Author | Title | Citation | Summary | Year |
Mark I. Schickman |
ARE EMPLOYER MINORITY AND GENDER DIVERSITY EFFORTS DEAD? |
49 Human Rights 11 (October, 2023) |
The concept of affirmative action was created by Executive Orders 11246 and 11375, issued by republican President Richard Nixon and Texas Democrat President Lyndon Baines Johnson. Those orders created affirmative action obligations on the part of federal contractors to hire more women and minorities. For a half century, the courts have debated... |
2023 |
Sidney E. Holler |
BRAIDS, LOCS, AND BOSTOCK: TITLE VII'S ELUSIVE PROTECTIONS FOR LGBTQ+ AND BLACK WOMEN EMPLOYEES |
26 Journal of Gender, Race and Justice 223 (Winter, 2023) |
Whiteness and patriarchy frame our understanding of what it means to be and look professional. Workplace grooming and dress standards, inherently rooted in gender and racial stereotypes, often result in policies that place Black women employees at a unique disadvantage, particularly when it comes to hair. Black women who do not conform to... |
2023 |
Anuj Teotia |
CIVIL PROCEDURE--DUKES COMMONALITY STANDARD--FACTORS THAT COURTS SHOULD WEIGH IN EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION CLASS ACTIONS. WAL-MART STORES, INC. v. DUKES, 564 U.S. 338 (2011) |
45 University of Arkansas at Little Rock Law Review 543 (Spring, 2023) |
Class actions are of great importance to our society, not just because they help adjudicate numerous individuals' claims at once but also because defendants can be liable for millions, sometimes even billions, of dollars. To court system observers, class actions can appear out of place in the world of civil lawsuits because they pose certain risks... |
2023 |
Robert Wennagel |
DARK SYSTEMS: REPROGRAMMING ARTIFICIAL INTELLIGENCE REGULATIONS TO PROMOTE FAIRNESS AND EMPLOYMENT NONDISCRIMINATION |
39 Santa Clara High Technology Law Journal 1 (2022-2023) |
Automated decision-making (ADM) systems, whether deploying artificial intelligence, machine learning, or other algorithmic processes, have become ubiquitous in modern life, but their use is often unnoticed or invisible to society at large. Currently no federal laws require notice or disclosure to individuals when an ADM is used to collect their... |
2023 |
Ashton Hessee |
DELAWARE U.S. DISTRICT COURT DISMISSES GAY EMPLOYEE'S CLAIMS OF SEXUAL ORIENTATION DISCRIMINATION |
2023 LGBT Law Notes 10 (March, 2023) |
On February 15, District Judge Richard G. Andrews (D. Delaware) delivered the latest ruling in an employment discrimination suit between Juan Rodriguez, a non-white Hispanic gay man, and his former employer Capital Vision Services, doing business as My Eye Doctor. Rodriguez alleged that his former employer discriminated against him based on sex,... |
2023 |
Keith Cunningham-Parmeter |
DISCRIMINATION BY ALGORITHM: EMPLOYER ACCOUNTABILITY FOR BIASED CUSTOMER REVIEWS |
70 UCLA Law Review 92 (June, 2023) |
From Uber to Home Depot to Starbucks, companies are increasingly asking customers to rate workers. Gathering data from these ratings, many firms utilize algorithms to make employment decisions. The proliferation of customer ratings raises the possibility that some customers may review workers negatively for racist, sexist, or other illegal reasons.... |
2023 |
Marc Chase McAllister |
EMPLOYEE BEWARE: WHY SECRET WORKPLACE RECORDINGS ARE RISKY BUSINESS FOR EMPLOYEES |
106 Marquette Law Review 485 (Spring, 2023) |
This Article examines the risks for employees when secretly recording workplace conversations. Although many employers flatly prohibit employees from secretly recording workplace conversations, case law contains dozens of examples of employees conducting such espionage. In the typical case, employees secretly record conversations to gather evidence... |
2023 |
Hale E. Sheppard, Esq. |
EMPLOYEE RETENTION CREDITS: ANALYZING CONGRESSIONAL AND IRS GUIDANCE |
111 Practical 2 PRAC. Tax Strategies 04 (October, 2023) |
Understanding the Employee Retention Credit (ERC) is a major challenge. This article explores the ERC rules in detail. The U.S. economy is humming along, a major disruption occurs, Congress introduces tax incentives to stabilize matters, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) provides guidance to implement them, some taxpayers exploit voids and... |
2023 |
Hale E. Sheppard, Esq. |
EMPLOYEE RETENTION CREDITS: ANALYZING CONGRESSIONAL AND IRS GUIDANCE FROM START TO FINISH |
139 Journal of Taxation 03 (September, 2023) |
This article, the first in a multi-part series, explores the ERC rules from start to finish. The U.S. economy is humming along, a major disruption occurs, Congress introduces tax incentives to stabilize matters, the Internal Revenue Service (IRS) provides guidance to implement them, some taxpayers exploit voids and ambiguities to their financial... |
2023 |
Hale E. Sheppard, Esq. |
EMPLOYEE RETENTION CREDITS: ANALYZING KEY ISSUES FOR 'PROMOTERS' AND OTHER 'ENABLERS' |
139 Journal of Taxation 15 (November, 2023) |
This article, the third in a series, summarizes the main ERC rules introduced by Congress and the IRS, clarifies the period during which ERC claims will continue, identifies several clues of imminent enforcement actions, and explores a long list of weapons that the IRS likely will utilize, some common, others obscure. It is obvious that the... |
2023 |
Hale E. Sheppard, Esq. |
EMPLOYEE RETENTION CREDITS: ANALYZING KEY ISSUES FOR TAXPAYERS FACING IRS AUDITS |
35 Taxation of Exempts 04 (November/December, 2023) |
This article, the second in a multi-part series, provides a substantive analysis of key issues facing taxpayers claiming ERCs. There are thousands of blogs, articles, comments, advertisements, infomercials and more about the Employee Retention Credit (ERC). Many focus on the benefits of this tax relief measure, strongly encouraging taxpayers to... |
2023 |
Virginia Stevens Crimmins , Mary C. Ambrose-Gerak |
EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION ISSUES FOR THE DISPUTE RESOLUTION PRACTITIONER IN THE COVID-19 ERA |
76 Dispute Resolution Journal 55 (2023) |
There have been as many plagues as wars in history, yet always plagues and wars take people equally by surprise. The COVID-19 pandemic came as a surprise to legal practitioners, as it did to the rest of society. The health challenges continue and, in turn, affect workplaces, employers, and employees who are still struggling to cope and adapt. As... |
2023 |
Cynthia Estlund |
EMPLOYMENT-AT-WILL: TOO SIMPLE FOR A COMPLEX WORLD |
10 Texas A&M Law Review 403 (Spring, 2023) |
For Professor Epstein, the distinctively American rule of employment-at-will (EAW) in its original, harsh form--which allowed either party to terminate employment at any time for good reason, bad reason, or no reason at all--is an exemplar of simple rules for a complex world. This Essay will reflect on a few ways in which EAW, plain and simple,... |
2023 |
Joshua Wood , Jennifer Yee , Hope Kurtela |
FEDERAL EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY LAW |
59-JAN Arizona Attorney 48 (January, 2023) |
In 2022, the world emerged from the height of the pandemic and brought numerous federal court decisions that were instructive to employment law practitioners. Some decisions were victories for employers, and others were victories for employees. Regardless of the outcome, all the opinions continue to shape the landscape of federal EEO jurisprudence.... |
2023 |
Ariel Roddy, PhD , Kaelyn Sanders , Christian Sarver, PhD , Emily Salisbury, PhD |
FINANCIAL MARGINALIZATION, HOUSING ACCESS, TRANSPORTATION, AND EMPLOYMENT: INTERSECTIONAL CONSIDERATIONS IN WOMEN'S REENTRY |
32-SUM Kansas Journal of Law & Public Policy 55 (Summer, 2023) |
The U.S. carceral system has a vast scope that includes close to two million individuals incarcerated in state, local, and federal facilities, as well as immigration detention centers, juvenile facilities, and other carceral institutions. Additionally, three million people are under probation or parole supervision. In particular, women's system... |
2023 |
Jim Stehlin |
FORMER WHISTLEBLOWERS: WHY THE FALSE CLAIMS ACT'S ANTI-RETALIATION PROVISION SHOULD PROTECT FORMER EMPLOYEES |
56 University of Michigan Journal of Law Reform 543 (Winter, 2023) |
Since the Civil War, the False Claims Act has served as a tool to combat fraud perpetrated against the government. Early fraud by government contractors during the Civil War was quaint: contractors selling the same horse twice or filling a Union Army contract for sugar with sand.0 Today, the government recovers billions of dollars annually through... |
2023 |
Andrew Kragie |
FREE SPEECH RIGHTS IN PRIVATE EMPLOYMENT? THE FIRST AMENDMENT, THE PRESENT PATCHWORK, AND A BALANCED IMPROVEMENT |
21 First Amendment Law Review 222 (2023) |
C1-2Table of Contents Introduction. 223 I. For Whatever Reason: The Vulnerability of At-Will Employment. 223 II. The First Amendment for Private Employers, But Not Workers. 228 A. Employers' Speech. 229 B. Compelled Speech. 232 C. Freedom of Association. 233 III. Federal Statutes with Broad Coverage but Narrow Protections. 235 A. National Labor... |
2023 |
Taylor M. Harrington |
HAVE YOUR CAKE AND EAT IT TOO (UNLESS YOU ARE DANNY BROCK): THE IRONY OF MISSOURI'S CO-EMPLOYEE LIABILITY STATUTE |
88 Missouri Law Review 199 (Winter, 2023) |
April 30, 2013, started like any other day for Danny Brock. Like each day before, he woke up, drove to work, and clocked in. A few hours later, he looked down to see his thumb completely detached from his hand, barely hanging on by the skin. When the injury occurred, Brock was following direct orders from his supervisor, Mark Edwards. Citing safety... |
2023 |
Bradford J. Kelley, Lance Casimir |
HIDDEN HEROES: EMPLOYMENT LAW PROTECTIONS FOR MILITARY CAREGIVERS |
15 Drexel Law Review 557 (2023) |
After decades of conflict overseas, military service members are returning home as survivors of tragic injuries from war due to incredible advances in battlefield medicine and combat casualty care. Meanwhile, veterans from past wars and conflicts are also experiencing service-related health issues along with the natural effects of aging. Regardless... |
2023 |
Laura Lee Norris , Eric Goldman |
HOW SANTA CLARA LAW'S "TECH EDGE JD" PROGRAM IMPROVES THE SCHOOL'S ADMISSIONS YIELD, DIVERSITY, & EMPLOYMENT OUTCOMES |
27 Marquette Intellectual Property & Innovation Law Review 21 (Winter, 2023) |
In 2018, Santa Clara Law (SCL) launched an innovative new certificate, Tech Edge JD (TEJD), for JD students who know when they apply to law school that they want to pursue technology law. TEJD students acquire valuable professional skills by completing milestones, not just specific courses, with support from a faculty/staff advisor and two... |
2023 |
Esther G. Lander , Amanda S. McGinn |
IMPACT OF SCOTUS AFFIRMATIVE ACTION RULING ON EMPLOYERS |
406 GPSolo No 74 (November/December, .) |
In Students for Fair Admissions, Inc. v. President and Fellows of Harvard College, No. 20-1199 (U.S. June 29, 2023) (the Harvard Opinion), the U.S. Supreme Court overturned its past precedent and held that the goal of achieving a diverse student body cannot justify using race as a plus factor in college admissions and that doing so violates the... |
2023 |
Alberto R. Salazar V. |
IMPLEMENTING THE NEW PURPOSE OF THE CORPORATION: THE DUTY OF DIRECTORS TO TIE EXECUTIVE PAY TO EMPLOYEES' INTERESTS |
20 Berkeley Business Law Journal 149 (2023) |
The traditional view of executive pay as a financial incentive to enhance firm performance that is often equated with shareholder value maximization has been put into question in the last few years. The rise of the new purpose of the corporation and stakeholder capitalism has put that traditional view under further scrutiny. This article elaborates... |
2023 |
Destiny Peterson |
IN THE THICK OF THICK ACCENTS: EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION AND THE APPALACHIAN ACCENT |
22 Appalachian Journal of Law 1 (2023) |
In the Thick of Thick Accents: Employment Discrimination and the Appalachian Accent explores how courts have misinterpreted Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 to deny Appalachians legal protection remedying employment discrimination. A brief overview of the terminology, constitutional background, and legal framework needed to understand the... |
2023 |
Anna Maria Sicenica |
INCREASING REPRESENTATION: EXPANDING INTERSECTIONAL CLAIMS IN EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION |
61 Duquesne Law Review 341 (Summer, 2023) |
The way we imagine discrimination or disempowerment often is more complicated for people who are subjected to multiple forms of exclusion. The good news is that intersectionality provides us a way to see it. - Kimberlé Williams Crenshaw The trend of globalization has only continued to bring workers from different races, religions, and countries... |
2023 |
Caitlin Taub Gaines |
KEEPING FAIR CHANCE LAWS FAIR: IMPLICATIONS FOR EMPLOYERS AND EMPLOYEES GIVEN THE EXPANSION AND VARIETY OF FAIR CHANCE LAWS IN THE UNITED STATES |
72 Catholic University Law Review 535 (Fall, 2023) |
Jurisdictions around the United States have adopted, and are considering adopting, fair chance laws, also known as ban the box laws, to improve access to employment opportunities for those with criminal histories. For years, individuals with criminal records--approximately one in four U.S. adults--have been disadvantaged when employers heavily... |
2023 |
W. Jonathan Martin II , Patricia-Anne Brownback |
LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT |
74 Mercer Law Review 1479 (Summer, 2023) |
This Article focuses on recent cases concerning federal labor and employment laws. The following is a discussion of those opinions. The Supreme Court of the United States issued one decision directly affecting labor and employment laws in 2022. The Supreme Court garnered the nation's attention with its decision in National Federation of Independent... |
2023 |
Amiel J. Provosty, Secretary-Treasurer, LSBA Labor and Employment Law Section, The Kullman Firm, Ste. 1600, 1100 Poydras St., New Orleans, LA 70163-1600 |
LABOR AND EMPLOYMENT LAW |
70 Louisiana Bar Journal 395 (February/March, 2023) |
In Tesla Inc., 371 NLRB No. 131 (Aug. 29, 2022), available at www.nlrb.gov/case/32-CA-220777, the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB) spelled out a burden-shifting analysis for whether uniform policies violate on their face Section 8(a)(1) of the National Labor Relations Act. The NLRB held that any work rule that requires employees to wear... |
2023 |
Kaitlyn Myles |
MANAGERS ARE PEOPLE, TOO! THE ELEVENTH CIRCUIT'S REJECTION OF THE "MANAGER EXCEPTION" ALLOWS HUMAN RESOURCE AND MANAGERIAL EMPLOYEES TO BRING TITLE VII RETALIATION CLAIMS |
74 Mercer Law Review 1665 (Summer, 2023) |
Human resource (HR) managers undertake important tasks at companies. For example, a company may employ a human resource manager to manage internal issues, such as those affecting lower-level employees. That HR manager may come to the conclusion that a lower-level employee, having faced some discrimination from the company, had their rights... |
2023 |
Laura T. Kessler |
MISCARRIAGE OF JUSTICE: EARLY PREGNANCY LOSS AND THE LIMITS OF U.S. EMPLOYMENT LAW |
108 Cornell Law Review 543 (March, 2023) |
This Article explores judicial responses to miscarriage under federal employment law in the United States. Miscarriage is a common experience. Of confirmed pregnancies, about 15% will end in miscarriage; almost half of all women who have given birth have suffered a miscarriage. Yet, this experience slips through the cracks of every major federal... |
2023 |
Shayak Sarkar |
NEED-BASED EMPLOYMENT |
64 Boston College Law Review 119 (January, 2023) |
Introduction. 120 I. Productivity and Beyond. 127 II. Need-Based Employment in Practice. 131 A. Historical Precedent: Need Through the New Deal's Work Programs. 131 1. Need-Based Employment Before the New Deal. 131 2. Need and the New Deal's Pre-WPA Work Programs. 133 3. Need and the WPA. 135 B. Contemporary Need-Based Employment. 138 1. Federal... |
2023 |
Logan C. Hibbs |
NOT SO CLEAR AND PLAIN: EXPLORING THE CIRCUIT SPLIT ON THE APPLICABILITY OF FEDERAL LABOR & EMPLOYMENT LAWS TO TRIBES |
75 Oklahoma Law Review 905 (Summer, 2023) |
As tribes have increased their economic independence over the last few decades, tribal governments have started to hire more employees than ever before. In Oklahoma alone, tribes employed over 54,000 Indian-and non-Indian workers, and paid out 5.4 billion in wages and benefits to those employees in 2019 And, in Washington, Minnesota, and Idaho,... |
2023 |
Hannah E. Wissler |
OVERLOOKED AND UNDERVALUED: EX-OFFENDERS IN THE EMPLOYMENT MARKET |
37 ABA Journal of Labor & Employment Law 93 (2023) |
Let's think about a hypothetical for a moment: Joe is a thirty-five-year-old man with a finance degree looking for work. Unfortunately, Joe is having trouble finding employment because he has a felony conviction. When Joe was twenty-eight, he accidentally hit and killed a small child after the child ran out from behind a truck and into the street.... |
2023 |
Meghan Golden |
PIERCING THE MINISTERIAL EXCEPTION: AN ENDEAVOR TO HOLD RELIGIOUS EMPLOYERS ACCOUNTABLE FOR HARASSING BEHAVIOR |
56 UIC Law Review 73 (Spring, 2023) |
I. Introduction. 74 II. Background. 77 A. Religious Liberty at the Federal Level. 78 B. Religious Liberty in the Employment Context. 81 C. Judicial Creation and Development of the Ministerial Exception. 84 D. Supreme Court Endorsement of the Ministerial Exception. 86 E. Ministerial Exception & Hostile Work Environment Claims. 89 F. The Adjudication... |
2023 |
Weyman Johnson, Kailyn G. Coots, Alexander Edmonds |
PRIVATIZATION OF EMPLOYMENT CLAIMS: PERHAPS A HYBRID APPROACH WILL FREE AMERICAN SOCIETY FROM THE EPIC TRAP THE SUPREME COURT HAS SPRUNG WITHOUT FORFEITING ALL ADVANTAGES OF ARBITRATION |
14 William & Mary Business Law Review 353 (February, 2023) |
Mandatory individual arbitration, as a condition of employment, binds many U.S. employees after the Supreme Court's 2018 decision in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis. In effect, fundamental employment protections--such as relief under current anti-discrimination statutes--are privatized. Now, only a legislative fix will break those bonds. Congress and... |
2023 |
Michael E. Rosman |
PUBLIC EMPLOYEE SPEECH AND THE HECKLER'S VETO: IS THERE A WAY AROUND IT? |
50 Rutgers Law Record 278 (2023) |
The law that governs public employee speech has engendered some serious criticism. Public employers can impose adverse employment actions (suspensions, firings, denying raises or promotions) for much speech that would be protected by the First Amendment from any action the government might take as a sovereign (fines, jail, etc.). Most... |
2023 |
Kate Bally, Adam D. Fuller, Daniel Furshpan, Roscoe Mutz |
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN EMPLOYMENT AND LABOR LAW |
58 Tort Trial & Insurance Practice Law Journal 283 (Summer, 2023) |
I. Introduction. 284 II. Show Me the Money: The Rise of Pay Disclosure Laws. 284 A. Gender and Racial Pay Gaps. 285 B. Initiatives to Date. 286 C. Pay Disclosure Laws. 286 1. State Law. 287 2. Local Law. 287 D. Conclusion. 288 III. The Crown Act: A Potential Solution to a Hairy Discrimination Issue. 289 A. History of the CROWN Act. 289 B. Current... |
2023 |
Evan Dandrea |
RECLAIMING RIGHTS: COMBATTING EMPLOYEE-SIDED LABOR & EMPLOYMENT LEGAL ACCESSIBILITY ISSUES FOR THE NEW WORKING CLASS THROUGH UNIONIZATION |
28 Roger Williams University Law Review 229 (Spring, 2023) |
A source of pride for the United States lies in the notion of maintaining equitable access to its justice system, regardless of a litigant's social or economic status: From the very beginning, our state and national constitutions and laws have laid great emphasis on procedural and substantive safeguards designed to assure fair trials before... |
2023 |
Bill Ong Hing |
RESISTING EMPLOYER SANCTIONS: A STRATEGY FOR CIVIL DISOBEDIENCE |
33 Berkeley La Raza Law Journal 37 (2023) |
The Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program is on a death march in the federal courts. Ending DACA would mean that 600,000 individuals would lose their work permits. That means that about 22,000 DACA recipients would lose employment authorization every month for two years, roughly 1,000 per business day. The Development, Relief, and... |
2023 |
Andrew Thompson |
SHORTENED LIMITATION PERIODS IN EMPLOYMENT CONTRACTS: A "REASONABLE" SUGGESTION |
73 Case Western Reserve Law Review 951 (Spring, 2023) |
C1-2Contents Introduction. 951 I. The Judicial Approach to Contractual Limitation Periods. 956 A. Reasonableness. 956 1. General and Specific Reasonableness. 956 2. Reasonableness as Balancing Interests. 960 B. Other Approaches. 964 II. Alternative Approaches to Enforcement of Provisions in Employment Contracts. 966 A. Covenants Not to Compete. 966... |
2023 |
Anne E. Collier , Mary E. Vandenack |
THE ACTUALIZED WORKPLACE |
493 Law No. Practice 32 (May/June, 2023) |
Much is written about the need for effective leadership and management. Overwhelmingly, people focus on the importance of leaders establishing culture. Without the tactical work of managers, however, the envisioned culture as a truly lived experience is missing. This article explores effective management skills for a positive, healthy, actualized... |
2023 |
Ofer Raban |
THE FREE SPEECH OF PUBLIC EMPLOYEES AT A TIME OF POLITICAL POLARIZATION: CLARIFYING THE PICKERING BALANCING TEST |
60 Houston Law Review 653 (Winter, 2023) |
The First Amendment restricts the ability of government employers to punish public employees for their speech. The governing constitutional standard, known as the Pickering test, is a flexible balancing inquiry pitting the interests of the government as an employer against the free speech interests of their employees. But this seemingly simple... |
2023 |
Kathryn M. Capizzi |
THE HAZY EMPLOYMENT PROTECTIONS FOR MEDICAL MARIJUANA USERS IN THE PENNSYLVANIA MEDICAL MARIJUANA ACT |
26 University of Pennsylvania Journal of Law and Social Change 425 (2023) |
INTRODUCTION. 426 I. ROLLING IT OUT: CONTEMPORARY FEDERAL AND STATE LEGISLATION OF MEDICAL MARIJUANA. 428 A. Federal Legislative History Regulating Marijuana Use. 429 1. The Controlled Substances Act (CSA). 429 2. Food, Drug, and Cosmetics Act (FDCA). 431 3. Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA). 431 4. Supreme Court Precedent: Gonzales v.... |
2023 |
Robert S. Mantell |
THE MISUSE OF THE BUSINESS JUDGMENT RULE IN EMPLOYMENT DISCRIMINATION CASES |
37 ABA Journal of Labor & Employment Law 53 (2023) |
Employees alleging discrimination sometimes argue that an employer's justification for an adverse action is so irrational that a jury could find such explanation to be pretext. In response to such arguments, the courts respond in a varying and highly contradictory fashion. On the one hand, some courts assert that a factfinder is free to infer that... |
2023 |
Nicholas J. Grandpre |
THE PRIMACY OF FREE EXERCISE IN PUBLIC-EMPLOYEE RELIGIOUS SPEECH |
98 Notre Dame Law Review 1767 (May, 2023) |
Last Term, the Court decided Kennedy v. Bremerton School District. The decision, in which the Court finally overruled Lemon v. Kurtzman, elicited significant commentary. Critics chastised the Court for playing fast and loose with the facts and inviting the reintroduction of prayer in public schools--thus further eroding the separation of church and... |
2023 |
Anshul Prakash , Deeksha Malik , Sana Sarosh , Partner, Khaitan & Co, Senior Associate, Khaitan & Co, Associate, Khaitan & Co |
TOP 10 STRATEGIES FOR EMPLOYERS IN INDIA TO MITIGATE THE RISK OF DISCRIMINATION CLAIMS |
2/14/2023 ACC Docket 1 (2/14/2023) |
Banner artwork by Hyejin Kang / shutterstock.com Indian laws have set protections for certain categories of employees against discrimination in the workplace. Employers should have or put in place redressal mechanisms to address discrimination claims and train their personnel. Employers should also ensure they have a defensible process for... |
2023 |
Megan E. Bowling |
TURN UP THE VOLUME: THE CONNICK PICKERING TEST AS A REMEDY FOR QUIET QUITTING AND THE COVID-19 PANDEMIC'S IMPACT ON CRITICAL PRIVATE EMPLOYMENT ISSUES |
92 University of Cincinnati Law Review 172 (10/20/2023) |
In the twentieth century, a shift in American jurisprudence led to the formation of regulations and structures that benefit and protect the American workforce. For those working in the public sector, a line of Supreme Court cases laid a foundation defining their speech protections. Though these cases impacted private sector speech protections, they... |
2023 |
Chacity C. Simmons |
WHY HE DIDN'T GET THE JOB: THE EVOLUTION OF EMPLOYMENT POLICY ISSUES AFFECTING INDIVIDUALS WITH CRIMINAL RECORDS |
50 Southern University Law Review 85 (Spring, 2023) |
This article will address developments--some recent and some not so recent-- which have helped protect African Americans in connection with their efforts to obtain employment. Specifically, this article will include a focus on some of those developments related to individuals seeking employment who have had interactions with a criminal justice... |
2023 |
Alicia Jessop, Esq. |
WINNING INCENTIVES: PROPOSED AMENDMENTS TO TITLE VII OF THE CIVIL RIGHTS ACT AND EQUAL EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITY ACT TO FOSTER DIVERSE WORKPLACE HIRING AND PROMOTION |
91 UMKC Law Review 775 (Summer, 2023) |
When it comes to workplace discrimination, the American sport industry presents a unique dichotomy. The racial and gender imbalances found in the make-up of professional teams' rosters versus their C-suites depict the hiring and promotion disparities persistent in the American workplace. Yet, because of its widespread visibility and rare ability to... |
2023 |
Sarah A. Schade |
"THE STAKES OF EMPLOYMENT:" THE IMPORTANCE OF AMENDING THE ELLIOTT-LARSEN CIVIL RIGHTS ACT TO INCLUDE INDEPENDENT CONTRACTORS |
67 Wayne Law Review 601 (Spring, 2022) |
I. Introduction. 602 II. Background. 605 A. Classification of Workers as Employees or Independent Contractors. 605 1. Classification Tests. 606 a. Common Law Control Test. 606 b. Economic Realities Test. 607 c. Hybrid Test. 608 d. ABC Test. 608 2. The Problem of Misclassification. 609 3. Difficulties in Classification in the Gig Economy. 610 B.... |
2022 |
Sebastian O. Ross |
A "HISTORIC WESTSIDE" STORY: LAS VEGAS BLACK HISTORY, GAMING POLICY EFFECTS ON BLACK EMPLOYMENT, AND GAMING COMPANIES LEAVING MONEY ON THE TABLE |
12 UNLV Gaming Law Journal 287 (Spring, 2022) |
Imagine yourself as a pop-cultural music icon, with generational talent propelling you into a social class in which many others from your background could not imagine themselves in. Your talent commands societal influence over entertainment, politics, and culture. Ultimately, your intangibles and hard work land you a contract performing on the Las... |
2022 |