Publication: A Comparison of Mental Well-being among Female Undergraduates in Sri Lanka based on Relationship Status
DOI
Type:
Article
Date
2024-05-20
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of Humanities and Sciences, SLIIT
Abstract
Principles of natural justice, including fair hearings and unbiased decision-makers, should apply in
employee disciplinary procedures. However, Sri Lankan labor law does not statutorily require employers
to conduct domestic inquiries before imposing disciplinary punishments. This study investigated whether
courts continue to uphold principles of natural justice in the absence of a legal mandate requiring
domestic inquiries, thereby assessing the necessity for legal reforms. Through examining legislation,
case law, and academic literature, this study found courts generally only consider if a valid reason exists
for the punishment, not whether fair procedures were followed. Further discrimination arises between
public and private sector employees in applying natural justice principles. Reforming labor law to
mandate domestic inquiries before employee punishment would strengthen natural justice rules and
align with international standards like ILO Convention 158. This reform is needed to universally uphold
procedural fairness in workplace discipline. Until then, the judiciary cannot fully ensure employees’
rights to fair disciplinary procedures are protected. Courts have upheld natural justice primarily under
writ or fundamental rights jurisdiction, mainly benefiting public sector employees. Private sector
employees lack that protection. Requiring domestic inquiries before punishment through amending the
Industrial Disputes Act would fill this gap. This suggested legal reform would bolster the rule of law
in Sri Lanka’s employment relations. As the law stands, employers currently have full discretion on
disciplinary procedures. Statutorily mandating domestic inquiries would check that unilateral authority.
This study demonstrates the need to embed fair process requirements into labor legislation to fully
realize principles of natural justice.
Description
Keywords
Disciplinary punishments, Domestic inquiry, Labor law, Natural justice
