Race Relations Act 1976


The Race Relations Act 1976 was established by the Parliament of [the United Kingdom] to prevent discrimination on the grounds of race. The scope of the legislation included discrimination on the grounds of race, colour, nationality, ethnic and national origin in the fields of employment, the provision of goods and services, education and public functions. The Act also established the Commission for Racial Equality with a view to review the legislation, which was put in place to make sure the Act rules were followed.
The Act incorporated the earlier Race Relations Act 1965 and Race Relations Act 1968 and was later amended by the Race Relations Amendment Act 2000, notably imposing a statutory duty on public bodies to promote racial equality and to demonstrate that procedures to prevent race discrimination were effective.
The Act was repealed by the Equality Act 2010, which superseded and consolidated previous discrimination law in the UK.

Employment

In the field of employment, section 7 of the Act extended protection to "contract workers", that is, someone who works for a person but is employed not by that person but by another person, who supplies the worker under a contract between the principal and the worker's employer. Typically this clause protects the rights of agency workers to be protected from racial discrimination. This provision was reviewed in a 2010 legal case, Leeds City Council v Woodhouse and Another, in which the court opted for "a broad reading" of section 7 and the type of employment relationship involved, "so as not to restrict the protection for contract workers". In this particular case it was confirmed that employees of an arms length housing management organisation were protected as contract workers even though the principal had no management control over how their employer dealt with its staff.

Commission for Racial Equality

Section 43 established "a body of Commissioners named the Commission for Racial Equality", whose collective duties were:
  1. to work towards the elimination of discrimination;
  2. to promote equality of opportunity, and good relations, between persons of different racial groups generally; and
  3. to keep under review the working of this Act and, when they are so required by the Secretary of State or otherwise think it necessary, draw up and submit to the Secretary of State proposals for amending it.