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Statutory Conditions of Employment: Individual Rights and Entitlements

J.R. Carby‐Hall (Senior Lecturer in Law, Faculty of Law, University of Hull and Visiting Reader in Law at I.M.C.B.)

Managerial Law

ISSN: 0309-0558

Article publication date: 1 February 1985

284

Abstract

Modern employment legislation invests the employee with important rights resulting in a greater degree of job security and improved legal protection in his employment. These rights or entitlements which are all personal in nature are divisible, for the sake of convenience, into four parts. Firstly, individual rights. These include guarantee payments, medical suspension, maternity, time off for specified activities, and the employer's insolvency. These rights are by no means exhaustive. Other rights of an individual nature as for example the right not to belong to a trade union where a closed shop is in operation; rights in connection with trade union membership; written reasons for dismissal; and so on, will be treated in the context of the discussion which will take place under the appropriate heading. Secondly, it is proposed to examine the employees right not to be discriminated against in employment on grounds of race and sex, thirdly, his right not to be unfairly dismissed will be analysed, to be followed finally by his right to redundancy payments. In this monograph, it is proposed to examine the first of these personal rights, namely the employee's individual rights. Each of the others will be discussed in subsequent monographs. It should be noted that unlike the common law terms implied into the contract of employment which consist of duties imposed on both the employer and the employee and which can be contracted out of by an express term in the contact of employment the statutory conditions of employment cannot be dispensed with in that manner. Like the implied terms at common law, the statutory conditions of employment too form another source of contract of employment though of course they are independent in that they neither form part of the contract of employment nor of the common law rights.

Citation

Carby‐Hall, J.R. (1985), "Statutory Conditions of Employment: Individual Rights and Entitlements", Managerial Law, Vol. 27 No. 2, pp. i-28. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb022417

Publisher

:

MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1985, MCB UP Limited

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