My earlier article in this journal, Wage Discrimination, Job Segregation, and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, advanced the theory that the same discriminatory factors which lead to job segregation are also likely to be responsible for wage differentials between segregated jobs. The discriminatorily depressed wage rate of the segregated job is therefore one of the adverse effects under Griggs v. Duke Power Co. of job segregation. In order to establish a prima facie case of wage discrimination in a Title VII action, plaintiffs must show the fact of job segregation - that the jobs were identified as minority or female - and that the wages in the segregated jobs occupied the low end of the employer\u27s wage scale. In a subsequent...
County of Washington v. Gunther was decided by the Supreme Court over five years ago. In that case, ...
The protected class approach to employment discrimination has not solved the problem of discriminati...
This Symposium helps to explain that comparable worth is merely a euphemism for garden variety dis...
My earlier article in this journal, Wage Discrimination, Job Segregation, and Title VII of the Civil...
It is the thesis of this article that job segregation and wage discrimination are not separate probl...
Our article focuses primarily on one legal question: Does the wage discrimination theory, as sketche...
The thesis of this Article is that wage discrimination can be remedied by the federal courts through...
More than twenty-five years after the enactment of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Am...
This Comment contends that the Court\u27s holding in Ledbetter marks a substantial deviation from th...
Four years have elapsed since the enactment of federal fair employment practice legislation banning ...
There is substantial racial and gender disparity in the American economy. As we will demonstrate, di...
This article initially examines the traditional theories of proof in Title VII cases. It then discus...
Last term the Supreme Court handed down three decisions in which it defined with some precision the ...
When the United States Commission on Civil Rights completed its recent study of discrimination in em...
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 sets forth certain broad prohibitions of discrimination ag...
County of Washington v. Gunther was decided by the Supreme Court over five years ago. In that case, ...
The protected class approach to employment discrimination has not solved the problem of discriminati...
This Symposium helps to explain that comparable worth is merely a euphemism for garden variety dis...
My earlier article in this journal, Wage Discrimination, Job Segregation, and Title VII of the Civil...
It is the thesis of this article that job segregation and wage discrimination are not separate probl...
Our article focuses primarily on one legal question: Does the wage discrimination theory, as sketche...
The thesis of this Article is that wage discrimination can be remedied by the federal courts through...
More than twenty-five years after the enactment of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, the Am...
This Comment contends that the Court\u27s holding in Ledbetter marks a substantial deviation from th...
Four years have elapsed since the enactment of federal fair employment practice legislation banning ...
There is substantial racial and gender disparity in the American economy. As we will demonstrate, di...
This article initially examines the traditional theories of proof in Title VII cases. It then discus...
Last term the Supreme Court handed down three decisions in which it defined with some precision the ...
When the United States Commission on Civil Rights completed its recent study of discrimination in em...
Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 sets forth certain broad prohibitions of discrimination ag...
County of Washington v. Gunther was decided by the Supreme Court over five years ago. In that case, ...
The protected class approach to employment discrimination has not solved the problem of discriminati...
This Symposium helps to explain that comparable worth is merely a euphemism for garden variety dis...