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California Employment Law Glossary

Workplace Discrimination Definition
Workplace Discrimination

 

Definition


 

Workplace discrimination means an employer treats you adversely - in hiring, firing, pay, assignments, promotions, or working conditions - because of a protected characteristic. California's FEHA prohibits discrimination based on race, sex, gender identity, age, disability, religion, national origin, pregnancy, marital status, and several other characteristics. California's protections are broader than federal anti-discrimination law in virtually every respect.


Frequently Asked Questions

Discrimination occurs when your employer treats you worse in hiring, pay, promotions, discipline, or termination because of a protected characteristic like race, sex, age, disability, or religion.

Evidence such as inconsistent treatment of similarly situated coworkers, discriminatory comments, sudden performance criticism after years of good reviews, or suspicious timing can all help establish that discrimination - not a legitimate reason - was the true cause.

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Discrimination at work is illegal under California law. Contact our firm for a free case review - we represent employees only.
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Related

Practice Area

Workplace Discrimination

See Also

FEHA Claims  ·  Race Discrimination  ·  Gender Discrimination

This glossary is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Reading this page does not create an attorney-client relationship with Lawyers for Employee and Consumer Rights. Laws change - for advice specific to your situation, contact our office for a free case review.