What is the difference between disparate treatment and disparate impact quizlet?

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What is the difference between disparate treatment and disparate impact quizlet?

Employment-based discrimination is prohibited when it is based on the workers’ protected characteristics. When it happens, it will take one of two forms, including disparate impact or disparate treatment. Each type requires a different analysis and burden of proof. To learn more about these types of discrimination, contact the employment attorneys at Swartz Swidler.

What is disparate treatment?

The Supreme Court defined disparate treatment as when employers treat certain employees with less favor than others because of their religion, sex, national origin or race. Employers may be held to be liable if the treatment was caused by discriminatory motives rather than legitimate reasons.

What is disparate impact?

Disparate impact discrimination looks at the disparate consequences of an employer’s actions on members of a protected class. This type of discrimination involves employment policies and practices that are facially neutral but that have more adverse impacts on members of the protected group. Employers might not be liable if they can show that the actions are justified out of business necessity.

What is the difference between disparate treatment and disparate impact quizlet?

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Types of disparate treatment claims

Disparate treatment claims fall into three primary categories, including wrongful terminations, failures to hire and the conditions and terms of employment. To prove a failure to hire case, you will need to prove the following:

  • You are a member of a protected class.
  • You applied for a job for which you had the qualifications and for which the employer was seeking applications.
  • Despite your qualifications, you were not hired.
  • The company continued looking for applicants with your qualifications after it rejected you.

To prove a wrongful termination claim, you must also prove your membership in a protected class and that you were fired. You will have to show that your job performance at the time of your termination met the legitimate expectations of your employer and that you were replaced by someone who was not a member of your protected class.

For terms and conditions claims, you will need to prove your membership in a protected class and that you suffered an adverse job action. You will also need to show that your employer acted more favorably to similarly situated employees who were not members of your protected class and that you had the qualifications for your job.

What are the elements of a prima facie disparate impact case?

In a disparate impact case, you will focus on the disparity that you are challenging. You will need to show proof that there is a disparity and that it directly results from a specific employment practice, policy or device. You will also need to show that the practice, policy or device was unnecessary and that your employer could have chosen other ways that are just effective while being less discriminatory.

Proving discrimination claims can be complex, necessitating the help of an attorney. Contact Swartz Swidler today to schedule an appointment with an experienced employment lawyer.

Everyone should have a fair chance in the workplace. Federal and state laws make it illegal for employers to treat some workers worse than others because those workers are in a protected class.

What Is a Protected Class?

Protected classes are groups of people who the law protects from discrimination. For example, Title VII of the Civil Rights Act prohibits discrimination against people because of their race, religion, national origin, color, or sex. Other federal, state, and local laws may protect against discrimination on the basis of age, sexual orientation, and disability. Each of these groups, in the language of employment discrimination law, is called a “protected class.”

The law recognizes two types of illegal discrimination. Disparate treatment refers to intentional discrimination, where people in a protected class are deliberately treated differently. This is the most common type of discrimination. An example would be an employer giving a certain test to all of the women who apply for a job but to none of the men.

Disparate impact refers to discrimination that is unintentional. The procedures are the same for everyone, but people in a protected class are negatively affected. For example, say that job applicants for a certain job are tested on their reaction times, and only people with a high score are hired. This test will discriminate against older workers, who are less likely to have fast reaction times. Whether this test is illegal will depend on whether fast reaction times are necessary for the job. Disparate impact discrimination is not always illegal. If an employer has a legitimate, necessary, and job-related reason for applying its procedures, then it is allowed to do so.

For example, say a fire department required job applicants to carry a heavy load up several flights of stairs. Say a higher percentage of male applicants pass the test, compared to the number of female applicants who pass. In that case, the test would have a disparate impact on women, who are a protected class. But if the fire department can show that carrying heavy loads up stairs is a necessary part of the job, then the test would be legal even if it favored men over women.

But say an accounting firm gave job applicants the same test, requiring them to carry heavy weights upstairs. In this case, the resulting disparate impact discrimination would be illegal. There is no legitimate job-related reason why accountants would need to carry heavy weights. A female job applicant who failed the accounting firm’s test would have a good case for a sex-discrimination lawsuit if she could show the test was the reason she didn’t get the job.

Proving that Illegal Discrimination Occurred

Knowing the difference between disparate treatment and disparate impact discrimination will give you an idea about what you will need to prove if you file a discrimination case.

Proving a Disparate Treatment Case

If your case involves disparate treatment, where the discrimination was deliberate, you need to show that:

  • You are a member of a protected class.
  • The employer knew you were in the protected class.
  • The employer did something that harmed you (for example, did not give you a promotion or a bonus, gave you an unfairly bad performance review, fired you, or, if you were a job applicant, did not hire you).
  • Other people who were in a similar employment situation but were not in your protected class were treated better.

The employer then gets a chance to show that it had a legitimate non-discriminatory reason for its actions. Then you get a chance to show that this reason was just a pretext, and the employer’s real reason was to discriminate.

Proving a Disparate Impact Case

Disparate impact cases can be harder to prove. In a disparate impact case:

  • You need to show that a specific employment practice caused people in your protected class to be treated worse than people not in the protected class. This part of the case may require using statistical analysis.
  • The employer then has to show that it had a legitimate business reason for this specific practice. If the employer can’t show this, then you will win the case.
  • If the employer does show a legitimate business reason, the ball then goes back into your court. You will need to show that the employer could have achieved the same business goal using some other practice that didn’t discriminate against your protected class.

Employment discrimination is a complex area of the law. Consulting an attorney who is highly experienced in employment law is essential to give you the best chance to win your case.

Why Sue for Employment Discrimination?

If you win an employment discrimination case, you could receive many remedies, which may include back pay and benefits, placement into a job that had been unfairly denied to you, and court costs and attorney’s fees. The company will also be ordered to stop its discriminatory practices and to take action to prevent future discrimination. Because of this, your lawsuit may benefit many people besides yourself, so lasting good may come out of the harm that you suffered.

We Want to Help

Everyone deserves to be treated fairly at work. If you believe you have been discriminated against in your workplace or during a job interview because of your race, religion, color, natural origin, sex or gender, disability, or sexual orientation, our experienced employment discrimination attorneys would be glad to talk to you. The Raynes & Lawn law firm has been dedicated for half a century to helping people get justice. We have obtained billions of dollars in remedies for our clients and have been honored with national and local recognition for our outstanding legal work. Fill out our contact form, or call us at (800) 535-1797, and a member of our team will be in touch. We offer a free, no-obligation consultation where we will evaluate your situation and tell you more about what you can expect.

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What is the difference between disparate treatment and disparate impact?

Both disparate impact and disparate treatment refer to discriminatory practices. Disparate impact is often referred to as unintentional discrimination, whereas disparate treatment is intentional. The terms adverse impact and adverse treatment are sometimes used as an alternative.

What is disparate treatment quizlet?

Disparate Treatment. A form of intentional discrimination in which an employee is hired, fired, denied a promotion, or the like, based on membership in a protected class (as listed in the CRA (Civil Rights Act), such as race, color, religion, sex, or national origin). This is a form of intentional discrimination.

What are examples of disparate treatment?

Disparate treatment refers to intentional discrimination, where people in a protected class are deliberately treated differently. This is the most common type of discrimination. An example would be an employer giving a certain test to all of the women who apply for a job but to none of the men.

What is the difference between adverse impact and disparate impact?

As a phenomenon, both are experienced by groups that should have been protected from discrimination. Disparate impact, however, is a legal concept, ff which adverse impact is one of the elements. Adverse impact is the direct result of disparate impact.