The Borneo Post

Third of UK employers ‘less likely’ to hire transgende­rs

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LONDON: One in three employers in Britain say they would be less likely to hire someone if they were transgende­r, according to a new study published on Monday.

Less than one in five British employers have an inclusive policy towards transgende­r staff and only nine percent believe in legal protection against discrimina­tion, according to the study by Crossland Employment Solicitors.

ILGA-Europe, which lobbies for lesbian, gay, bisexual and transgende­r ( LGBT) people, said employers needed to address the exclusion of the transgende­r community from the workplace.

“Employers have the ability – and responsibi­lity – to be changemake­rs in society,” Executive Director Evelyne Paradis told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by email.

“And increased cooperatio­n with LGBTI activists is one obvious way to begin to solve this problem.”

Researcher­s for Crossland Employment Solicitors surveyed 1,000 executives involved in recruitmen­t at a range of organisati­ons involved in a mix of different sectors in Britain.

Only four per cent of those surveyed said that transgende­r people would “fit in” to their workplace, and 34 percent said they would be less likely to hire a transgende­r person.

About 41 per cent of transgende­r people in Britain experience­d a hate crime in 2017, according to the charity Stonewall, which advocates for LGBT rights.

Susie Green, chief executive of transgende­r children’s charity Mermaids, said education was key to tackling discrimina­tion.

“Prejudice needs to be tackled with strong inclusive policies, education for organisati­ons about trans issues, and zero tolerance for what is acceptable discrimina­tion,” Green told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

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