AuthorTitleCitationSummaryYear
Major Taren E. Wellman EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION AGAINST MILITARY SPOUSES: A CASE FOR ILLEGALITY CONTRARY TO POPULAR BELIEF AND PRACTICE 79 Air Force Law Review 207 (2018) I. Introduction 209 A. Discrimination Against the Spouse is Discrimination Against the Member 215 B. How Big is the Problem? 217 II. State of Current Law 220 A. The Statutory Legal Framework 220 1. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 220 2. Non-Title VII Antidiscrimination Sources of Protection 222 a. Equal Pay Act 222 b. Executive Order... 2018
Elizabeth Westrope EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF CRIMINAL HISTORY: WHY AN ANTI-DISCRIMINATION STATUTE IS A NECESSARY REMEDY 108 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 367 (Spring, 2018) The harms of mass incarceration do not end when an individual is released from prison. Instead, criminal records haunt approximately 70 million people throughout the United States today. Criminal histories follow persons convicted of crimes for the rest of their lives, creating collateral consequences that make it difficult for these individuals to... 2018
Theanne Liu ETHNIC STUDIES AS ANTISUBORDINATION EDUCATION: A CRITICAL RACE THEORY APPROACH TO EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION REMEDIES 11 Washington University Jurisprudence Review 165 (2018) This Note will use a critical race theory lens to argue that most trainings on equal employment opportunity (EEO), diversity, or implicit bias operate as a restrictive remedy to Title VII race discrimination violations, and that incorporating an ethnic studies framework into these trainings can further an expansive view of antidiscrimination law.... 2018
Margaux Joselow MAYHEW v. TOWN OF SMYRNA: THE SIXTH CIRCUIT FRUSTRATES PUBLIC EMPLOYEES' RIGHT TO A JURY TRIAL 59 Boston College Law Review E-Supplement 83 (March 19, 2018) On May 11, 2017, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit, in Mayhew v. Town of Smyrna, held that the protected status of a public employee's speech in a First Amendment retaliation claim remains one of law, rather than one of mixed law and fact. In so doing, the Sixth Circuit disallowed jury determinations on the fact-intensive... 2018
Vicki Schultz OPEN STATEMENT ON SEXUAL HARASSMENT FROM EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION LAW SCHOLARS 71 Stanford Law Review Online 17 (June, 2018) For Law Professors Rachel Arnow-Richman, Ian Ayres, Susan Bisom-Rapp, Tristin Green, Rebecca Lee, Ann McGinley, Angela Onwuachi-Willig, Nicole Porter, Vicki Schultz, and Brian Soucek We, the undersigned legal scholars and educators with expertise in employment discrimination law, seek to offer a new vision and agenda for eliminating sexual... 2018
Michael Pego THE DELUSION OF AMATEURISM IN COLLEGE SPORTS: WHY SCHOLARSHIP STUDENT ATHLETES ARE DESTINED TO BE CONSIDERED "EMPLOYEES" UNDER THE NLRA 13 FIU Law Review 277 (Fall, 2018) I tend to be more worried about college players than NFL players in the sense that the NFL players have a union . and most of them are well-compensated for the violence they do to their bodies. You read some of these stories about college players who undergo some of these same problems with concussions and so forth and then have nothing to fall... 2018
Ruqaiijah Yearby THE IMPACT OF STRUCTURAL RACISM IN EMPLOYMENT AND WAGES ON MINORITY WOMEN'S HEALTH 43 Human Rights 21 (2018) In 2010, at the end of the great recession that disproportionately harmed racial minorities and women, the federal government recognized that health disparities are caused by the social determinants of health (SDOH) (Figure 1), which are outside an individual's control. (Sec'y's Advisory Comm, on Nat'l Health Promotion & Disease Prevention... 2018
Emily Gold Waldman THE PREFERRED PREFERENCES IN EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION LAW 97 North Carolina Law Review 91 (December, 2018) In theory, customer preferences cannot justify discriminatory treatment by employers. The reality is more complicated. Built into the structure of federal employment discrimination law are several openings for customer preferences to provide employer defenses to what would otherwise likely be actionable discrimination. This Article explores when... 2018
Ryan H. Vann , Melissa A. Logan THE TENSION BETWEEN THE NLRA, THE EEOC, AND OTHER FEDERAL AND STATE EMPLOYMENT LAWS: THE MANAGEMENT PERSPECTIVE 33 ABA Journal of Labor & Employment Law 291 (Fall, 2018) Public opinion relating to workplace harassment has undergone a dramatic revolution in the past year. Rarely a day passes without news of a high-profile harassment allegation. Employers have responded to the demands of the public and their employees by erring on the side of assuring more reporting options, swifter and more thorough investigations,... 2018
Manuel Quinto-Pozos THE TENSION BETWEEN THE NLRA, THE EEOC, AND OTHER FEDERAL AND STATE EMPLOYMENT LAWS: THE UNION PERSPECTIVE 33 ABA Journal of Labor & Employment Law 277 (Fall, 2018) Many labor and employment lawyers have encountered circumstances presenting tensions between employees' National Labor Relations Act (NLRA or Act) Section 7 rights and another law. The other law often raises the specter of employer liability to additional employees, individuals, or entities. Here are some examples: While picketing outside the... 2018
Jeffrey Selbin, Justin McCrary, Joshua Epstein UNMARKED? CRIMINAL RECORD CLEARING AND EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES 108 Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 1 (Winter, 2018) An estimated one in three American adults has a criminal record. While some records are for serious offenses, most are for arrests or relatively low-level misdemeanors. In an era of heightened security concerns, easily available data, and increased criminal background checks, these records act as a substantial barrier to gainful employment and... 2018
Dallan F. Flake WHEN SHOULD EMPLOYERS BE LIABLE FOR FACTORING BIASED CUSTOMER FEEDBACK INTO EMPLOYMENT DECISIONS? 102 Minnesota Law Review 2169 (May, 2018) Following a checkup at the local medical clinic, Mark stops by the reception desk to fill out an anonymous survey about his visit in exchange for ten dollars off his bill. Mark skims the questionnaire, rates his doctor, Melanie Flowers, mostly threes (out of five), and is on his way. When the clinic is forced to lay off one of its doctors two... 2018
Tyler Sherman ALL EMPLOYERS MUST WASH THEIR SPEECH BEFORE RETURNING TO WORK: THE FIRST AMENDMENT & COMPELLED USE OF EMPLOYEES' PREFERRED GENDER PRONOUNS 26 William & Mary Bill of Rights Journal 219 (October, 2017) Under an ordinary gloss, it is easy to limit the First Amendment's Free Speech Clause to its black-letter text. Taken purely at face value, the Free Speech Clause only prohibits the government from making laws abridging the freedom of speech. The text makes no other direct mention of speech rights, guarantees, or proscriptions. However, the First... 2017
Ariela Rutbeck-Goldman AN "UNFAIR AND CRUEL WEAPON": CONSEQUENCES OF MODERN-DAY POLYGRAPH USE IN FEDERAL PRE-EMPLOYMENT SCREENING 7 UC Irvine Law Review 715 (December, 2017) I. Doug Williams's Case and Its Precedents. 718 II. Background of Polygraph Technology and Its Use in Employment. 722 A. Polygraph Background and Basics. 722 B. Banning the Test for Employment Screening. 725 1. Background of the Ban: Unreliability. 725 2. The Federal Government's Exemption in the EPPA. 726 3. Specific Issues in Expansion to CBP.... 2017
Deborah Dinner BEYOND "BEST PRACTICES": EMPLOYMENT-DISCRIMINATION LAW IN THE NEOLIBERAL ERA 92 Indiana Law Journal 1059 (Summer, 2017) Why does U.S. legal culture tolerate unprecedented economic inequality even as it valorizes social equality along identity lines? This Article takes a significant step toward answering this question by examining the relationship between U.S. employment-discrimination law and neoliberalism. It shows that the rise of antidiscrimination ideals in the... 2017
Rebecca J. Wilson , Kiley M. Belliveau , Leigh Ellen Gray BUSTING THE BLACK BOX: BIG DATA, EMPLOYMENT AND PRIVACY 84 Defense Counsel Journal 1 (July, 2017) We live in an era of big data. Our increasing reliance on digital communication coupled with the technological ability to capture, collect, and analyze ever-growing volumes of data has led to the application of predictive analytics techniques to many of the most important facets of our lives, including healthcare, education, and employment. The... 2017
Andrew T. Williamson CLEARLY UNFAIR: MCCLEARY-EVANS AND THE PROBLEMS ASSOCIATED WITH PLEADING AN EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION CASE 11 Charleston Law Review 270 (Winter, 2017) I. INTRODUCTION. 271 II. A SUMMARY OF THE CASE. 273 A. Factual Summary. 273 B. Procedural Summary. 274 III. THE EVOLUTION OF THE FEDERAL CIVIL PLEADING STANDARD. 276 A. The Birth of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure--Common Law to Code Pleading. 276 B. The Era of Notice Pleading. 279 1. Conley v. Gibson: No Set of Facts. 279 2. McDonnell... 2017
Einat Albin CUSTOMER DOMINATION AT WORK: A NEW PARADIGM FOR THE SEXUAL HARASSMENT OF EMPLOYEES BY CUSTOMERS 24 Michigan Journal of Gender & Law 167 (2017) This Article introduces a novel legal paradigm--customer domination at work--to address the sexual harassment of employees by customers. This new approach challenges the prevailing paradigm, which focuses on the employer-employee binary relationship. I show how, under current Title VII law, the prevailing paradigm leads to a weaker form of employer... 2017
Laura Beth Nielsen , Ellen C. Berrey , Robert L. Nelson DIGNITY AND DISCRIMINATION: EMPLOYMENT CIVIL RIGHTS IN THE WORKPLACE AND IN COURTS 92 Chicago-Kent Law Review 1185 (2017) Gerry Handley (plaintiff): They would like always bring up these racial conversations and make these racial jokes . I'd just ignore them. I wouldn't laugh or I wouldn't listen in .. They started talking about incest, and they started talking about blacks from slavery time, you know, they bred them and sold them, and they inbred them down in the... 2017
Matthew Bottoms EMPLOYER BEWARE: CHANGING THE LANDSCAPE OF EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION CLAIMS AT THE SUMMARY JUDGMENT STAGE 68 Mercer Law Review 1145 (Summer, 2017) In Quigg v. Thomas County School District, the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit changed the summary judgment framework for mixed-motive employment discrimination cases. The ruling in Quigg will affect both employers and employees and will lead to more mixed-motive discrimination claims reaching the jury, rather than being... 2017
Dallan F. Flake EMPLOYER LIABILITY FOR NON-EMPLOYEE DISCRIMINATION 58 Boston College Law Review 1169 (September, 2017) Introduction. 1170 I. The Growth of Non-employee Discrimination. 1176 A. The Service Economy. 1176 B. Growing Organizational Complexity. 1178 II. Manifestations of Non-employee Discrimination. 1181 A. Conscious Discrimination. 1182 1. Direct Discrimination. 1182 2. Indirect Discrimination. 1183 B. Unconscious Discrimination. 1186 1. Direct... 2017
Laura T. Kessler EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION AND THE DOMINO EFFECT 44 Florida State University Law Review 1041 (Spring, 2017) Employment discrimination is a multidimensional problem. In many instances, some combination of employer bias, the organization of work, and employees' responses to these conditions, leads to worker inequality. Title VII does not sufficiently account for these dynamics in two significant respects. First, Title VII's major proof structures divide... 2017
Lucy Gubernick ERASING THE MARK OF CAIN: AN EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS OF THE EFFECT OF BAN-THE-BOX LEGISLATION ON THE EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES OF PEOPLE OF COLOR WITH CRIMINAL RECORDS 44 Fordham Urban Law Journal 1153 (August, 2017) Criminals, it turns out, are the one social group in America we have permission to hate. --Michelle Alexander C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 1154 I. Why Are Governments Banning the Box?. 1157 A. Criminal Records in the Labor Market. 1157 II. The Negative Credential and Race. 1164 A. The Legal History That Gave Rise to the Need for States to... 2017
Ryan J. Blackney EXECUTIVE ORDERS, TITLE VII & LGBT EMPLOYEES: MAKING THE CASE FOR FURTHER UNILATERAL ACTION 51 University of San Francisco Law Review 313 (2017) Executive orders are a historically rich phenomenon and extend as far back as George Washington. While executive orders are not expressly enumerated under the Constitution, the chief executive has traditionally relied on them for a variety of purposes. Since 1789, American presidents have used executive orders in some form to implement foreign... 2017
Harvey L. Fiser , Patrick D. Hopkins GETTING INSIDE THE EMPLOYEE'S HEAD: NEUROSCIENCE, NEGLIGENT EMPLOYMENT LIABILITY, AND THE PUSH AND PULL FOR NEW TECHNOLOGY 23 Boston University Journal of Science and Technology Law 44 (Winter, 2017) Two months ago, Jack was hired by ThreeSheets Brewery, Inc. as a driver. His job was to load, transport, and unload beer from a central production and distribution center to numerous restaurants, convenience stores, and bars within a 200-mile area--a job where he would be constantly exposed to alcohol and often encouraged to try new flavors. He had... 2017
Camille A. Olson, Gina R. Merrill, Kaitlyn F. Whiteside, Needhy Shah IMPLICIT BIAS THEORY IN EMPLOYMENT LITIGATION 63 Practical Lawyer 37 (October 1, 2017) The term implicit bias is commonly used to refer to ingrained beliefs, whether positive or negative, about other individuals or groups that are triggered automatically. These beliefs are not conscious thoughts but rather represent reflexive reactions at the unconscious level. The developers of the theory, social psychologists Anthony Greenwald... 2017
David L. Hudson Jr. PUBLIC EMPLOYEES, PRIVATE SPEECH 103-MAY ABA Journal 48 (May, 2017) High-profile controversies over police shootings, questionable promotions, racial profiling, attacks on law enforcement and race-based incidents have led to an increase in public employees being disciplined for publicly posting commentary deemed offensive or incendiary. Public employees have been suspended for all manner of speech--supporting the... 2017
David McElhattan , Laura Beth Nielsen , Jill D. Weinberg RACE AND DETERMINATIONS OF DISCRIMINATION: VIGILANCE, CYNICISM, SKEPTICISM, AND ATTITUDES ABOUT LEGAL MOBILIZATION IN EMPLOYMENT CIVIL RIGHTS 51 Law and Society Review 669 (September, 2017) What factors affect whether ordinary citizens believe that workplace decisions involving African-American employees rise to the level of discrimination? When do observers believe targets of possible race discrimination should consider mobilizing the law? We use a factorial design vignette study administered to a nationally representative sample of... 2017
Elaine Luthens RACIAL DISCRIMINATION OR VALID BUSINESS JUDGMENTS?: EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION AND THE BUSINESS JUDGMENT RULE 20 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 381 (Spring, 2017) I. Introduction. 381 II. Background. 382 A. Employment Discrimination Statutes. 382 1. Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. 383 2. The Equal Pay Act. 383 3. The Americans with Disabilities Act. 384 4. The Age Discrimination in Employment Act. 384 5. State Statutes. 385 B. The McDonnell Douglas Burden-Shifting Scheme. 385 C. The Business... 2017
Katherine E. Leung RACIAL IDENTITY PERFORMANCE AND EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION LAW 24 Virginia Journal of Social Policy and the Law 57 (Winter, 2017) Introduction. 58 I. Framing Racial Identity Performance Protection. 59 A. Critical Framework. 59 B. The Development of Modern Disparate Impact Theory. 61 II. History of Identity Performance Protections Under Title VII. 63 A. The Evolution of Sex Discrimination Under Title VII. 63 B. Protecting Religious Identity Performance. 66 Before and After... 2017
Matthew W. Green Jr. SAME-SEX SEX AND IMMUTABLE TRAITS: WHY OBERGEFELL v. HODGES CLEARS A PATH TO PROTECTING GAY AND LESBIAN EMPLOYEES FROM WORKPLACE DISCRIMINATION UNDER TITLE VII 20 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 1 (February, 2017) The plaintiffs also state that, by treating their marriages as if they did not exist, the state . encourages private citizens to deny their marriages and exposes them to discrimination in their daily lives. I. Introduction. 2 II. Same-Sex Sex and Immutable Traits. 7 A. Lawrence, Obergefell, and Same-Sex Sex. 8 1. Due Process and Fundamental Rights.... 2017
Randall John Bunnell SUMMARY JUDGMENT PRINCIPLES IN LIGHT OF TOLAN v. COTTON: EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION IMPLICATIONS IN THE FIFTH CIRCUIT 63 Loyola Law Review 77 (Spring, 2017) INTRODUCTION. 77 I. THE FRAMEWORK AND ITS ARENA. 79 A. The Framework. 80 1. The Establishment of the McDonnell Douglas Framework. 80 2. Proving Pretext. 82 3. Variations on a Theme: Views of Pretext. 84 4. The Fifth Circuit Post-Reeves. 87 B. The Arena. 89 1. A Brief History of Summary Judgment. 89 2. The Summary Judgment Trilogy. 90 3. Recent... 2017
Matthew T. Bodie THE BEST WAY OUT IS ALWAYS THROUGH: CHANGING THE EMPLOYMENT AT-WILL DEFAULT RULE TO PROTECT PERSONAL AUTONOMY 2017 University of Illinois Law Review 223 (2017) Employment at-will is the default rule of termination for the vast majority of American employment relationships. The rule creates a presumption--a strong one--that the contract for employment allows either party to terminate the contract at any point in time. Since its inception, this bright-line rule has given way to carefully curated exceptions,... 2017
Benjamin D. Geffen THE COLLATERAL CONSEQUENCES OF ACQUITTAL: EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION ON THE BASIS OF ARRESTS WITHOUT CONVICTIONS 20 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 81 (2017) Lawmakers, advocates, and scholars have trained a great deal of attention on the collateral consequences of criminal convictions, particularly the effects of conviction on employment. This article focuses on an overlooked problem: employers' widespread use of non-convictions, including acquittals, to reject job applicants or fire employees. Using... 2017
Alexander M. Nourafshan THE NEW EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION: INTRA-LGBT INTERSECTIONAL INVISIBILITY AND THE MARGINALIZATION OF MINORITY SUBCLASSES IN ANTIDISCRIMINATION LAW 24 Duke Journal of Gender Law & Policy 107 (Spring, 2017) I. Introduction. 108 II. The Roots of Intersectional Invisibility. 111 A. The Single-Axis Framework in Employment Discrimination Law. 111 B. Judicial Responses to Intersectional Claims. 115 III. LGBT Intersectionality. 120 A. LGBT Workplace Discrimination. 122 B. The Precariousness of Intersectional LGBT Claims. 126 C. Intra-LGBT Intersectionality.... 2017
Deborah L. Brake THE SHIFTING SANDS OF EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION: FROM UNJUSTIFIED IMPACT TO DISPARATE TREATMENT IN PREGNANCY AND PAY 105 Georgetown Law Journal 559 (March, 2017) C1-3Table of Contents L1-2Introduction . L3560 I. A Brief Overview of Employment Discrimination Law: The Tyranny of the Proof Frameworks and the Judiciary's Narrow View of Discriminatory Intent. 563 A. TRACING THE IMPACT AND TREATMENT DIVIDE AND THEIR SEPARATE PROOF FRAMEWORKS. 564 B. THE MEANING OF DISCRIMINATORY INTENT: WHAT COURTS HAVE IN MIND.... 2017
Maurice Wexler THE SURVIVAL OF THE INTENTIONALITY DOCTRINE IN EMPLOYMENT LAW: TO BE OR NOT TO BE? 47 University of Memphis Law Review 699 (Spring, 2017) I. Introduction. 700 II. Challenging the Intentionality Doctrine. 701 II. The Long and Short of Implicit Bias. 704 III. Old Fashioned Stereotyping and the Intentionality Doctrine: Their Genesis and Survival. 705 A. One Hundred Fifty Years and Then Some of Explicit Racial Discrimination and Stereotyping and the Intentionality Doctrine. 706 1. Racial... 2017
Todd R. Wulffson, Emily K. Borman THE WAGE EQUALITY ACT OF 2016: PROMOTING EQUITY OR STUNTING EMPLOYMENT? 59-FEB Orange County Lawyer 32 (February, 2017) Celebrated during the month of February, National African American History Month honors the contributions of African Americans to United States history, and recognizes the continuing struggle of many courageous individuals for fair and equal rights. The call for equality is not limited to African Americans, but encompasses the sacrifice's and... 2017
Nina Kucharczyk THINKING OUTSIDE THE BOX: REFORMING EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION DOCTRINE TO COMBAT THE NEGATIVE CONSEQUENCES OF BAN-THE-BOX LEGISLATION 85 Fordham Law Review 2803 (May, 2017) As part of the larger movement to reform the criminal justice system, legislation has recently been implemented to expand job opportunities for formerly incarcerated individuals as they exit the system. Specifically, ban-the-box laws were passed to reduce widespread employment discrimination that formerly incarcerated individuals encounter by... 2017
Sarah Khanghahi THIRTY YEARS AFTER AL-KHAZRAJI: REVISITING EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION UNDER SECTION 1981 64 UCLA Law Review 794 (March, 2017) Many scholars have written about the racialization process experienced by people of Southwest Asia and North African (SWANA) descent, emphasizing the increased discrimination experienced by those perceived as Middle Eastern or SWANA. There is very little scholarship, however, concentrating specifically on employment discrimination faced by those of... 2017
Susan D. Carle ANGRY EMPLOYEES: REVISITING INSUBORDINATION IN TITLE VII CASES 10 Harvard Law & Policy Review 185 (Winter, 2016) To read federal case law decided under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 --the provision that prohibits employment discrimination on the basis of race, sex, and other characteristics--is to be struck by the continuing racial and sexual hostility in U.S. workplaces today, and also at courts' too frequent unwillingness to address it. Courts... 2016
Shane O'Halloran DOES TITLE VII WORK FOR TEMPS? FAUSH v. TUESDAY MORNING RECONSIDERS THE EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIP 61 Villanova Law Review 653 (2016) And you have all these people say, When are you going to get a real job? I mean, you're going through all the motions of a real job. I mean, you're showing up at a place between eight and five. And technically, you're probably doing as much as anyone else who works there full-time. You know? But you're just sort of this ghost. Matthew Faush was... 2016
Nicholas Larkin EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION: HAVE THE FEDERAL COURTS REACHED A CONSENSUS ON HOW TO INTERPRET TITLE VII CLAIMS ALLEGED BY PLAINTIFFS WHO IDENTIFY AS LESBIAN, GAY, BISEXUAL, OR TRANSGENDER? 6 American University Labor & Employment Law Forum 1 (2016) Discrimination, especially when it occurs in the workplace, is a controversial and complicated subject that society has struggled to overcome for many years. When workplace discrimination is directed towards those who identify as Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, or Transgender (LGBT), employment discrimination becomes even more complex. Employment... 2016
Elizabeth P. Weissert GET OUT OF JAIL FREE? PREVENTING EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION AGAINST PEOPLE WITH CRIMINAL RECORDS USING BAN THE BOX LAWS 164 University of Pennsylvania Law Review 1529 (May, 2016) Introduction. 1530 I. The Problem of Discrimination Against People with Criminal Records in Hiring. 1533 A. The Prevalence and Negative Impacts of Employment Discrimination Against People with Criminal Records. 1533 B. Employers' Motivations for Refusing to Hire Job Applicants with Criminal Records. 1536 II. The Limitations of the Current Legal... 2016
Leora F. Eisenstadt , Jeffrey R. Boles INTENT AND LIABILITY IN EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION 53 American Business Law Journal 607 (Winter 2016) In March 2015, The New Yorker brought a question typically debated by legal scholars firmly into the public consciousness when it published the article, The Ellen Pao Trial: What Do We Mean by Discrimination? The article was prompted by an employment discrimination case brought by Ellen Pao, a former junior partner at the Silicon Valley-based... 2016
Shayak Sarkar INTIMATE EMPLOYMENT 39 Harvard Journal of Law & Gender 429 (Summer, 2016) Intimate employees work to facilitate, maintain, and protect our private bodies, moments, and spaces. Amidst such interdependencies, how do we legally balance the interests of employers, including parents and those with physical disabilities, with those of their intimate employees? A national movement for domestic workers' rights unsettles a status... 2016
W. Jonathan Martin II , F. Damon Kitchen , Gary R. Wheeler LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT LAW 67 Mercer Law Review 955 (Summer 2016) This Article surveys the United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit precedent from January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2015. The following is a discussion of those opinions. The United States Supreme Court issued three decisions affecting employment law this survey period. First, in Young v. United Parcel Service, Inc., a divided Supreme... 2016
Lawrence D. Rosenthal NO GOOD DEED GOES UNPUNISHED: THE LACK OF PROTECTION FOR VOLUNTEERS UNDER FEDERAL ANTI-DISCRIMINATION STATUTES 2016 Brigham Young University Law Review 117 (2016) One issue that often arises in cases involving Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (Title VII), the Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA), and the Age Discrimination in Employment Act (ADEA) is whether a particular individual is an employee. There are many reasons why this issue is important. First, only employees can sue under these... 2016
John H. Shannon , Susan A. O'Sullivan-Gavin POST QUON: AN ANALYSIS OF THE EVOLUTION OF NEW MEDIA AND THE EMPLOYMENT RELATIONSHIP 11 Journal of Business & Technology Law 179 (2016) New Media and the employment relationship intersect on several fronts: the initial hiring process, maintenance and termination of an employment relationship, intraoffice communication, contacts with clients and customers, supply chain exchanges, governmental agency relationships, and public relations. In each scenario, both the employer and... 2016
Peter Siegelman PROTECTING THE COMPROMISED WORKER: A CHALLENGE FOR EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION LAW 64 Buffalo Law Review 565 (May, 2016) Only the very best workers are completely satisfactory, and they are not likely to be discriminated against-the cost of discrimination is too great. The law tries to protect average and even below-average workers against being treated more harshly than would be the case if they were of a different race, sex, religion, or national origin, but it has... 2016
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