#World News

France moves closer to ban on hair discrimination


By Lipika Pelham

France has moved a step closer to banning discrimination in the workplace against hairstyles.

A bill has been approved in the National Assembly and will now be debated in the Senate.

The law will bar employers from requiring hair to be straightened and for afros, dreadlocks and braids to be covered.

Its author hopes the law will support those, particularly black people, who have faced workplace hostility.

The bill does not specifically target race-based discrimination, though that is the law’s primary motivation.

It will also protect blondes and redheads, as well as bald victims of what it calls “hair prejudice”.

It was proposed by Olivier Serva, an MP from the French Caribbean island of Guadeloupe, who presented an American study which pointed out that a quarter of black women said they had been ruled out for jobs because of how they wore their hair at the interview.

“People who don’t fit in Eurocentric standards are facing discrimination, stereotypes and bias,” Mr Serva said.



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