Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year | Type |
Sherley E. Cruz |
ESSENTIALLY UNPROTECTED |
96 Tulane Law Review 637 (April, 2022) |
Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly. --Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, the American public has relied on essential low-wage workers to provide... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Patrice Ruane |
FROM PIN MONEY WORKERS TO ESSENTIAL WORKERS: LESSONS ABOUT WOMEN'S EMPLOYMENT AND THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC FROM THE GREAT DEPRESSION AND THE GREAT RECESSION |
29 UCLA Journal of Gender & Law 335 (Summer, 2022) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 336 I. The Great Depression. 342 A. Characteristics of the Women's Workforce Before the Great Depression. 343 1. The Image of Working Women. 344 2. Wage and Hour Legislation for Women Before the Great Depression. 348 B. The Employment Landscape During the Great Depression. 354 C. Federal Policy Responses. 357 1.... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Kimberly J. Winbush, J.D. |
Litigation of Compassionate Release Law |
173 American Jurisprudence Trials TRIALS 1 (2022) |
This article addresses the procedures and relevant considerations in assessing an inmate's request for compassionate release. Most published case law addresses the federal statutory framework but included are a smattering of cases addressing state laws governing medical parole. Most requests for release stem from an inmate's serious medical... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Zachary Parrish |
LOCKED UP AND LOCKED DOWN IN THE LAND OF THE FREE: A LOOK AT THE UNITED STATES' PRISONS AND COVID-19'S DISPROPORTIONATE EFFECT ON BLACK AMERICANS' RIGHT TO HEALTH |
37 American University International Law Review 391 (2022) |
I. INTRODUCTION. 393 II. BACKGROUND. 396 A. Racism in the United States: A Brief History. 396 i. Mass Incarceration. 396 ii. Systemic Racism. 399 B. COVID-19. 399 i. COVID-19's effect on Black Americans within prisons. 400 C. The International Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Racial Discrimination (the Convention). 405 i. Article 1:... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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MA LEGIS 268 (2022) |
H.B. No. 5274 2022 Mass. Legis. Serv. Ch. 268 (H.B. 5274) (WEST) (November 10, 2022.) |
< [For vetoes, reductions and sections returned for amendment, see the Governors message following this chapter.] >AN ACT relating to economic growth and relief for the commonwealth. |
2022 |
Legislation (Proposed & Enacted) |
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Memorandum of Law in Opposition to Plainitff's Motion for a Preliminary Injunction and in Support of Defendant's Cross-Motion to Dismiss the Complaint |
No. 22-CV-0033 MAD/ML. (18-Feb-22) |
Defendant, Mary T. Bassett, Commissioner of the New York State Department of Health, sued in her official capacity (Defendant), submits this memorandum of law, together with the... |
2022 |
Trial Court Documents |
Yanbai Andrea Wang , Justin Weinstein-Tull |
PANDEMIC GOVERNANCE |
63 Boston College Law Review 1949 (June, 2022) |
Introduction. 1951 I. Pandemic Theory and Policy. 1956 A. Pandemics and Crisis Management Theory. 1957 B. Pandemic Policy. 1959 1. State and Local. 1960 2. National. 1963 II. Intergovernmental Behaviors. 1968 A. Conflict. 1970 1. Active: Undermining. 1970 2. Passive: Abdication. 1975 B. Coordination. 1981 1. Active: Collaboration. 1981 2. Passive:... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Toni M. Massaro , Justin R. Pidot , Marvin J. Slepian |
PANDEMICS AND THE CONSTITUTION |
2022 University of Illinois Law Review 229 (2022) |
The COVID-19 pandemic unleashed a torrent of legal and political commentary, and rightly so: the virus touches every corner of life and implicates many areas of law. In response to the virus, governments, civic institutions, and businesses struggled to protect public health, respect individual autonomy, and enable Americans to satisfy their... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Personal injury |
No. CIV SB 2205155. (8-Mar-22) |
1. Plaintiff (name ornames): Atziri Renteria alleges causes of action against defendant (name or names): Shoes Kouture; Daisy Lepe; DOES 1 to 20 2. This pleading, including attachments and... |
2022 |
Trial Court Documents |
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Petition for A Writ of Certiorari |
No. 21-1156. (17-Feb-22) |
Petitioner Rodric David respectfully petitions for a writ of certiorari to review the judgment of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which reversed and remanded the judgment of the United... |
2022 |
Briefs |
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Plaintiffs' Seconded Amended Complaint |
No. 1:21-CV-22789-JLK. (27-Jan-22) |
Plaintiffs KATIA BORGELLA and ANTHONY WILLIAMS (hereinafter referred to individually as Plaintiff Borgella and Plaintiff Williams, or referred to collectively as Plaintiffs), by and... |
2022 |
Trial Court Documents |
Mechele Dickerson |
PROTECTING THE PANDEMIC ESSENTIAL WORKER |
85 Law and Contemporary Problems 177 (2022) |
In March 2020, states and cities tried to slow the spread of the Coronavirus (COVID-19) by issuing shelter-in-place or stay-at-home orders. Once the economic consequences of a total shutdown of the economy became clear, however, the federal government and states declared that certain business sectors or industries were critical. These critical... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Shauhin A. Talesh* |
RACIAL INEQUALITY, COVID-19, AND HEALTH AND UNEMPLOYMENT INSURANCE: LESSONS LEARNED AND PATHWAYS FORWARD |
71 DePaul Law Review 635 (Spring, 2022) |
COVID-19 impacted the entire world, and the United States is no exception. In addition to pervasive death and illness, COVID-19 wreaked havoc on the U.S. economy. Many people in the United States lost their jobs, others worked remotely, and many essential workers continued working in their workplace settings at great risk to themselves. The public... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Courtney G. Lee |
RACIST ANIMAL AGRICULTURE |
25 CUNY Law Review 199 (Summer, 2022) |
Industrialized animal agriculture--concentrated animal feeding operations (CAFOs) and slaughterhouses--is inherently oppressive of both nonhumans and humans. This Article seeks to expose the human side of that exploitation, specifically examining how industrial animal agriculture was built upon and continues to propagate racism. The harms to... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
René Reyes |
RELIGIOUS LIBERTY, RACIAL JUSTICE, AND DISCRIMINATORY IMPACTS: WHY THE EQUAL PROTECTION CLAUSE SHOULD BE APPLIED AT LEAST AS STRICTLY AS THE FREE EXERCISE CLAUSE |
55 Indiana Law Review 275 (2022) |
This Article offers a critical comparative analysis of the Supreme Court's jurisprudence under the Free Exercise Clause and the Equal Protection Clause. In a number of recent cases, the Court has shown increasing solicitude for the rights of religious objectors and has upheld claims for exemptions from various laws--even in the absence of an intent... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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Reply Memorandum of Law in Support of Plaintiffs' Motion for Preliminary Injunction |
No. 1:22-cv-00710-NGG-RML. (28-Feb-22) |
Served February 28, 2022 Defendants' responses are exemplars of self-contradiction. On one hand, Defendants claim that issuing race-neutral guidance is akin to intentionally maintaining a... |
2022 |
Trial Court Documents |
Peter H. Huang |
RESISTANCE IS NOT FUTILE: CHALLENGING AAPI HATE |
28 William and Mary Journal of Race, Gender, and Social Justice 261 (Winter, 2022) |
This Article analyzes how to challenge AAPI (Asian American Pacific Islander) hate--defined as explicit negative bias in racial beliefs towards AAPIs. In economics, beliefs are subjective probabilities over possible outcomes. Traditional neoclassical economics view beliefs as inputs to making decisions with more accurate beliefs having indirect,... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Aila Hoss |
SECURING TRIBAL CONSULTATION TO SUPPORT TRIBAL HEALTH SOVEREIGNTY |
14 Northeastern University Law Review 155 (Februar y, 2022) |
Introduction 159 I. Tribal Governments and Federal Indian Law 161 II. Tribal Consultation and the Law 163 A. United Nations Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples 164 B. Federal Executive Branch Requirements 166 C. Federal Statutory Requirements 169 D. State Requirements 170 III. Limitations of Existing Consultation Mandates 175 IV.... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Devon W. Carbado |
STRICT SCRUTINY & THE BLACK BODY |
69 UCLA Law Review Rev. 2 (March, 2022) |
When people in law think about strict scrutiny, often they are also thinking about equal protection law's treatment of race. For more than four decades, scholars have vigorously challenged that legal regime. Yet none of that contestation has interrogated the social manifestation of strict scrutiny. This Article does that work. Its central claim is... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Natalie Ram , Lance Gable , Jeffrey L. Ram |
THE FUTURE OF WASTEWATER MONITORING FOR THE PUBLIC HEALTH |
56 University of Richmond Law Review 911 (Symposium 2022) |
The COVID-19 pandemic has invited dramatic investment in and expansion of wastewater surveillance. This surveillance may enable early detection of an increasing presence of COVID-19 in the community. But the same technology may simultaneously or soon be turned to other uses, including for drug interdiction, community wellness, or environmental... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Wendy Netter Epstein , DePaul University College of Law, 25 E. Jackson Blvd., Chicago, IL 60604, USA |
THE HEALTH EQUITY MANDATE |
9 Journal of Law & the Biosciences Biosciences 1 (January-June, 2022) |
People of color and the poor die younger than the White and prosperous. And when they are alive, they are sicker. Health inequity is morally tragic. But it is also economically inefficient, raising the nation's healthcare bill and lowering productivity. The COVID pandemic only, albeit dramatically, highlights these pre-existing inequities. COVID... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Anne Barnhill, A. Susana Ramírez, Marice Ashe, Amanda Berhaupt-Glickstein, Nicholas Freudenberg, Sonya A. Grier, Karen E. Watson, Shiriki Kumanyika |
THE RACIALIZED MARKETING OF UNHEALTHY FOODS AND BEVERAGES: PERSPECTIVES AND POTENTIAL REMEDIES |
50 Journal of Law, Medicine & Ethics 52 (Spring, 2022) |
Keywords: Race and Ethnicity, Food and Beverage Marketing, Targeted Marketing, Health Equity, Structural Racism Abstract: We propose that marketing of unhealthy foods and beverages to Black and Latino consumers results from the intersection of a business model in which profits come primarily from marketing an unhealthy mix of products, standard... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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United States v. Chau |
Slip Copy, 4:20-CR-350-JAR, United States District Court, E.D. Missouri, Eastern Division. (1-Dec-22) |
This matter is before the Court on Defendant Kerry Chau's pro se motion for compassionate release (Doc. No. 43), as supplemented by counsel (Doc. No. 53). The Government opposes the motion. (Doc. No. 62). For the reasons discussed below, the motion will be denied. On April 15, 2021, Defendant Kerry Chau pled guilty to one count of a one count... |
2022 |
Cases |
Kevin Cope , Ilya Somin , Alexander Stremitzer |
VACCINE PASSPORTS AS A CONSTITUTIONAL RIGHT |
54 Arizona State Law Journal 25 (Spring, 2022) |
Does the U.S. Constitution guarantee a right to a vaccine passport? In the United States and elsewhere, vaccine passports have existed for over a century, but became politically divisive as applied to COVID-19. A consensus has emerged among legal experts that vaccine passports are usually constitutionally permissible. Yet there has been almost no... |
2022 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Jann L. Murray-Garcia, MD, MPH , Victoria Ngo, PhD |
"I THINK HE'S NICE, EXCEPT HE MIGHT BE MAD ABOUT SOMETHING": CULTURAL HUMILITY AND THE INTERRUPTION OF SCRIPTS OF RACIAL INEQUALITY |
25 U.C. Davis Social Justice Law Review 73 (Summer, 2021) |
I think he's nice, except he might be mad about something. A White-presenting child responds to the question ABC News's John Stossel posed to a group of school-aged children. He shows them enlarged photos of two men, one Black and the other White. What about this guy? Do you think he's nice? Stossel asks about the White man. I think he's... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
H. Timothy Lovelace Jr. |
"TO RESTORE THE SOUL OF AMERICA": HOW DOMESTIC ANTI-RACISM MIGHT FUEL GLOBAL ANTI-RACISM |
115 AJIL Unbound 63 (2021) |
On November 7, 2020, President Joe Biden proclaimed that his administration would restore the soul of America. He declared that U.S. voters had given him a mandate to achieve racial justice and root out systemic racism in this country, and that he plans to use the nation's restored moral leadership to create international consensus around U.S.... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
WILLIAM H. RODGERS, JR., Emeritus Stimson Bullitt Professor of Environmental Law, University of Washington School of Law, ELIZABETH BURLESON, Burleson Institute, part of the U.N. Climate Technology Center and Network, By Yiyi Wong |
§ 0B:22. Climate Change Linked to the Rise in Infectious Diseases-The Rise of Coronaviruses and Climate Change-The Psychosocial Effects and Stigma of the Coronavirus Pandemic |
Rodgers Environmental Law Second Edition 0B:22 (2021) |
COVID-19 is now an internationally known disease which has spread around the world like a wildfire, caused a global recession, and changed the societal habits. Yet, at the end of 2019, health professionals in Wuhan only knew that there was an unknown illness causing pneumonia-like cases. China alerted WHO on December 31, 2019, that something was... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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§ 11:2. What you should know about COVID-19 and the ADA, the Rehabilitation Act, and other EEO laws |
Disability Law Compliance Manual 11:2 (2021) |
Technical Assistance Questions and Answers - Updated on May 28, 2021. All EEOC materials related to COVID-19 are collected at www.eeoc.gov/coronavirus. The EEOC enforces workplace anti-discrimination laws, including the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act (which include the requirement for reasonable accommodation and... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Ted A. Donner, J.D., Richard K. Gabriel |
§ 12:8. Managing Jury Trials Post COVID-19 |
Jury Selection Strategy and Science 12:8 (2021) |
While the COVID-19 pandemic continued to grow as a problem in the United States, there remained a host of problems that needed to be addressed by the courts. Limiting what needed to be decided through stipulations and summary dispositions, conducting some or all of the proceedings through video conference, and ensuring the environment was sanitized... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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§ 23:61. Protecting vulnerable employees of COVID-19 pandemic through reasonable accommodation |
Employment Discrimination Law and Litigation 23:61 (2021) |
The EEOC issued a revised Pandemic Preparedness in the Workplace and the Americans with Disabilities Act guidance on March 21, 2020 updating its October 9, 2009 guidance in response to the COVID-19 Pandemic. The EEOC noted that the guidance does not have the force and effect of law. Nevertheless, its views are influential. The EEOC continues to... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
WILLIAM H. RODGERS, JR., Emeritus Stimson Bullitt Professor of Environmental Law, University of Washington School of Law, ELIZABETH BURLESON, Burleson Institute, part of the U.N. Climate Technology Center and Network |
§ 23A:2. Covid-19 Climate-Energy Implications: Access to Information |
Rodgers Environmental Law Second Edition 23A:2 (2021) |
Covid-19 has been an energy sector game changer. Exxon warns that its oil and gas operations may be written down by as much as $3.1 billion, given low oil prices and demand. Shell similarly predicted a $22 billion write down and BP expected a $17.5 billion write-down. The Congressional Research Service reports that the Interior Department's Office... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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§ 2991b-3. Grant program to ensure survival and continuing vitality of Native American languages |
No Citation Available (4/21/2021) (4/21/2021) |
United States Code Annotated|**|Title 42. The Public Health and Welfare|**| Chapter 34. Economic Opportunity Program|**| Subchapter VIII. Native American Programs |
2021 |
Statutes & Court Rules |
Theresa L. Corrada and Roberto L. Corrada |
§ 3:30. Avoiding discrimination related to COVID-19 safety measures, policies, and practices in the workplace |
16 West's Colorado Practice Series TM 3:30 (2021) |
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) enforces workplace anti-discrimination laws, many of which are uniquely pertinent in the case of a pandemic, including the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) and the Rehabilitation Act (which require reasonable accommodation, prohibits discrimination based on disability, and limit employer... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
Edward Louis Fiandach |
§ 32:24. COVID-19 early release |
New York Driving While Intoxicated 32:24 (2021) |
In People v. Webb, the defendant who was incarcerated in the Warren County Jail for eight months a s a result of a violation of probation maintained that he should be released as a result of perceived risks arising from the COVID-19 pandemic. Disagreeing, the Glens Falls City Court (Hobbs, J.) held that pursuant to Penal Law § 70.40(2) the Board of... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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§ 5:1. Jury Representativeness in the Era of COVID-19, A Note from Oscar Bobrow, Public Defender |
Jurywork Systematic Techniques 5:1 (2021) |
In this time of widespread illness, and reasonable fear of illness, experts have been discussing juror-friendly policies courts might implement as they re-open and summon jurors. One recommendation in this regard is increased flexibility in granting postponements and excusals to summoned jurors. Though such policies may be reasonable responses to... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 102-917 CFPB DIRECTOR TARGETS COVID-19 RELIEF, RACIAL INEQUALITY. |
Bk. Compl. Gd. P 102-917, Bank Compliance Guide (2021); (Publication Name: Bank Compliance Guide) (4/15/2021) |
¶ 102-917 Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. February 4, 2021. CFPB blog post in full text. By Dave Uejio It has been just over two weeks since President Biden's inauguration and my appointment as Acting Director of the Bureau. I have been meeting with the dedicated members of the Bureau's divisions, and I am continually impressed, though not... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 157-408 CFPB DIRECTOR TARGETS COVID-19 RELIEF, RACIAL INEQUALITY. |
Fed. Bank. L. Rep. P 157-408, Federal Banking Law Reporter (2021); (Publication Name: Federal Banking Law Reporter) (4/15/2021) |
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. February 4, 2021. CFPB blog post in full text. By Dave Uejio It has been just over two weeks since President Biden's inauguration and my appointment as Acting Director of the Bureau. I have been meeting with the dedicated members of the Bureau's divisions, and I am continually impressed, though not surprised,... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 157-525 CFPB TAKING STEPS TO PREVENT WAVE OF COVID-19 FORECLOSURES. |
Fed. Bank. L. Rep. P 157-525, Federal Banking Law Reporter (2021); (Publication Name: Federal Banking Law Reporter) (4/15/2021) |
Consumer Financial Protection Bureau. 86 Federal Register 18840, April 9, 2021. Notice of proposed rulemaking in full text. ACTION: Proposed rule; request for public comment. The Bureau of Consumer Financial Protection (Bureau) seeks comment on proposed amendments to Regulation X to assist borrowers affected by the COVID-19 emergency. The... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 181,558 FINAL RULE, 86 FR 62240, NOVEMBER 9, 2021 - MEDICARE AND MEDICAID PROGRAMS; CY 2022 HOME HEALTH PROSPECTIVE PAYMENT SYSTEM RATE UPDATE; HOME HEALTH VALUE-BASED PURCHASING MODEL REQUIREMENTS AND MODEL EXPANSION; HOME HEALTH AND OTHER QUALITY REPO |
Medicare and Medicaid Guide 181558 (2021) |
[86 FR 62240] 42 CFR Parts 409, 424, 483, 484, 488, 489 and 498 [CMS-1747-F and CMS-5531-F] RIN 0938-AU37 and 0938-AU32 AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). ACTION: Final rule. This final rule updates the home health and home infusion therapy services payment rates for... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 181,559 FINAL RULE, 86 FR 61555, NOVEMBER 5, 2021 - MEDICARE AND MEDICAID PROGRAMS; OMNIBUS COVID-19 HEALTH CARE STAFF VACCINATION |
Medicare and Medicaid Guide 181559 (2021) |
[86 FR 61555] 42 CFR Parts 416, 418, 441, 460, 482, 483, 484, 485, 486, 491 and 494 [CMS-3415-IFC] RIN 0938-AU75 AGENCY: Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), HHS. ACTION: Interim final rule with comment period. This interim final rule with comment period revises the requirements that most Medicare- and Medicaid-certified... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 37,250 EXPERTS SHARE INSIGHTS ON INTERSECTION BETWEEN COVID-19 PANDEMIC AND CIVIL RIGHTS ISSUES - EEOC NEWS |
Labor & Employment Law 37250 (2021) |
By Pamela Wolf, J.D. At a hearing on April 28, 2021, the EEOC heard from a dozen invited experts on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on civil rights in the workplace. It was the Commission's first all-virtual hearing. The panelists represented a very broad group of stakeholders, including a workplace compliance expert who asked for more guidance... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 37,574 IS AN EMPLOYEE WHO EXERCISES EEO RIGHTS IN CONNECTION WITH COVID-19 PROTECTED FROM RETALIATION |
HR Compliance 37574 (2021) |
Issue: An Asian-American employee complained to you about a coworker's abusive comments accusing Asian people of causing and spreading COVID-19. After an internal investigation was completed and appropriate action was taken, the employee's supervisor told him she didn't appreciate him going around her to HR to report the harassment. Since then,... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 400,190 EXPANDING COVID-19 VACCINE ELIGIBILITY MAY REDUCE ACCESS FOR VULNERABLE POPULATIONS |
Food Drug Cosmetic Law Reporter 400190 (2021) |
ASPE Report, May 5, 2021. APRIL 2021 As of mid-February 2021, states and other jurisdictions have vaccinated 11-21% of their population against COVID-19, using different approaches for vaccine eligibility and vaccine distribution strategies. The percentage of vaccine doses received by states that have been administered to patients varies from... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 400,195 COVID-19: HHS AGENCIES' PLANNED REVIEWS OF VACCINE DISTRIBUTION AND COMMUNICATION EFFORTS SHOULD INCLUDE STAKEHOLDER PERSPECTIVES |
Food Drug Cosmetic Law Reporter 400195 (2021) |
GAO Report, GAO-22-104457, November 4, 2021. November 2021 COVID-19 GAO@100 A Century of non-partisan Fact-Based Work GAO-22-104457 Highlights of GAO-22-104457, a report to congressional committees Vaccination remains critical in the federal response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Vaccine implementationprioritizing, allocating, distributing, and... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 400,195 MISCELLANEOUS DOCUMENTS, GAO-22-104457, NOVEMBER 4, 2021 - COVID-19: HHS AGENCIES' PLANNED REVIEWS OF VACCINE DISTRIBUTION AND COMMUNICATION EFFORTS SHOULD INCLUDE STAKEHOLDER PERSPECTIVES |
Food Drug Cosmetic Law Reporter 400195 (2021) |
November 2021 COVID-19 GAO@100 A Century of non-partisan Fact-Based Work GAO-22-104457 Highlights of GAO-22-104457, a report to congressional committees Vaccination remains critical in the federal response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Vaccine implementationprioritizing, allocating, distributing, and administering dosesrequires coordination among... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 45,757 NEW REPORT ADDRESSES HOW 40 PERCENT OF AMERICAN WORKERS EXPERIENCED WORSENING JOB QUALITY SINCE THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC - SURVEY RESULTS |
HR Compl. P 45757, HR Compliance (2021); (Publication Name: HR Compliance) (4/15/2021) |
A new report from GallupHow COVID-19 Affected the Quality of Workshows that 40 percent of workers have experienced worsening job quality since the start of the COVID-19 pandemic, up from 24 percent as measured in the spring of 2019 relative to the previous year. In addition to upending social interactions, the COVID-19 pandemic has profoundly... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 45,808 EXPERTS SHARE INSIGHTS ON INTERSECTION BETWEEN COVID-19 PANDEMIC AND CIVIL RIGHTS ISSUES - CONFERENCE COVERAGE |
HR Compliance 45808 (2021) |
At a hearing on April 28, 2021, the EEOC heard from a dozen invited experts on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on civil rights in the workplace. It was the Commission's first all-virtual hearing. The panelists represented a very broad group of stakeholders, including a workplace compliance expert who asked for more guidance in his written... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 46,019 MAJORITY OF PARENTS SAY COVID-19 CHILD CARE DUTIES HAVE HURT THEIR CAREERS - SURVEY RESULTS |
HR Compliance 46019 (2021) |
More than six out of 10 U.S. adults with children under the age of 18 (62 percent) believe their child care and virtual schooling duties during the COVID-19 pandemic have negatively affected their ability to get ahead in their job or career, according to results from the latest American Staffing Association Workforce Monitor® survey conducted by... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 550,171 COVID-19: HHS AGENCIES' PLANNED REVIEWS OF VACCINE DISTRIBUTION AND COMMUNICATION EFFORTS SHOULD INCLUDE STAKEHOLDER PERSPECTIVES |
Health Care Compliance Reporter 550171 (2021) |
GAO Report, GAO-22-104457, November 4, 2021. November 2021 COVID-19 GAO@100 A Century of non-partisan Fact-Based Work GAO-22-104457 Highlights of GAO-22-104457, a report to congressional committees Vaccination remains critical in the federal response to the COVID-19 pandemic. Vaccine implementationprioritizing, allocating, distributing, and... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |
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¶ 5509 RESOLUTION OF THE U.S. EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY COMMISSION CONDEMNING VIOLENCE, HARASSMENT, AND BIAS AGAINST ASIAN AMERICANS AND PACIFIC ISLANDERS IN THE UNITED STATES |
Empl. Prac. Guide P 5509, Employment Practices Guide (2021); (Publication Name: Employment Practices Guide) (4/15/2021) |
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission, March 22, 2021. WHEREAS the U.S. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (Commission or EEOC), established by the landmark Civil Rights Act of 1964, is the principal federal agency charged with enforcing the nation's laws prohibiting employment discrimination; and WHEREAS the 1964 Civil Rights Act, which... |
2021 |
Law Review Articles and Other Secondary Sources |