Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia

This paper deals with some topical issues in relation to illegal workers. The legal rights of illegal workers have become an international concern. In this paper two common law countries are examined. The engagement of illegal workers for work raises a number of delicate employment law and policy is...

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Main Authors: Guthrie, Rob, Taseff, R.
Other Authors: Atul Gupta
Format: Conference Paper
Published: Oxford University, UK 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21259
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author Guthrie, Rob
Taseff, R.
author2 Atul Gupta
author_facet Atul Gupta
Guthrie, Rob
Taseff, R.
author_sort Guthrie, Rob
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description This paper deals with some topical issues in relation to illegal workers. The legal rights of illegal workers have become an international concern. In this paper two common law countries are examined. The engagement of illegal workers for work raises a number of delicate employment law and policy issues. This article compares the attitude of the courts in the England and Australia in relation to the question of the rights of workers who work contrary to immigration laws (illegal workers). In England the courts have tended to adopt a traditional approach of not enforcing contracts which are tainted by illegality in relation to cases involving payment of wages and to termination of employment. This has meant that often workers employed illegally have no rights to enforce agreements with employers who are a party to the illegal agreement. However in relation to discrimination cases the English courts have used a number of devises to sidestep this harsh approach and recently a number of workers who have been engaged illegally have been successful in establishing that their employer has discriminated unlawfully against them. In Australia in the last decade the picture is even less clear with a mixture of outcomes in relation to cases by workers claiming wages when they have been working illegally. No discrimination cases have emerged in Australia although this paper speculates that the Australian courts may be receptive to adopting the English approach.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-212592017-03-08T13:31:56Z Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia Guthrie, Rob Taseff, R. Atul Gupta This paper deals with some topical issues in relation to illegal workers. The legal rights of illegal workers have become an international concern. In this paper two common law countries are examined. The engagement of illegal workers for work raises a number of delicate employment law and policy issues. This article compares the attitude of the courts in the England and Australia in relation to the question of the rights of workers who work contrary to immigration laws (illegal workers). In England the courts have tended to adopt a traditional approach of not enforcing contracts which are tainted by illegality in relation to cases involving payment of wages and to termination of employment. This has meant that often workers employed illegally have no rights to enforce agreements with employers who are a party to the illegal agreement. However in relation to discrimination cases the English courts have used a number of devises to sidestep this harsh approach and recently a number of workers who have been engaged illegally have been successful in establishing that their employer has discriminated unlawfully against them. In Australia in the last decade the picture is even less clear with a mixture of outcomes in relation to cases by workers claiming wages when they have been working illegally. No discrimination cases have emerged in Australia although this paper speculates that the Australian courts may be receptive to adopting the English approach. 2007 Conference Paper http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21259 Oxford University, UK restricted
spellingShingle Guthrie, Rob
Taseff, R.
Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia
title Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia
title_full Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia
title_fullStr Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia
title_full_unstemmed Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia
title_short Dismissal and discrimination: Illegal workers in England and Australia
title_sort dismissal and discrimination: illegal workers in england and australia
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/21259