Employees are often left unprotected from discrimination because they are unable to satisfy the requirement of causation. Courts have made clear that to obtain legal redress for discrimination, it is generally insufficient to show that a protected characteristic such as race or sex was a “motivating factor” of an adverse employment decision. Rather, under Supreme Court precedent—including the Court’s Comcast and Babb decisions in the 2020 term—the antidiscrimination statutes generally require a showing of “but-for” causation. Consequently, many victims of discrimination will be unable to prevail because an employer can readily refute allegations of discrimination by asserting a legitimate purpose—true or not— for the adverse decision. There...
Twice in the 2020 term, in Bostock and Comcast, the Supreme Court doubled down on the reasoning of “...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
More than four decades ago, the Supreme Court concluded that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 19...
Employees are often left unprotected from discrimination because they are unable to satisfy the requ...
Employment discrimination laws make the “simple but momentous” declaration that it is illegal to den...
In two separate decisions this spring—Comcast v. National Association of African American-Owned Medi...
This article analyzes and recommends a Congressional response to the Supreme Court’s 2009 decision i...
Regardless of merit, most individual employment discrimination claims die a fast death at summary ju...
One of the many statutory changes brought about by the Civil Rights Act of 1991 involved an effort t...
Studies consistently show that African Americans face more employment scrutiny and negative employme...
Two decades after the once fiery debate about the meaning of discrimination in employment under Ti...
Employment discrimination is a fact in our society. Scientific studies continue to show that employe...
In this article, I hope to contribute to the ongoing debate on how our society treats the problem of...
In litigation regarding employment discrimination, the burden of establishing proof has continued to...
Over the past few decades, federal discrimination law has become captive to an increasingly complex ...
Twice in the 2020 term, in Bostock and Comcast, the Supreme Court doubled down on the reasoning of “...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
More than four decades ago, the Supreme Court concluded that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 19...
Employees are often left unprotected from discrimination because they are unable to satisfy the requ...
Employment discrimination laws make the “simple but momentous” declaration that it is illegal to den...
In two separate decisions this spring—Comcast v. National Association of African American-Owned Medi...
This article analyzes and recommends a Congressional response to the Supreme Court’s 2009 decision i...
Regardless of merit, most individual employment discrimination claims die a fast death at summary ju...
One of the many statutory changes brought about by the Civil Rights Act of 1991 involved an effort t...
Studies consistently show that African Americans face more employment scrutiny and negative employme...
Two decades after the once fiery debate about the meaning of discrimination in employment under Ti...
Employment discrimination is a fact in our society. Scientific studies continue to show that employe...
In this article, I hope to contribute to the ongoing debate on how our society treats the problem of...
In litigation regarding employment discrimination, the burden of establishing proof has continued to...
Over the past few decades, federal discrimination law has become captive to an increasingly complex ...
Twice in the 2020 term, in Bostock and Comcast, the Supreme Court doubled down on the reasoning of “...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
More than four decades ago, the Supreme Court concluded that Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 19...