This Article examines the concept of the independent contractor classification – a characterization at issue in early litigation involving the question of whether particular workers are employees or independent contractors. It describes the early cases arising in transportation, including over-the-road trucking, the taxi-cab industry, and package delivery companies like Federal Express (“FedEx”). The Article takes the position that the concept of flexibility, frequently used by employers to classify or reclassify employees as independent contractors, is a false justification for determining that employees are independent contractors. It also takes the position that engaging in part-time work for numerous employers is consistent with a fi...
“Autonomous” workers include most gig-platform drivers, like those working globally for Uber and Lyf...
Taken effect on January 1st, California’s Assembly Bill 5 (“AB-5”) has created a great deal of contr...
The continuing misclassification of gig workers as independent contractors has been problematic for ...
This Article examines the concept of the independent contractor classification – a characterization ...
This note by Peter Gibbins explores the legal challenges both companies and workers face in the “gig...
Judges are often called upon today to determine whether certain workers are “employees” or “independ...
In recent years, a controversy has erupted over the distinction between employees and independent co...
The gig economy continues to confound courts and workers alike—nowhere more so than when the workers...
This article assesses the extent to which the UK's Supreme Court (UKSC) rulings in Uber and Pimlico ...
Increasingly, companies in the gig-economy utilize independent contractors, rather than traditional ...
For a worker in today\u27s economy, being designated an independent contractor can mean many diffe...
For decades, U.S. labor and employment law has used a binary employment classification system, label...
The notion that large numbers of workers are independent contractors not entitled to unionize or to ...
In litigation against ride-sharing companies Uber and Lyft, former drivers have alleged that they we...
For most people, ordering a ride or a cleaning service over their phone may now seem like a convenie...
“Autonomous” workers include most gig-platform drivers, like those working globally for Uber and Lyf...
Taken effect on January 1st, California’s Assembly Bill 5 (“AB-5”) has created a great deal of contr...
The continuing misclassification of gig workers as independent contractors has been problematic for ...
This Article examines the concept of the independent contractor classification – a characterization ...
This note by Peter Gibbins explores the legal challenges both companies and workers face in the “gig...
Judges are often called upon today to determine whether certain workers are “employees” or “independ...
In recent years, a controversy has erupted over the distinction between employees and independent co...
The gig economy continues to confound courts and workers alike—nowhere more so than when the workers...
This article assesses the extent to which the UK's Supreme Court (UKSC) rulings in Uber and Pimlico ...
Increasingly, companies in the gig-economy utilize independent contractors, rather than traditional ...
For a worker in today\u27s economy, being designated an independent contractor can mean many diffe...
For decades, U.S. labor and employment law has used a binary employment classification system, label...
The notion that large numbers of workers are independent contractors not entitled to unionize or to ...
In litigation against ride-sharing companies Uber and Lyft, former drivers have alleged that they we...
For most people, ordering a ride or a cleaning service over their phone may now seem like a convenie...
“Autonomous” workers include most gig-platform drivers, like those working globally for Uber and Lyf...
Taken effect on January 1st, California’s Assembly Bill 5 (“AB-5”) has created a great deal of contr...
The continuing misclassification of gig workers as independent contractors has been problematic for ...