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Via tumblr, love this story of malicious compliance and loophole-hunting:

Back in 1936, Vera Carey was appointed Leitrim County Librarian. When she married four years later she submitted her letter of resignation as required in her contract. On the request of her employer, she remained in the post until her replacement was found. In the meantime, Vera sought legal advice. Her solicitor discovered that while the 1924 Civil Service Regulation Act required women in the public service to resign from marriage it, mistakably, did not disqualify married women from applying for such posts. Vera applied and, being the most qualified candidate, was reappointed as County Librarian, despite local opposition. She continued in her job until her retirement in 1974.


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in reply to @dog's post:

Oh yeah, there’s a reason the feminist movement was so active in the 70s. Most countries lacked workplace anti-discrimination protections for women until the feminist movement worked to change that.

This also has to do with the Republic of Ireland having Francoist Spain levels of capture by the Catholic Church for most of its history. Basically, the wrong guys won the Irish Civil War, so contraception wasn't legal until 1980, and divorce wasn't legal until 1996. probably the most infamous example was the Magdalene Laundries, active until the 90s, which is more than i can write about now.

i can't write a proper reply right now but I also can't not complain about how one-dimensional this characterisation of my country is. "the Wrong Guys won the civil war therefore the Magdalene Laundries" boggles the mind. A lot of things might have been different if the anti-Treaty side won the civil war but I do not see the social dominance of the Catholic Church being one of them

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