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HIV/AIDS and the labour sector : examining the role of law in protecting the HIV positive worker in Kenya

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dc.contributor.advisor Dekker, Adriette Hendrina
dc.contributor.author Ojienda, Tom Odhiambo
dc.date.accessioned 2010-09-30T10:59:45Z
dc.date.available 2010-09-30T10:59:45Z
dc.date.issued 2010-05
dc.identifier.citation Ojienda, Tom Odhiambo (2010) HIV/AIDS and the labour sector : examining the role of law in protecting the HIV positive worker in Kenya, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3617> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/3617
dc.description.abstract Kenyan labour laws inadequately protect HIV positive worker. The Constitution of Kenya, 1963, does not prohibit stereotypical attitudes adverse to HIV positive workers and discrimination on the basis of health status. It does not provide for the right to employment, health and health care services, and fails to delimit privacy and dignity rights. Under the Industrial Property Act, 2001, the basis for Government exploitation of patent through compulsory licensing is whimsical and parallel importing is not envisaged. Employers unilaterally draft employment contracts notwithstanding their unequal power relations to employees. The HIV and AIDS Tribunal institutionalises discrimination against HIV positive workers on the basis of the ambiguous ‘inherent job requirements.’ Plausible international labour laws and practices have no place in Kenya unless they are domesticated. SUMMARY This thesis interrogates the Kenyan labour laws and policies to identify their inefficiencies and suggest recommendations for reform. It commences with an analysis of the topical issues associated with the HIV positive worker. It then examines the extent of prevalence and ramifications of HIV/AIDS in Kenya. Subsequently, it studies the efforts made at the international and domestic arena in protecting the HIV positive worker. A comparative analysis is made of the laws protecting the HIV positive worker in a number of countries, namely, South Africa, United States of America and Australia. The thesis draws conclusions and recommends measures on how best to protect the Kenyan HIV positive worker. The labour laws should be amended to prohibit discrimination on the basis of health status, provide for right to affordable medication and work, allow negotiation of employment contracts, list international laws that Kenya ratifies without reservation as a source of law and delimit the concept of ‘inherent requirements of a job.’ The public should be sensitised to embrace HIV positive workers. Once the new Constitution is enacted, it should list socio-economic rights as fundamental rights and reform the office of the ombudsman to deal with complaints against private employers. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xiv, 284 leaves) en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Asymptomatic stage en
dc.subject Compulsory licensing en
dc.subject HIV/AIDS en
dc.subject HIV positive worker en
dc.subject Stereotypical attitudes en
dc.subject Labour sector en
dc.subject Domesticate en
dc.subject Generations of rights en
dc.subject Inherent requirements of a job en
dc.subject Parallel importing en
dc.subject.ddc 344.15906762
dc.subject.lcsh AIDS (Disease) -- Patients -- Employment -- Law and legislation -- Kenya en
dc.subject.lcsh HIV-positive persons -- Employment -- Law and legislation -- Kenya en
dc.subject.lcsh Labor laws and legislation -- Kenya en
dc.subject.lcsh Discrimination in employment -- Law and legislation -- Kenya en
dc.subject.lcsh Employee rights -- Kenya en
dc.subject.lcsh Labor policy -- Kenya en
dc.title HIV/AIDS and the labour sector : examining the role of law in protecting the HIV positive worker in Kenya en
dc.type Thesis en
dc.description.department Mercantile Law en
dc.description.degree LL.D.


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