by Sima Matthes
Although 2007 showed an increase in reported pregnancy discrimination complaints to the EEOC (up 14 percent from the previous year and up 40 percent from 10 years ago), it is only certain recent case in the UK and a pending case before the US Supreme Court that have brought the issue front and center for public debate.
According to the Sunday Times in the UK, Sarah Vince-Caine won £120,000 in compensation for unfair dismissal and sex discrimination from her former employer, the Giorgio Armani group. She sued the company after she was pushed into a lower-level role and eventually fired after her second maternity leave.
Although this represents a victory for Ms. Vince-Caine, Nicola Brewer, chief executive of the Equalities and Human Rights Commission, in a separate statement, remarked “If the world of work is premised on the assumption that a woman will take a year off, that loads the dice against her.”