination
in the sphere of employment are also essential. Accordingly States
are invited to adopt anti-discrimination laws applying to areas
including employment and covering all grounds of discrimination. These
laws must provide for easily accessible remedies for victims so
that they can uphold their rights.
28. The third category of measures comprises integrated policies
whose aim is to promote access to employment for various disadvantaged
groups. In this connection particular mention can be made of measures designed
to promote access to education and training for people belonging
to disadvantaged groups, to help long-term unemployed people to
return to work, to facilitate language learning or to combat prejudice
and stereotypes among the general public.
29. The components cited above help to create the conditions in
which jobseekers can compete in the labour market on an equal footing.
Measures aimed specifically at employers must be regarded as an
integral part of these components.
5. Eliminating
discrimination by employers
30. While it goes without saying
that employers play a decisive role in access to employment for
every candidate who applies for the jobs offered by their company,
the overall, long-term effect of employers’ conduct is not always
easy to gauge. A recent study by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation
and Development (OECD) reveals nonetheless just how much discrimination
is likely to arise as a result of candidates’ origins as soon as
their application is examined. For instance, in France, candidates
whose parents are from North or Sub-Saharan Africa have to send
their curriculum vitae to twice as many potential employers as other candidates
to be invited for interview; in Sweden, young people from Middle-Eastern
backgrounds have to send two and a half times more CVs; and in the
German-speaking provinces of Switzerland, an Albanian speaker both
of whose parents come from the former Yugoslavia also has to send
two and a half-times more CVs than any other candidate.
31. Various methods make it possible, directly or indirectly,
to make the recruitment process objective, in other words to ensure
that candidates are selected according to the skills required for
a post, and not on the basis of information that has nothing to
do with these skills. Some of these methods, set out below, can
be considered good practices which should be implemented more widely
in our member States.
5.1. “Direct”
methods
32. A first series of practices
is intended to directly modify the way in which employers sort CVs
and select candidates. It should be noted from the outset that the
methods described below are more applicable to large and medium-sized
enterprises than to small ones.
33. The anonymous CV, in other words a CV from which information
that may give rise to discrimination (particularly the candidate’s
name, photograph, age and address) is excluded, is the leading practice
in this field. It guarantees that recruiters will examine applications
objectively basing themselves solely on the candidates’ skills.
For employers, anonymous CVs also have the merit of preventing risks
of breaching anti-discrimination laws and helping to improve their
company’s image.
34. In France, anonymous CVs became a legal requirement for companies
with more than 50 employees in 2006. However, no implementing decree
making it possible to determine the conditions under which this obligation
would apply and to make it effective was adopted. In 2013, it was
estimated that only 4% of the companies concerned used anonymous
CVs and in 2015 the law was amended, making the practice optional again.
A
large-scale study had, however, shown how effective anonymous CVs
were where it came to eliminating discrimination on the ground of
sex and preventing any tendency by employers to select, knowingly or
unknowingly, candidates resembling them. Nor were these effects
confined to the stage at which candidates were to be called to interview.
Greater diversity was also noted among the people ultimately recruited.
However,
according to another study, the use of anonymous CVs had penalised
candidates from foreign backgrounds or disadvantaged neighbourhoods;
some researchers believed that this result could be due to shortcomings
in the design of the CVs used.
35. Several other large-scale surveys conducted in Europe have
shown that the use of anonymous CVs makes for more equal opportunities
and invitations to interviews of formerly under-represented groups.
According
to the German Federal Anti-Discrimination Agency, the optimum tool
in the transition to anonymous CVs is the establishment of standardised
application forms. It is widely considered that anonymous CVs are an
essential tool to combat discrimination in access to employment.
36. In short, the use of anonymous CVs can reduce discrimination
if it is present in recruitment procedures, as applicants are assessed
solely on the basis of their abilities. However, it can have unwanted
side effects insofar as, by eliminating the possibility of identifying
applicants belonging to discriminated groups, it prevents employers
from implementing positive discrimination policies. This is why
this measure is not sufficient in itself.
37. The establishment of a register of applications makes it possible
to recruit candidates without CVs. All applications are registered
per job vacancy and suitable candidates are selected by means of
a computerised analysis based on objective criteria set out in the
vacancy notice. This is an objective method of screening CVs, which
helps to prevent recruiters from referring, knowingly or unknowingly,
to stereotypes. However, like anonymous CVs, this method only defers
the risk of discrimination to the job interview.
Furthermore, as computer
filters are designed by humans, there is a real risk that they will
reflect any prejudices held by those who programme them.
38. As these two examples show, employers are increasingly using
new technologies, in particular artificial intelligence, to help
them select applications. It is essential in this context to ensure
that any algorithm used to process data gathered in the recruitment
procedure does not increase the impact of discrimination. For example,
in the case of anonymous CVs, by masking the characteristics on
which direct discrimination is based, algorithms can help to exclude
such discrimination. However, decision-making algorithms can also have
the effect of exacerbating indirect discrimination: for example,
taking into account pensionable years may penalise women who have
had a career break following one or more pregnancies. Furthermore,
unlike people, algorithms are unable to counteract bias consciously.
For these reasons, it is imperative that the algorithms used in
recruitment procedures are designed in such a way as to eliminate
the risks of discrimination.
These questions
warrant greater attention from our member States, the Assembly and
the intergovernmental sectors of the Council of Europe.
39. Unconscious bias training, designed to alert for employers
or recruiters to the unconscious biases which can affect their recruitment
decisions, is also available. While the representative of the Runnymede
Trust argued at the hearing on 26 June 2018 that legislation should
be enacted which made such training obligatory – a position which
is often championed by non-governmental organisations representing
minorities – many studies raise doubts about the effectiveness of
such a measure. Making training compulsory in order to prompt trainees
to alter their conduct may have the opposite effect to that sought,
increasing their desire to remain “independent” and continue to
behave in the same way. Optional training on the other hand is considered
to have a positive effect, setting up a virtuous circle among participants
who have already shown their willingness to promote diversity by
asking for training.
Other measures aimed at neutralising
the role of unconscious bias should be implemented in parallel with
optional training, such as standard interviews (in which the same questions
are put in the same order to each candidate) and the assessment
of candidates on the basis of predetermined scales that have also
been standardised.
40. Diversity monitoring or auditing, designed to promote diversity
in professional organisations by shedding light on the situation
in a public or private company and forcing it to account for its
activities, may also be an effective means of prevention. This is
the method proposed by “Equally Professional”, a network supported
by the Equality and Human Rights Committee in England, Scotland
and Wales. Instead of making an alternative method of recruitment
binding for employers, it is suggested that they gather information
on diversity in their company. Such data can be analysed and used
to improve their methods of recruitment. In order to assess effectively
whether the organisation is open to diversity or not, employees
must answer a questionnaire. They must know and understand why they
are filling out this questionnaire and how the information will
subsequently be used. They must also have the guarantee that the
information will never be used against them. The parameters relating
to the confidentiality of the information gathered must be very
strict and extra precautions must be taken to maintain anonymity
if the number of employees is low. The outcome of the collection
of information can then be compared with national and/or regional
demographic statistics and those of the industry in general. The
company will then know whether it meets diversity objectives and,
if not, it may review its diversity policy, in particular by undertaking
to recruit more employees from an under-represented group.
5.2. “Indirect”
methods
41. Making use of employment intermediaries
can help to reduce the risks of discrimination in access to employment.
Their role is to identify people who are being discriminated against,
to help them to draft their CV and to prepare them for their job
interview. Applicants would be allocated a mentor in a management
post, who would put them in contact with employers.
42. Another means of prevention is that of introducing recruitment
grants to encourage employers to improve their recruitment methods,
namely by exempting them from a number of employer contributions
or by granting them lump sum subsidies in certain cases and under
certain conditions.
For example, in Canada, the employment
integration programme for immigrants and visible minorities (PRIIME)
provides for payment of a subsidy for the recruitment of people
who have held a residence permit for less than five years or of
people who belong to a visible minority, irrespective of whether
they were born in Canada or elsewhere. In France, the single integration
contract (CUI) combines training and financial assistance to facilitate
the employment of people whose job applications are habitually rejected.
43. In the United Kingdom, the public authorities are subject
to a legal obligation to promote equality and to combat discrimination,
including in their role as employers. This obligation applies to
all public authorities, at both national and local levels, including
the armed forces and public media, as well as to all other entities providing
a public service, in the performance of their duties. Pursuant to
this obligation, the public authorities are obliged to eliminate
any form of conduct that is prohibited by the 2010 Equality Act
and to promote equal opportunities between people with a characteristic
protected by the law and those who do not have such a characteristic.
For example, a police force might be required to change its recruitment
procedures to ensure that it does not intentionally or unintentionally
dissuade people belonging to ethnic minorities from applying for a
job in the force.
44. Another means of encouraging employers to verify and, where
necessary, improve their human resources procedures by preventing
and remedying discrimination is to introduce a government-supported label.
This is designed to recognise the efforts made by employers who
introduce binding measures to prevent discrimination. France has
had such a system since 2008, when the “Diversity Label” was introduced.
This certification draws attention to good recruitment and professional
development practices enhancing diversity in access to employment.
The label can be awarded to all types of employers (businesses,
administrations, local and regional authorities, public establishments,
associations, etc.). It is, however, a purely voluntary step on
the part of companies.
45. The introduction of quotas can prove effective in certain
fields. In France for example, a 6% quota of persons with disabilities
has been compulsory since 1987 in both public and private establishments
with at least 20 posts. If the establishment fails to comply with
this obligation, they may have to pay an annual contribution to
the AGEFIPH, an association responsible for promoting the professional
integration of persons with disabilities and for ensuring they are
kept in employment.
Nevertheless, it should
be noted that numerous business enterprises prefer to pay an annual
contribution rather than recruit persons with disabilities. The
quota system has not been successful, except in the case of businesses
seeking to improve their image. Our committee deals with such issues
in the above-mentioned report “For a disability-inclusive workforce”.
5.3. Support
for voluntary measures by companies
46. Some companies have long been
committed to respecting diversity and have understood the commercial
benefits of having a public profile as active promoters of diversity.
Whatever the reasons for their commitment this is a key means of
combating discrimination in access to employment.
47. We had the opportunity, at the hearing on 26 June 2018, to
hear more about Germany’s major initiative in this area, namely
its Charta der Vielfalt (Diversity Charter). It was launched in
2006 by four companies employing about 500 000 employees, and now
brings together 2 950 public and private companies and associations,
ranging from the largest to the smallest, covering about 10 million
employees. Signatories undertake in particular to recognise both
the diversity at the core of German society and the potential this
holds for employers; to promote a culture of respect for all employees;
to implement a diversity management policy and to audit their human
resources management processes; to notify their employees about
such activities and involve them in those activities; and to publish
information about their activities in this field once a year. The main
aim of this initiative is to raise awareness among employers about
the importance of promoting and managing diversity within their
companies or institutions and to influence the strategies devised
in this sphere. This implies exchanging good practices and organising
awareness-raising events (annual conference, annual diversity day,
inclusion prize, etc.). Although the Charter does not itself publish
figures on the tangible impact of the activities put in place, every
signatory company or body is required to make its own results public.
The Charter, which has the financial backing of 25 large companies,
also receives major political support: the German Chancellor has
been its patron for several years, and the Federal Commissioner
for Migrants, Refugees and Integration is a member of its governing
board. This is a further means for the authorities to give impetus
to efforts to eliminate discrimination in access to employment.
6. Conclusions
48. The right to work is a fundamental
right. Over the years, the Council of Europe has shown its commitment to
respect for this right and for the principle of non-discrimination
in this area through a large number of instruments. Despite these
principles however, discrimination in access to employment clearly
remains a real problem in our member States and this is the case
regardless of the ground of discrimination in question – ethnic
origin or membership of a national or ethnic minority, real or presumed
religion, age, sex, social background, place of residence, sexual
orientation or gender identity, disability, physical appearance
or other grounds. This is not just a violation of the rights of
the people excluded from the labour market but is a significant
waste of potential for our societies.
49. To promote equal access to employment effectively, a whole
series of general measures must be taken. The collection of data
broken down according to the criteria referred to above, the adoption
of powerful anti-discrimination legislation comprising accessible
and effective remedies and the introduction of integrated policies
designed to promote access to employment for various disadvantaged
groups are essential and help to create the conditions in which
jobseekers can compete on an equal footing in the labour market.
50. However, it is also crucial to eliminate discrimination by
employers as, if this is not done, the effectiveness of other general
measures adopted by States will be seriously undermined.
51. All of these efforts should, moreover, continue in the long
term, as part of the ongoing fight against discrimination.