Published on 01 January 2010 |
Fair Treatment at Work Survey, 2008
View DatasetDescription
The <i>Fair Treatment at Work Survey</i> is Britain's first large-scale official survey of employees' experience of unfair treatment, perceived discrimination, bullying and sexual harassment in the workplace. The survey was commissioned by the Department for Business, Enterprise and Regulatory Reform (BERR) which in June 2009 merged with the Department for Innovation, Universities and Skills (DIUS) to form the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills (BIS). The new survey combines two earlier surveys; the <i>Employment Rights at Work Survey, 2005</i> (ERWS) (not available from the UKDA) and the <i>Fair Treatment at Work Pilot Survey, 2005-2006</i> (available from the UKDA under SN 6203).<br> The main aims of the <i>Fair Treatment at Work Survey, 2008</i> were:<ul><li>to assess people's general awareness of their rights at work and to see how this has changed since the last survey</li><li>to determine knowledge about specific rights at work (the National Minimum Wage and holiday entitlement) </li><li>to find out which sources of advice people would use to find out about their rights at work in general and to find out about the National Minimum Wage</li><li>to measure the proportion of individuals that has had problems at work in the last five years</li><li>to determine how people go about resolving the most serious problems which they have had </li></ul>
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Metrics Over Time
Publication Details
Subfield
Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health
Field
Medicine
Domain
Health Sciences
Confidence Score
46%
Source
Open Alex