In the News

Practice Areas » Race Discrimination Lawyers in California

Race Discrimination Lawyers in California

California Race Discrimination Lawyers Protecting Employee Rights

Employees should be evaluated based on performance, qualifications, and professionalism—not race, ethnicity, ancestry, or assumptions tied to identity.

Yet workplace race discrimination continues to affect employees across California. Workers may experience unequal treatment in hiring, promotions, discipline, compensation, workplace culture, or termination decisions. Sometimes discrimination is direct. More often, it develops through patterns, workplace dynamics, or policies that disproportionately impact certain groups.

California law prohibits workplace discrimination based on race and related protected characteristics.

At Peter Law Group, we represent employees who believe they experienced unlawful workplace discrimination and help hold employers accountable when unequal treatment affects careers, livelihoods, and opportunities.

Contact us for a confidential consultation.


What Is Race Discrimination?

Race discrimination occurs when an employer treats an employee or applicant differently because of:

  • Race
  • Ethnicity
  • Ancestry
  • National origin
  • Physical characteristics associated with race
  • Perceived race or ethnicity
  • Association with individuals of a particular race or ethnicity

Discrimination can affect nearly every stage of employment, including:

  • Hiring decisions
  • Promotions
  • Compensation
  • Job assignments
  • Discipline
  • Performance evaluations
  • Workplace culture
  • Termination decisions

Discrimination does not always involve explicit comments or conduct.

Sometimes the strongest evidence comes from patterns and unequal treatment over time.


Common Examples of Workplace Race Discrimination

Race discrimination can take many forms.

Examples may include:

  • Unequal discipline compared to similarly situated employees
  • Being passed over for promotions
  • Disproportionate layoffs affecting certain groups
  • Exclusion from opportunities or leadership roles
  • Stereotyping or assumptions about qualifications
  • Hostile comments or racial slurs
  • Unequal enforcement of workplace policies
  • Discriminatory hiring practices
  • Retaliation after complaints

Employers cannot rely on assumptions, stereotypes, or unequal standards in workplace decision-making.


Hostile Work Environment and Racial Harassment

Many race discrimination cases also involve harassment.

Examples may include:

  • Offensive comments
  • Racial jokes
  • Slurs
  • Intimidation
  • Derogatory remarks
  • Repeated targeting or exclusion

Harassment becomes unlawful when it becomes severe or pervasive enough to create a hostile work environment.

Employers may be legally responsible if they knew—or should have known—about the conduct and failed to take corrective action.


Race Discrimination Can Be Systemic

Not all discrimination is obvious or directed at a single employee.

Workplace systems, policies, or practices can sometimes disproportionately affect certain racial or ethnic groups even when the language appears neutral.

Examples may include:

  • Promotion criteria applied inconsistently
  • Hiring practices producing unequal outcomes
  • Workplace testing procedures
  • Discipline patterns
  • Job assignment disparities

Patterns across departments or groups of employees may become important evidence.

In some cases, multiple workers may experience similar treatment, raising broader concerns about company-wide practices.


California Provides Strong Legal Protections

Claims involving workplace race discrimination commonly arise under:

  • California Fair Employment and Housing Act (FEHA)
  • Title VII of the Civil Rights Act
  • Wrongful termination protections
  • California anti-retaliation statutes

California often provides broader workplace protections than federal law.

Employers generally cannot make employment decisions based on race, ethnicity, stereotypes, or assumptions.


Retaliation Frequently Follows Complaints

Employees who raise concerns about discrimination sometimes experience retaliation.

Examples may include:

  • Increased scrutiny
  • Demotions
  • Schedule changes
  • Exclusion from opportunities
  • Negative evaluations
  • Reduced responsibilities
  • Termination

California law prohibits retaliation against employees who report discrimination or participate in workplace investigations.


How Race Discrimination Cases Are Proven

Evidence often includes:

  • Internal communications
  • Performance reviews
  • Hiring and promotion records
  • Witness testimony
  • Comparative treatment of coworkers
  • Statistical evidence
  • Complaint histories

Discrimination cases frequently involve patterns rather than isolated events.

The strongest evidence often comes from examining broader workplace conduct.


Why Race Discrimination Cases Matter

Equal opportunity requires more than workplace policies.

Employees should not face barriers because of race or assumptions tied to identity.

When discriminatory practices become normalized, workplace systems become unfair and unlawful.

Anti-discrimination laws exist to create accountability and ensure employees are judged by their work—not by stereotypes.


Speak With a California Race Discrimination Lawyer

If you believe you experienced workplace discrimination, racial harassment, retaliation, or wrongful termination based on race or ethnicity, legal options may be available.

These claims are often highly fact-specific and time-sensitive.

Peter Law Group represents employees throughout California in workplace discrimination and employment matters.

Contact us for a confidential consultation.

FAQs

Frequently Asked Questions About Race Discrimination

What qualifies as race discrimination?

Race discrimination generally occurs when an employee experiences unequal treatment because of race, ethnicity, ancestry, or related characteristics.

Can racial harassment create a legal claim?

Potentially. Severe or pervasive harassment may create a hostile work environment claim.

What if discrimination is subtle?

Many race discrimination cases involve patterns rather than direct statements. Timing, comparative treatment, and workplace conduct often become important.

Can my employer retaliate against me?

No. California law prohibits retaliation for reporting discrimination concerns or participating in investigations.

What evidence can help prove race discrimination?

Emails, performance records, witness testimony, workplace patterns, and comparative treatment may all become important evidence.