Enhancing the Accessibility of Pedestrian Environments: Critical Reflections on the Role of the Public Sector Equality Duty
Abstract
:1. Introduction
“accessibility should be viewed not only in the context of equality and non-discrimination, but also as a way of investing in society and as an integral part of the sustainable development agenda”. (para. 4)
2. Methods
3. Legal Basis of the Public Sector Equality Duty and Critical Reflections on Its Use in Case Law on the Accessibility of Streetscapes
3.1. Legislative Base and Accompanying Guidance
“The Public Sector Equality Duty does not require any particular outcome to be achieved by a public authority; rather, it imposes a procedural duty (and an important one) to have due regard to various matters in the process by which an outcome is reached”. (Hamnett v Essex County Council, para. 76)8
“The level of ‘due regard’ considered sufficient in any particular context depends on the facts. A proportionate approach should be taken to the resources spent on duty compliance, depending on the circumstances of the case and the seriousness of the potential equality impacts on those with protected characteristics. For example, if you were reforming a personal tax or benefit, you would likely have to assess the 3 aims in some depth. But if you were buying office equipment, your assessment may be brief … You may exercise functions that have no equality impact, but it may then be useful to note that you took the duty into account and did not consider it relevant”.
3.2. Critical Reflections on PSED-Related Case Law Concerning the Accessibility of Streetscapes
“For Public Realm Schemes, and in line with best practice, it is recommended that a ‘standard’ kerb height of 125 mm should be generally used, though this may be reduced to a desirable minimum of 100 mm to suit local site circumstances. Exceptionally, however, where there is a desire to incorporate a lower standard kerb height to that either stipulated here or in DMBR [sic] … such as in a public realm scheme where a shared surface street is envisaged, it is recommended that kerb heights should not be less than 60 mm. It is also recommended that these lower kerb heights should only be introduced following meaningful consultation with organisations representing the accessibility needs of local people, particularly those with a disability …”
“A conscious approach to section 75 was required … and officials should have appreciated the need for councillors to receive advice on the equality aspect of the matter now before them, which would have included or be likely to include an analysis of the UCL research and an assessment of the impact of the 30 mm kerbs on the position of blind or partially sighted persons”. (Re Toner, para. 149)
4. Involvement of Disabled People, the Public Sector Equality Duty, and the Accessibility of Streets
4.1. The Extent to Which the Public Sector Equality Duty Requires Involvement
4.2. Involvement-Related Reflections of our Stakeholder Participants: Preliminary Explanations
4.3. Involvement-Related Reflections of Our Stakeholder Participants: Findings
4.3.1. Recognition of the Value of Involvement in the Context of Street Accessibility
“Yes … Taking what disabled people say seriously and listening—which is, by the way, what Article 4(3) of the convention says … It is not what would be nice. It is what should happen. And [was] fought for, for years”.
“it’s the lived experience that’s critical. It’s the thing that we can’t make up or guess. We need to be hearing those voices”.
“Even if an organisation was only approaching it from a cynically economic view of the world, which I’m sure not many do, it would still make sense to have lived experience in the mix because effectively you’re getting the greatest consultant you could possibly have on that part of the jigsaw”.
“We do hear them, we do listen to them, and we do try and change. Engagement and consultation can slow things down. But if you want to get it right, you really need to do it right”.
“So, there’s things like a sign is facing this way, but if you turn it that way, more people can access or see it or view it or know where they’re going. There’s really simple things that can be done to help and enhance people’s experience. Policy change doesn’t need to cost the earth. And if we just listen to what people are asking and make those small changes, it can make a difference …”
4.3.2. Facilitators of Effective Involvement
“So, I think for me it’s about … not just ticking a box and saying, I’ve done that. That’s what I’m legally bound to do. It’s about going beyond that, to think beyond what you’re legally bound to do. … it is about where can you go beyond your legal duty? … Please don’t make it just be a tick box exercise”.
“It’s good but if it’s approached as compliance or tick box rather than leadership culture and purpose then it’ll be sub-optimal. So, in short, it’s a thoroughly good thing … but it needs to become part of everybody’s understanding and … part of organisations and institutions and individuals’ DNA”.
“I think the most important thing is to listen to the feedback from people … disabled people … And making sure that their voice is heard”.
“I find a lot of the council’s consultations have many leading questions. And I think that’s a big problem really. There should be more flexibility for people to put an alternative opinion. So … on a cycle lane, the question might be do you think it should be one metre or two metres … rather than do you support a cycle lane”.
“So, it’s not just about a ramp at the front door. It’s about … how do we engage as many people as possible and have we got BSL signers? Have we got someone who can take a guide dog for a walk so that they can stay for 3 h? Is there a water bowl for the guide dog? Have we sent out information in an easy read format so maybe people with learning difficulties can take part? … We really should be designing things for everybody. … It’s not just about the building that you’re having your engagement in. It’s about who’s coming, how do they get there, how will they be able to give their best and be able to participate without making them feel awkward or different?”
“I’ve been in meetings where it’s quite clear that some of the disabled people represented are not clear about what’s being discussed. And so, I now, I want to know a little bit of information about who I’m meeting with. For example, if I am meeting with a group who have blind or partially sighted people, then I will slow things down, image describe … because quite often, you know, people could turn up and sound really nice but actually have a really awful design, people are almost taking it on trust. And that’s not fair”.
“I always remember one of the worst examples: I was dragged in at the last minute because the people who were presenting were scared to go and talk to this disability group. And they had a structural engineer who talked about concrete and steel calculations for 20 min. And you think, there’s going to be a nice level surface and the bridge is pretty much flat, with a big wide path. That’s all they needed to know”.
“[S]o, we’ve worked with one forum that includes lots of people with a variety of needs and what’s really special about the way that we work together is that they have already had some of the difficult conversations with one another that have kind of brought issues to the forefront, such as the tactile pavement that a blind person might rely on might be really painful for somebody with rheumatoid arthritis to stand on. And somebody with sight issues might need brighter light whereas somebody with epilepsy might need darker light. There’s not one answer. And I think the most powerful thing is when we’re working with organisations that take a holistic view of … several of their members’ needs”.
“I think it is also, kind of, negotiating the politics of different charities as well, and organisations, you know, some of the bigger organisations can sometimes … monopolise … time and … sometimes the smaller organisations can be … better than actually some of the really large ones”.
“Meaningful engagement should come with a budget. We shouldn’t be expecting people to give up hours and hours of their time. … [V]ery very few people can afford to give up hours and hours … And … it’d be interesting to look at the demographics of access groups, the ones that do exist. Because as far as I can see, unless you don’t work and you can afford to come and meet … during the working day, your voice isn’t heard”.
“I’ve met with groups who are seriously organised and really understand the technical detail and the debate beyond their own individual needs. But I’ve also had projects where we’ve gathered individual disabled people who have no understanding beyond their own [experience], and the difference in feedback, and the weight you can give to the feedback, is very different”.
“We very much work in a co-produced way, so looking at how we can shift the power so that citizens of [the city], council employees, companies like bus companies, etc.—anybody that is a stakeholder—has an equal voice and we actually sit down and kind of problem solve this together, rather than work from an us and them perspective”.
“[W]ithout being un-positive, I think there’s still a huge gulf in terms of understanding what many many different individuals and organisations are asking for, wanting, and needing, to be able to be empowered to exercise their full citizen rights. … If there isn’t an appreciation of the power asymmetry between individuals in a particular situation, you’re never going to come out with the right outcome—and what I mean by right outcome is the inclusive outcome”.
4.3.3. Concerns about Ineffective Involvement
“In my role as a city councillor, of course, it’s been very useful to have that information about the Equality Act … Partly because within the local authority context, as seen with many big organisations particularly in the public sector, there’s a lot of talk about equalities applying with the Public Sector Equality Duty, but relatively little understanding—in anything more than a fairly generalised and fluffy way, often erroneous, sometimes in a way that undercuts people’s rights and sometimes in ways that just overplay it”.
“I think that the big gulf is planning officers know absolutely nothing about the equality duty. In fact, I’ve seen some of them still referring to the DDA and sort of you know, or in actual fact, I’ve seen one say something like well planning law trumps discrimination law, for example”.
“Local plans are developed without any consultation or any effective consultation with disabled people and … if you haven’t got the right approach set out in the local plan at the point at which it’s developed, you can then get really poor decision-making on planning permission”.
“[T]hings have cropped up again during my time as a Planning chair—when some planning applications were being approved or recommended for approval … without the access officer having cast their eye over it. And that was one thing I got introduced, because when we talk about accessibility in planning, it can mean transport connectivity but obviously it can also mean inclusivity as well. So, I tried to draw out a separate section, accessibility transport, accessibility inclusivity, to try and strengthen those Planning papers. … What we’re trying to do now is … some work with all our senior council officers, chair, and equalities board … and get that embedded throughout the organisation”.
“I think you still have local government departments, for example, highways departments. The sorts of departments that bring in traffic regulation orders but still don’t think through how the PSED applies to the work they do. Because they don’t see it as a sort of—unlike … perhaps in education services, or children’s services—they just don’t see it as part of what they do”.
“They’ve admitted that it was purely within the design team and two access consultants who drew up the whole plan. … I think they actually came to do the presentation thinking we’d all say marvellous, brilliant, absolutely fantastic. And I think they’re still shocked that as a broad representative community disability group, every one of us was, was absolutely shocked … at that one element that was so clearly a discrimination against some disabled people. … If they’d have consulted, we may have avoided that”.
“I think sometimes they don’t tell you what they are doing until they almost want you to sign on the dotted line. So, they are not co-producing the solution with you. They are just sort of telling you what their solution is, which is often wrong”.
“If you go back to the question of street design, it’s … photographs and diagrams and maps … showing where things are going. And there’s rarely a clear paragraph description of how this is going to affect such and such a street, and what we’re going to do is build a cycle path. You’re far more likely to be shown a diagram showing what’s going to happen than to get an outline of what is going to be there and what that means in terms of change or what that means in terms of things remaining the same and what it is that might be of concern”.
“I live near [a low-traffic neighbourhood] and here the main road has been closed off, not just to cars but also to buses. So, there is no way that anyone could actually get down to and use the high street unless they are able to walk. And that has gone on for a year now, and it is what the council is hoping to do permanently. And the consultation on that, the consultation—I use the term loosely—took the form of one meeting with local people, the information for which was delivered by leaflet through the door. It didn’t seem to be available in alternative formats at all. And I think that is replicated across the country”.
“where spaces are being designed essentially towards an increased trend towards pedestrianisation, and in line with environmental objectives for cleaner air and trying to reduce the amount of traffic, but without due regard to the impact on disabled people who may need access to that particular space. … So, my concern on those cases is that … it’s very easy … [for] local authorities to comply with the PSED. They just have to show that they have thought through the issue”.
“I suppose we could honestly say the Public Sector Equality Duty has had no impact. … So many street changes are just being made now without reference to it at all. … Everything feels a bit like it was developed for a different era almost, because—I think, you know—given what is happening around climate change and around the electric vehicles and electric scooters. … [T]he next ten years … the amount of change … it feels like this is the decade of changes to the street environment, but without any solid kind of principles of equality guiding it. … It just feels that there is a bit of a vacuum in terms of the equality principles underpinning these changes to the environment”.
4.4. Discussion
“It is the redistribution of power that enables the have-not citizens, presently excluded from the political and economic processes, to be deliberately included in the future. It is the strategy by which the have-nots join in determining how information is shared, goals and policies are set … programs are operated, and benefits … are parcelled out. … There is a critical difference between going through the empty ritual of participation and having the real power needed to affect the outcome of the process”.
“Since this function affects a large number of users, it can be more difficult for a local authority to consult all the relevant stakeholders. As a result, there is a risk that only the best organised groups are likely to have their voices heard … while those less organised, which possibly include more vulnerable individuals, end up being excluded from the process of consultation”.
5. Enforcement of the Public Sector Equality Duty and Accessible Pedestrian Environments
5.1. How the Public Sector Equality Duty Can Be Enforced
5.2. Enforcement-Related Reflections of Our Stakeholder Participants: Preliminary Explanations
5.3. Enforcement-Related Reflections of Our Stakeholder Participants: Findings
5.3.1. The Value of Enforcing the Duty
“[W]ith judicial review … if the local authority announces that it is going to bring in the pedestrianisation scheme and … your client knows it is going to negatively affect disabled people, you don’t have to wait for it to happen and to see the damage that it will do, before you challenge it. Right? Simply the announcement or the proposal to do it might be enough, might be a sufficient decision … So, in that sense … you might use it then to stop it before even it happens, or really has a damaging effect”.
“… I think part of why people use the Equality Duty is because it can be a better way to get systemic change. And that if you’re bringing a judicial review, you’re more likely to have a trial, a reported judgement, or at least somewhere along the line, you’re more likely to get policy change. If you’re using private law, it quite often … turns into—it’s just about the money and the specific, very specific changes in relation to that individual’s impairment, for example—and you don’t get the wider systemic change”.
“If you are sceptical that the PSED is going to get you over the line, for example, or you think that what is going to happen at some point, is the council will cave because it realises it can undo its decision and take the decision again having filled in a different form … Then that is really not going to help your clients that much. Because ultimately that is just a means of nudging the council to do its paperwork better. It’s a process-based jurisdiction rather than outcome-based. If, on the other hand, you run those together with private law actions, for example, you might have maybe 100 people affected … you also … bring a private law action for damages, then the combined effect of approaching it in that sort of pincer style is one which hurts the local authority financially and embarrasses it at the same time. So, you’re using the private law action essentially to nudge a change of behaviour … that they might not be legally obliged to do through a judicial review”.
“So, yeah, law and politics, I mean, they are two tools that you use for general campaigning on social issues and discrimination. They go hand-in-hand. And of course, the key rule about doing a judicial review on some campaign is that it’s just pointless doing it unless you’ve got a good public campaign, local campaign behind it”.
“It can be useful … It can force senior managers … to become aware of what is going on … To give an example, [organisation name], they were being terrible about giving information about accessibility of their … service and attempting to block it. Then when … it got through to head office … what their own subcontractors or departments were doing … they were horrified and sorted it. So sometimes it can bring people together”.
“Some designs for a key street in the centre of [name of city] were published. And we did a joint response to the plans, which was fairly critical of them, and submitted it to the city council. And then we found that … they had not completed reviewing the consultation responses before seeking to take this decision. And we wrote to every councillor on the committee asking what the result of the consultation was, whether there were findings available, had they done an equality impact assessment on the scheme that they very much wanted to get funding for? So, the council was then forced to do an equality impact assessment”.
“[T]hat due regard duty is actually reasonably straightforward to discharge if the local authority is properly advised. … There was that slew of cases where public claimant lawyers had a good run. But I suspect that is now coming to an end. So, I think there is a need to think a little bit more creatively about claims, other claims that could be brought”.
5.3.2. Barriers to Enforcing the Duty
“I think certainly in Scotland, JRs are as rare as hens’ teeth outside immigration law. And so, it’s used almost not at all here except by the Equality and Human Rights Commission. Just hardly ever see it. We can go into a hundred reasons why that’s the case”.
“[W]e’ve had cases where the decision may have actually been taken by a cabinet some time before we thought the decision had been taken. That can affect the ability to bring a challenge in time. So, the lack of transparency of information is the problem”.
“It’s marginally easier to get it for a JR. Partly because there were no specialist … legal aid contracts in discrimination law until about two years ago, which meant that a firm like mine, with loads of experience in using the Equality Act, couldn’t get a legal aid certificate to bring a private law discrimination claim”.
“legal aid has been so decimated that really it is only available to a very small category of potential claimants”.
“[T]he fact is that there’s barely any legal aid. There’s practically no funding from the commission anymore or anyone else. But also, there’s practically no one to fund”.
“The problem is that disabled people are denied access to it for reasons of funding. … I think the example would be that one officer within the council kind of basically mocked us … kind of laughingly that clearly if you would have had half a million pound and gone to it through a JR, you probably would have won. And to be honest, [the city council] would have taken you seriously”.
“So, if you are a lawyer running these cases, and you know that … remedial work can be done up until the day before trial, then it is quite worrying—because, unless you have got public funding for the challenge, which is increasingly unlikely, then you may find that you assist with the change but don’t get paid for it. Which is a problem. The system is generally fairly stacked against you if you actually bring one of these challenges to be fair”.
“So that was a [judicial review]. And they pleaded … the Northern Ireland equivalent … of the PSED—but they also used the Section 29 equivalent of the DDA … And they won—but they won on the equality impact assessment and their failure to take account of … relevant research and stuff. But the judge absolutely hated the Section 29 point. He didn’t want to deal with it at all, and it was quite instructive … listening to him on it. And in the end, he just said—I will find for you on the equality duty point and then I don’t even have to make a decision on the other point … I am not going to deal with it. And … after watching that, I was just a bit like, you are never going to get it with a JR. … Even though you can use public law courts for that, they are just not set up to deal with it. Then I think using the County Court would be more effective”.
“I think County Courts and the High Court, they have their advantages and their disadvantages. Obviously, the High Court you get a particular type of judgment and a particular type of judge, they are used to dealing with often quite knotty areas of law and there are people who will prefer to take their cases in the High Court particularly because of that and that is understandable. Particularly when you are dealing with a public authority, because they are used to dealing with that. And sometimes if you take a case in the County Court you will get a judgment which may not be particularly robust and that can be difficult because it could be grounds for an appeal. Having said that, you can get very robust decisions in the County Court, and you can get judges who are very bold. And judges who might actually go much further in some respects against a public authority than some High Court judges would be prepared to do because there is a certain amount of deference in a way or a certain amount of built-in latitude for a public authority that you won’t get in a County Court necessarily. So, there are advantages and disadvantages …”
“They always just think that their equality obligations are just the PSED … and sometimes they are not even bothered about that. But, you know, they just think—if I have got an equality impact assessment and I can show that I have done it, it doesn’t really matter that the scheme discriminates. They don’t move on to the—oh dear, what do I do about the duty to make reasonable adjustments etcetera. That doesn’t sort of enter peoples thinking at all. And I don’t know how we get around that, until it is taking a case and it being seen to be a factor”.
5.3.3. The Role of the EHRC in Enforcing the Duty
“[T]he government knew what they were doing when they took a lot of funding out of it. And that’s exactly what they were there to do, because there would have been so many JRs against a lot of government policy … I think, until the Equality and Human Rights Commission are appropriately funded or have some other means of allowing them to support and enable peer–peer action, then unfortunately, they’re not much more use than a chocolate fire guard”.
“when we had the DRC and the OEC and the Race Equality Council … they might have been siloed, but I think they had a more targeted agenda. And the Public Sector Equality Duty covers nine protected characteristics and looking at good relations and all sorts of things. And it almost has become so big that it is sort of, almost become too unfocused to implement”.
5.4. Discussion
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Pseudonym | Stakeholder Category | Description |
---|---|---|
Alastair | Lawyer | Senior lawyer in a national equality and human rights organisation |
Barnaby | Campaigner | Trustee of a national disability rights organisation and equality campaigner |
Daisy | Campaigner | Disabled person and accessibility expert working with a range of organisations |
Darcie | Lawyer | Senior lawyer in a national human rights organisation |
Duncan | Public authority | Elected member of local council |
Felix | Public authority | Member of the House of Lords |
Fletcher | Campaigner | Accessibility consultant and campaigner |
Florence | Lawyer | Senior lawyer in a national equality and human rights organisation |
Gregor | Public authority | Representative of a national organisation working on the promotion, design, and implementation of active travel |
Hamish | Lawyer | Disability equality and human rights barrister |
Harrison | Public authority | Manager at a local council |
Lloyd | Campaigner | Senior manager in a local disabled people’s organisation |
Lottie | Lawyer | Planning and equality barrister |
Nina | Campaigner | Senior manager of a national disabled people’s organisation |
Olivia | Lawyer | Lawyer in a disabled people’s organisation |
Orla | Public authority | Senior civil servant in Scotland |
Piers | Campaigner | Senior manager of a local disabled people’s organisation |
Ralph | Lawyer | Equality and human rights solicitor in private practice |
Reginald | Public authority, Lawyer | Equality solicitor and elected member of a local council |
Scarlett | Lawyer | Equality and human rights barrister |
Violet | Campaigner | Accessibility expert in a disabled people’s organisation |
References
Treaties
- United Nations Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabilities. 2006. 2515 UNTS 3.
Legislation (United Kingdom)
- Civil Procedure Rules 1998.
- Court of Session Act 1988.
- Disability Discrimination Act 1995.
- Equality Act 2006.
- Equality Act 2010.
- Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) (Scotland) Regulations 2012 (SI 2012/162).
- Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) Regulations 2011 (SI 2011/2260).
- Equality Act 2010 (Statutory Duties) (Wales) Regulations 2011 (SI 2011/1064).
- Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012.
- Northern Ireland Act 1998.
- Race Relations Act 1976.
- Senior Courts Act 1981.
- Sex Discrimination Act 1975.
Legislation (United States)
- Architectural Barriers Act 1968, 42, U.S.C. 4151–4157.
- Americans with Disabilities Act 1990, 42, U.S.C. 12101–12131.
Cases
- Ali v London Borough of Newham [2012] EWHC 2970 (Admin).
- Bracking and others v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2013] EWCA Civ 1345.
- Hamnett v Essex County Council [2014] EWHC 246 (Admin).
- LDRA limited v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2016] EWHC 950 (Admin).
- Pieretti v Enfield London Borough Council [2011] 2 All ER 642.
- R (JL) v Islington London BC [2009] EWHC 458 (Admin).
- R (LH) v Shropshire Council [2014] EWCA Civ 404.
- R (on the application of Brown) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2008] EWHC 3158 (Admin).
- R (on the application of Coleman) v Barnet LBC [2012] EWHC 3725 (Admin).
- R (on the application of Goodall) v Reading Borough Council [2016] EWHC 3795 (Admin).
- R (on the application of Kays) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2022] EWCA Civ 1593.
- R (on the Application of Leadbetter) v Secretary of State for Transport [2023] EWHC 210 (Admin).
- R (on the Application of Leadbetter) v Secretary of State for Transport [2023] EWCA Civ 1496.
- R v Secretary of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs [1995] 1 WLR 386.
- Re Toner’s Application for Judicial Review [2017] NIQB 49.
- Rowley v The Cabinet Office [2021] EWHC 2108 (Admin).
- Secretary of State for Work and Pensions v Eveleigh and Others [2023] EWCA Civ 810.
- Stroud v Northwest Leicestershire District Council [2018] EWHC 2886 (Admin).
- YL v Birmingham City Council and Others [2009] 1 AC 95.
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2 | Race Relations Act 1976, s. 71. |
3 | Sex Discrimination Act 1975, s. 76A. |
4 | Disability Discrimination Act 1995, s. 49A. |
5 | EqA, s. 149(1). |
6 | EqA, s. 156. |
7 | Senior Courts Act 1981, s. 31(1). |
8 | [2014] EWHC 246 (Admin). |
9 | See, e.g., R (on the application of Brown) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2008] EWHC 3158 (Admin) and R (on the application of Coleman) v Barnet LBC [2012] EWHC 3725 (Admin). |
10 | Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) Regulations 2011 (SI 2011/2260). |
11 | Equality Act 2010 (Statutory Duties) (Wales) Regulations 2011 (SI 2011/1064). |
12 | Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) (Scotland) Regulations 2012 (SI 2012/162). |
13 | EqA, s. 149(2). |
14 | See R (JL) v Islington London BC [2009] EWHC 458 (Admin) para. 114, per Black J; Pieretti v Enfield London Borough Council [2011] 2 All ER 642, paras. 25 and 26. |
15 | LDRA Limited v Secretary of State for Communities and Local Government [2016] EWHC 950 (Admin). |
16 | Stroud v North West Leicestershire District Council [2018] EWHC 2886 (Admin). |
17 | R (on the application of Coleman) v Barnet LBC [2012] EWHC 3725 (Admin). |
18 | [2014] EWHC 246 (Admin). |
19 | [2016] EWHC 3795 (Admin). |
20 | [2012] EWHC 2970 (Admin). |
21 | [2017] NIQB 49. |
22 | [2023] EWHC 210 (Admin). |
23 | R (on the Application of Leadbetter) v Secretary of State for Transport [2023] EWCA Civ 1496, para. 54. |
24 | [2023] EWCA Civ 810. |
25 | R (on the application of Kays) v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2022] EWCA Civ 1593. |
26 | See, e.g., the second principle articulated by McCombe LJ in Bracking and others v Secretary of State for Work and Pensions [2013] EWCA Civ 1345, para. 26—according to which, “If the relevant material is not available, there will be a duty to acquire it and this will frequently mean that some further consultation with appropriate groups is required”. |
27 | Disability Discrimination (Public Authorities) (Statutory Duties) Regulations 2005, SI 2966. |
28 | Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) Regulations 2011 (SI 2011/2260). |
29 | Equality Act 2010 (Specific Duties) (Scotland) Regulations 2012 (SI 2012/162) (as amended), regulation 4(2). |
30 | Equality Act 2010 (Statutory Duties) (Wales) Regulations 2011 (SI 2011/1064), regulation 5. |
31 | R(LH) v Shropshire Council [2014] EWCA Civ 404. |
32 | [2014] EWHC 246 (Admin). |
33 | [2016] EWHC 3795. |
34 | EqA 2006, s. 30(1) and (2). |
35 | EqA 2006, s. 31(1) and sch. 2. |
36 | EqA 2006, s. 32(2). |
37 | EqA 2006, s. 32(1)–(4). |
38 | EqA, s. 156. |
39 | Senior Courts Act 1981, s. 31(1). |
40 | Senior Courts Act 1981, s. 31(3). |
41 | [1995] 1 WLR 386, 396–397. |
42 | Civil Procedure Rules 1998, r. 54.5. |
43 | Civil Procedure Rules 1998, r. 3.1(2)(a). |
44 | Court of Session Act 1988, s. 27A. |
45 | Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012 s. 9; sch. 1, pt. 1, para. 19; pt. 2, para. 18. |
46 | Legal Aid Sentencing and Punishment of Offenders Act 2012, sch. 3, paras. 1–3. |
47 | [2021] EWHC 2108 (Admin). |
48 | [2017] NIQB 49. |
49 | We have not used this participant’s pseudonym here in order to protect their identity. |
50 | EqA, s. 21(3). |
51 | [2013] EWHC Civ 1565. |
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Lawson, A.; Orchard, M.; Eskyte, I.; Campbell, M. Enhancing the Accessibility of Pedestrian Environments: Critical Reflections on the Role of the Public Sector Equality Duty. Laws 2024, 13, 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040043
Lawson A, Orchard M, Eskyte I, Campbell M. Enhancing the Accessibility of Pedestrian Environments: Critical Reflections on the Role of the Public Sector Equality Duty. Laws. 2024; 13(4):43. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040043
Chicago/Turabian StyleLawson, Anna, Maria Orchard, Ieva Eskyte, and Morgan Campbell. 2024. "Enhancing the Accessibility of Pedestrian Environments: Critical Reflections on the Role of the Public Sector Equality Duty" Laws 13, no. 4: 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040043
APA StyleLawson, A., Orchard, M., Eskyte, I., & Campbell, M. (2024). Enhancing the Accessibility of Pedestrian Environments: Critical Reflections on the Role of the Public Sector Equality Duty. Laws, 13(4), 43. https://doi.org/10.3390/laws13040043