In this contribution to the University of Louisville Law Review’s Annual Carl A. Warns Labor and Employment Institute issue, I examine the Supreme Court’s labor and employment-related decisions from the October Term 2012 (OT 2012). I argue that the Court’s decisions assisted employers as litigators—as repeat players in the employment dispute resolution system—in two ways. First, the Court established simple contract drafting strategies that employers may use to limit their exposure to employment claims. Second, the Court adopted bright-line interpretations of employment statutes. Both forms of assistance served a formalist interest in what I term “procedural predictability”—enhanced employer predictability and control of both the duration a...
The U.S. Supreme Court\u27s 1996-1997 Term will surely not be remembered among lawyers for its decis...
Two events can serve as bookends for alternative dispute resolution (ADR) in labor and employment la...
Commentators and scholars alike have long worried that mandatory arbitration’s rise as a common meth...
In this contribution to the University of Louisville Law Review’s Annual Carl A. Warns Labor and Emp...
It is longstanding tradition for the Secretary of the ABA\u27s Labor and Employment Law Section to p...
In the 2010-11 term, the U.S. Supreme Court decided nine significant labor and employment cases. Alt...
At the dawn of a new century of Supreme Court workplace law, it seems especially appropriate to offe...
Employment discrimination cases filed during recessions are more likely to settle after filing and l...
This article analyzes the outcomes of employment discrimination lawsuits filed in federal court from...
My review of the Supreme Court\u27s October 2014 Term will focus on cases involving workplace law st...
I set two simple objectives for the article. First, the article will summarize each of the cases. My...
The growing trend toward reliance upon arbitration, rather than judicial adjudication, has resulted ...
The 2009-10 Term at the Supreme Court was a relatively quiet one for labor and employment law. While...
Following a relatively quiet and uneventful 2012 survey period, the United States Supreme Court step...
This Article highlights the more notable labor and employment law decisions by the Supreme Court sin...
The U.S. Supreme Court\u27s 1996-1997 Term will surely not be remembered among lawyers for its decis...
Two events can serve as bookends for alternative dispute resolution (ADR) in labor and employment la...
Commentators and scholars alike have long worried that mandatory arbitration’s rise as a common meth...
In this contribution to the University of Louisville Law Review’s Annual Carl A. Warns Labor and Emp...
It is longstanding tradition for the Secretary of the ABA\u27s Labor and Employment Law Section to p...
In the 2010-11 term, the U.S. Supreme Court decided nine significant labor and employment cases. Alt...
At the dawn of a new century of Supreme Court workplace law, it seems especially appropriate to offe...
Employment discrimination cases filed during recessions are more likely to settle after filing and l...
This article analyzes the outcomes of employment discrimination lawsuits filed in federal court from...
My review of the Supreme Court\u27s October 2014 Term will focus on cases involving workplace law st...
I set two simple objectives for the article. First, the article will summarize each of the cases. My...
The growing trend toward reliance upon arbitration, rather than judicial adjudication, has resulted ...
The 2009-10 Term at the Supreme Court was a relatively quiet one for labor and employment law. While...
Following a relatively quiet and uneventful 2012 survey period, the United States Supreme Court step...
This Article highlights the more notable labor and employment law decisions by the Supreme Court sin...
The U.S. Supreme Court\u27s 1996-1997 Term will surely not be remembered among lawyers for its decis...
Two events can serve as bookends for alternative dispute resolution (ADR) in labor and employment la...
Commentators and scholars alike have long worried that mandatory arbitration’s rise as a common meth...