This Article takes a comprehensive look at retaliation and its place in discrimination law. The Article begins by examining current social science literature to understand how retaliation operates as a social practice to silence challenges to discrimination and preserve inequality. Then, using the recent controversy over whether to imply a private right of action for retaliation from a general ban on discrimination as a launching point, the Article theorizes the connections between retaliation and discrimination as legal constructs, and contends that retaliation should be viewed as a species of intentional discrimination. The Article argues that situating retaliation as a practice that is implicitly encompassed by a ban on discrimination pu...
This Article takes a comprehensive look at the failure of Title VII as a system for claiming nondisc...
This Article argues that the “reasonableness” requirement of Title VII should be rejected. Under thi...
Many employers were shocked and alarmed when the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2006 unanimously establi...
This Article takes a comprehensive look at retaliation and its place in discrimination law. The Arti...
This Article examines how the prevalence of internal policies and complaint procedures for addressin...
When a worker complains about discrimination, federal law is supposed to protect that worker from la...
According to the U.S. Supreme Court, the rising number of workplace retaliation claims is a problem,...
In the UK and the United States, anti-discrimination law prohibits disparate treatment and disparate...
Retaliation toward employees who report illegal discrimination and/or unethical practices in the wor...
Retaliation, the fastest growing cause of action in discrimination law, has gained considerable atte...
Recently, the federal circuit courts of appeal have divided in addressing to what extent either Titl...
When an LGBT employee is punished for complaining about discrimination in the workplace, he or she h...
Title VII theoretically provides virtually unlimited protection from retaliation for one kind of wor...
In the 1970s, federal courts began identifying categories of discrimination, such as disparate impac...
This article discusses the case CBOCS West, Inc. v. Humphries, 553 U.S. 442 (2008). That case presen...
This Article takes a comprehensive look at the failure of Title VII as a system for claiming nondisc...
This Article argues that the “reasonableness” requirement of Title VII should be rejected. Under thi...
Many employers were shocked and alarmed when the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2006 unanimously establi...
This Article takes a comprehensive look at retaliation and its place in discrimination law. The Arti...
This Article examines how the prevalence of internal policies and complaint procedures for addressin...
When a worker complains about discrimination, federal law is supposed to protect that worker from la...
According to the U.S. Supreme Court, the rising number of workplace retaliation claims is a problem,...
In the UK and the United States, anti-discrimination law prohibits disparate treatment and disparate...
Retaliation toward employees who report illegal discrimination and/or unethical practices in the wor...
Retaliation, the fastest growing cause of action in discrimination law, has gained considerable atte...
Recently, the federal circuit courts of appeal have divided in addressing to what extent either Titl...
When an LGBT employee is punished for complaining about discrimination in the workplace, he or she h...
Title VII theoretically provides virtually unlimited protection from retaliation for one kind of wor...
In the 1970s, federal courts began identifying categories of discrimination, such as disparate impac...
This article discusses the case CBOCS West, Inc. v. Humphries, 553 U.S. 442 (2008). That case presen...
This Article takes a comprehensive look at the failure of Title VII as a system for claiming nondisc...
This Article argues that the “reasonableness” requirement of Title VII should be rejected. Under thi...
Many employers were shocked and alarmed when the U.S. Supreme Court in June 2006 unanimously establi...