No.10/02
Author:
Daniela Caruso
Title:
Limits of the Classic Method:
Positive Action in the European Union after the New Equality Directives
Abstract:
A rather traditional version of the
equality paradigm, based on individual rights and identity-neutral justice, has
so far controlled the ECJ's decisions on positive action for women in the
workplace. The same paradigm inspires the new equality directives, and will
probably continue to guide the Court in the scrutiny of States' positive action
measures in favor of racial, ethnic or religious groups. Against this trend,
this article advocates a drastic revirement in the supranational adjudication
of positive action disputes, leading to broader State autonomy in the
experimentation of new formulae for the mainstreaming of marginalized groups.
Alternative forms of European governance are apt to ensure, better than
supranational judicial review, the coordination of national policies in this
respect.
The argument builds upon three
analytical pillars: a) a critique of the ECJ's positive-action case law, based
on the Court's over-reliance on the prescriptive power of the group/individual
rights dichotomy; b) a re-conceptualization of positive action as
identity-based redistribution. Rather than exceptional aberration from the
canon of individual equality and blind justice, positive action can be
conceived of as one among many forms of allocation of resources in favor of
identity-defined groups; c) a collection of examples of identity-based
redistribution, sharing the essence, if not the form, of positive action. These
examples show how measures targeting ethnic or religious groups for
redistributive purposes are not at all new or uncommon in both national and
supranational policies. They are natural adaptations of welfare canons to the
diversity of social landscapes. The dominant rhetoric of identity-blind justice
fails to capture such realities and thwarts the debate on the problems of a
multicultural Europe.
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