2. THE LAW
There is no legislation specifically aimed at preventing workplace bullying. Unions campaigned for many years without success for a specific legal right to dignity at work in a freestanding Dignity at Work Bill. The main laws available to protect workers against workplace bullying and harassment include:
• health and safety laws;
• the employment contract (the contractual right to work in a safe environment and the implied duty of mutual trust and confidence);
• the law of negligence (the employer’s duty to take reasonable steps to protect workers from foreseeable psychiatric injury caused by bullying);
• the Protection from Harassment Act 1997;
• criminal law, including laws outlawing malicious communications;
• unfair dismissal laws;
• anti-discrimination laws;
• anti-blacklisting regulations; and
• laws protecting whistleblowers and workers engaged in lawful trade union activities.
The TUC emphasises that “despite these legal protections, the priority for trade unions must be to prevent people being bullied in the first place. That means trying to eliminate it from the workplace. To do that, it is important to focus on the bullying behaviour rather than on the bullies themselves. This recognises that some people who bully do not do so knowingly, but specifically reflect a culture that is being allowed to develop within the workplace” (TUCWorkplace Manual, 2012) .