Preventing discrimination

Individuals, organizations, and communities have the ability and responsibility to create environments where all people are included, respected, and treated equitably. Preventing hate, racism, and discrimination takes all of us working together to create change.

Prevention initiatives

There are many ways to prevent hate, racism, and discrimination, including systemic discrimination and harassment. Prevention should meaningfully involve affected people and communities, from initial discussions through to decision-making. Prevention efforts are more effective when we use multiple strategies and work together to create change.

Below are examples of prevention initiatives that individuals, organizations, and communities can take.

Prevention initiative examples

  • increasing awareness about and respecting religious and cultural practices
  • hosting information sessions
  • training staff on human rights issues (for example, Indigenous history and culture, different religious holidays and practices, sexual harassment)
  • learning more about rights and responsibilities under human rights law

  • creating harassment prevention and other human rights policies
  • implementing diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) policies and strategies
  • hiring diverse employees
  • ensuring 2SLGBTQ+-friendly spaces
  • evaluating pay structures to ensure equal pay
  • having a policy and procedure for requesting accommodation
  • informing employees about all policies, practices, and procedures
  • consistently enforcing policies and following the prescribed process for dealing with incidents

  • providing services that accommodate and improve access for persons based on a protected ground. For example, for people with disabilities, parents or pregnant people, or people with religious needs.
  • delivering programs and services in new and different ways to increase access for marginalized groups. For example, offering virtual programs for people who cannot access services in-person.
  • designing your website to be accessible. For example, for people who are deaf or hard of hearing, are blind or partially sighted, have low literacy skills, or have English as a second language.
  • improving physical structures and spaces by ensuring buildings are accessible. For example, having ramps, accessible sidewalks, automatic doors, accessible washrooms, and all-gender washrooms, or offering space for prayer or religious ceremony, including smudging.

  • advocating to governments on issues impacting you or other groups
  • looking within your own industry to identify where barriers and discrimination exist, participating in or initiating collaborative initiatives to address them, and advocating for collective change. For example, working with associations and businesses within the hospitality sector to address racial profiling.

The Commission's programs and initiatives

The Commission offers programs and services that increase understanding about human rights principles and laws, and prevent hate, racism, and discrimination. We also engage with organizations, businesses, associations, governments, and communities to co-create strategies that foster equity and reduce discrimination.

The Commission’s work to prevent discrimination includes:

  • providing information and increasing awareness about human rights principles
  • developing education tools, resources, training, and programs that increase knowledge about rights and responsibilities under the Alberta Human Rights Act
  • using research and data to develop programs that address human rights issues, including hate, harassment, and systemic racism and discrimination
  • advising communities and organizations on their human rights initiatives
  • collaborating with and engaging community stakeholders to co-create programs and initiatives that prevent discrimination
  • developing organizational and public policy

Learn more about our work promoting human rights and preventing discrimination:

FAQs

It depends. If the person requesting accommodation refuses reasonable and appropriate accommodation, then the employer, service provider, or landlord has likely met their legal responsibilities.

If the employer, service provider, or landlord fails to accommodate the person to the point of undue hardship, then they may be contravening (going against) the Act. The person requesting accommodation can discuss their situation with human resources and may choose to file a complaint with their employer or ultimately make a human rights complaint with the Commission. You have one year after the discriminatory act or treatment to make a complaint to the Commission.

For more information about the complaint process and remedies, refer to the Making a complaint page.

Individuals, organizations, and communities have the ability and responsibility to create environments where all people are included, respected, and treated equitably. There are many ways for organizations to be diverse, respectful, and inclusive.

Some steps you can take include:

  • raising awareness of discrimination issues through signage and other communications
  • providing learning opportunities and training for staff on human rights
  • creating or updating organization policies and best practices on inclusion, including their implementation
  • incorporating best practices for ensuring accessible services and creating inclusive spaces, for example:
    • ensuring websites follow the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG)
    • allowing service animals
    • making sure programs and services are physically accessible (providing ramps, accessible sidewalks, automatic doors, accessible washrooms, all-gender washrooms, and supports for people who are deaf or hard of hearing)
    • providing spaces for prayer and cultural ceremony, including smudging
    • ensuring 2SLGBTQ+-friendly spaces
  • forming diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) internal working groups or committees
  • hiring experts to provide support for developing and implementing DEI strategies

Refer to the following information on this website to learn more:

Individuals, organizations, and communities have the ability and responsibility to create environments where all people are included, respected, and treated equitably. There are many ways for individuals and organizations to prevent and address racism.

Some steps you can take include:

  • learning about the history of racism and systemic racism, how it impacts your organization, and how to dismantle systems that oppress people
  • creating or updating organizational policies and best practices on countering racism, including their implementation
  • providing anti-racism learning opportunities and training for staff, leadership, and board members
  • sharing helpful, credible resources with staff, leadership, and board members. This can include Commission resources on those topics.
  • forming diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) internal working groups or committees
  • hiring experts to provide support for developing and implementing DEI strategies
  • joining or getting involved with anti-racism organizations or in initiatives such as the Alberta Anti-Racism Advisory Council, Calgary Anti-Racism Action Committee, or Edmonton Anti-Racism Advisory Committee

To learn more about how the Commission can support your efforts, refer to the Education and engagement page.

Individuals, organizations, and communities have the ability and responsibility to create environments where all people are included, respected, and treated equitably. There are many ways to prevent or respond to hate.

Some steps you can take include:

To learn more about how the Commission can support your efforts, refer to the Education and engagement page.

The Commission previously administered the Human Rights and Multiculturalism Grants program, funded through the Alberta Lottery Fund. Alberta’s 2019 Budget transferred the Alberta Lottery Fund to the Alberta Treasury Board and Finance on behalf of the General Revenue Fund and the fund was dissolved.

At present, the Commission no longer offers grant funding. Funding support for human rights projects may be available through other grants programs: