From fiscal years 2004 through 2008, over 135,000 employees received backpay through NLRB proceedings, mostly based on wrongful discharges. The Labor Board\u27s backpay determination processes are often cumbersome and time-consuming to apply: they effectively invite employers to reduce and delay monetary recoveries and, not coincidentally, they undermine the remaining employees\u27 interest in pursuing unionization and a collective bargaining relationship. The Article first asks to what extent the Board has statutory authority to adjust its approach toward backpay and mitigation. The answer, in short, is more than has previously been understood. Invoking the remedial authority found within section 10(c) and embraced by the Supreme Court in ...
The NLRB entered a back pay order against the employer. Four months later, and before the order was ...
The protection of employee labor rights to organize unions, collectively bargain with employers, and...
This Note will outline the historical trend of favoring an award of the most complete relief possibl...
From fiscal years 2004 through 2008, over 135,000 employees received backpay through NLRB proceeding...
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 provides administrative and judicial remedies for victims ...
The National Labor Relations Board issued a back pay order in favor of the victim of a discriminator...
With the maturing of employment law and litigation, the shift away from class action to individual l...
This Article examines the performance of the NLRB in light of the fiftieth anniversary of the Nation...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
In January 1984 the NLRB, reconstituted by President Reagan\u27s appointees, announced significant c...
The National Labor Relations Board\u27s remedies are the vehicles through which the policies of the ...
Fashion dictates what lawyers argue about, and law professors write about, more than we may care to ...
Having found that the petitioner, by discharging employees for union activities, had engaged in an u...
This article previews the Supreme Court case Hoffman Plastic Compound, Inc., v. NLRB, 535 U.S. 137 (...
This article considers the extent to which the National Labor Relations Board should defer in its pr...
The NLRB entered a back pay order against the employer. Four months later, and before the order was ...
The protection of employee labor rights to organize unions, collectively bargain with employers, and...
This Note will outline the historical trend of favoring an award of the most complete relief possibl...
From fiscal years 2004 through 2008, over 135,000 employees received backpay through NLRB proceeding...
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 provides administrative and judicial remedies for victims ...
The National Labor Relations Board issued a back pay order in favor of the victim of a discriminator...
With the maturing of employment law and litigation, the shift away from class action to individual l...
This Article examines the performance of the NLRB in light of the fiftieth anniversary of the Nation...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
In January 1984 the NLRB, reconstituted by President Reagan\u27s appointees, announced significant c...
The National Labor Relations Board\u27s remedies are the vehicles through which the policies of the ...
Fashion dictates what lawyers argue about, and law professors write about, more than we may care to ...
Having found that the petitioner, by discharging employees for union activities, had engaged in an u...
This article previews the Supreme Court case Hoffman Plastic Compound, Inc., v. NLRB, 535 U.S. 137 (...
This article considers the extent to which the National Labor Relations Board should defer in its pr...
The NLRB entered a back pay order against the employer. Four months later, and before the order was ...
The protection of employee labor rights to organize unions, collectively bargain with employers, and...
This Note will outline the historical trend of favoring an award of the most complete relief possibl...