Abstract

The UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD) features interesting labour law related aspects. The goals of this article are to reconcile horizontal human rights and contract law in the context of reasonable accommodation in working life and to establish guidelines by which to assess the obligation to make accommodation, for example in relation to the EU Employment Equality Directive. This article utilises the framework of just social practice, which makes reference to welfarism in Nordic contract law. Just social practice creates a theoretical framework in which to investigate the rights and obligations attached to reasonable accommodation in working life, because it may be argued that its basic premises correspond to the ultimate justification of the accommodation rights provided for by the UNCRPD: the idea of social inclusion. The first part of the article seeks to identify common features between the UNCRPD and contract law. It sketches the theoretical framework of just social practice, in which contract law and human rights coincide within the context of employment. The second part of the article elaborates what the process of reasonable accommodation within the framework of just social practice constitutes and introduces specific steps that are followed when the right to accommodation is in question. The article also identifies the factors that have an influence on reasonableness evaluations as being either internal or external to the contractual relationship and exemplifies how contract law principles are to be applied when assessing reasonableness. The article argues that reconciliation of the goals of private law and human rights within the framework of just social practice makes it possible to argue that contract law principles can function as a tool for social inclusion.

Highlights

  • The aim of this article is to present a theoretical framework which reconciles horizontal human rights and contract law in the context of reasonable accommodation in working life and to establish guidelines by which to assess the obligation to make reasonable accommodation under the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD). Achieving such reconciliation is crucial as the predictability and foreseeability of contractual obligations, which is an inherent goal of contract law, may be diminished due to justified interests stemming from the human rights sphere

  • One of the challenges that labour law faces is the pressure of deregulation

  • The contract law approach can be regarded as an attempt to address this challenge and to pinpoint the practical importance of integrating contract law and human rights in order to protect the vulnerable

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Summary

Introduction

The aim of this article is to present a theoretical framework which reconciles horizontal human rights and contract law in the context of reasonable accommodation in working life and to establish guidelines by which to assess the obligation to make reasonable accommodation under the UN Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities (UNCRPD). Achieving such reconciliation is crucial as the predictability and foreseeability of contractual obligations, which is an inherent goal of contract law, may be diminished due to justified interests stemming from the human rights sphere.

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