In a country that protects the plaintiff\u27s right to a day in court, it only seems natural that Sally should have the opportunity to take her cause to the courthouse. But the strong fedral presumption that supports the enforcement of arbitration provisions is like a hammber that pushes plaintiffs like Sally and those if Huffman into the arbitration arena. In Huffman, the Sixth Circuit rescued an employwer from an ambiguous arbitration provision contained in the employer-drafted employment agreement and enforced the arbitration provision as one of the provisions to survive expiration of the contract, even though it was not listed in the survival clause
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
For the greater part of the twentieth century, arbitration has played a large role in resolving disp...
Arbitration is used regularly to settle employment disputes, and federal policy supports these agree...
With the constant increase of employment litigation2 among individuals, unions and companies, the us...
Since the early 1980s, the Supreme Court has espoused a strong preference for arbitration in the emp...
When a new employee skims the pages of her employment contract hurriedly, excited to start her new p...
This Note argues that courts should adopt a narrow reading of the employment contract exception to t...
As support for arbitration clauses began to grow, employers began to include arbitration clauses in ...
In this Article, I argue that arbitration agreements fall somewhere along the middle of the rights/c...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Mandatory arbitration agreements subvert an employee\u27s constitutional right to a judicial forum a...
Through the Civil Rights Act of 1991, Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act, Congress ha...
The friction between the FAA and Title VII arises when an injured employee has signed an arbitration...
First, this note examines the historical interpretations of arbitration agreements under the FAA and...
Employers are increasingly imposing arbitration agreements on their employees as a condition of empl...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
For the greater part of the twentieth century, arbitration has played a large role in resolving disp...
Arbitration is used regularly to settle employment disputes, and federal policy supports these agree...
With the constant increase of employment litigation2 among individuals, unions and companies, the us...
Since the early 1980s, the Supreme Court has espoused a strong preference for arbitration in the emp...
When a new employee skims the pages of her employment contract hurriedly, excited to start her new p...
This Note argues that courts should adopt a narrow reading of the employment contract exception to t...
As support for arbitration clauses began to grow, employers began to include arbitration clauses in ...
In this Article, I argue that arbitration agreements fall somewhere along the middle of the rights/c...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
Mandatory arbitration agreements subvert an employee\u27s constitutional right to a judicial forum a...
Through the Civil Rights Act of 1991, Title VII and the Americans with Disabilities Act, Congress ha...
The friction between the FAA and Title VII arises when an injured employee has signed an arbitration...
First, this note examines the historical interpretations of arbitration agreements under the FAA and...
Employers are increasingly imposing arbitration agreements on their employees as a condition of empl...
Published in cooperation with the American Bar Association Section of Dispute Resolutio
For the greater part of the twentieth century, arbitration has played a large role in resolving disp...
Arbitration is used regularly to settle employment disputes, and federal policy supports these agree...