Over the past two decades, several U.S. companies have sought to bar women from jobs that expose them to potential reproductive hazards, justifying these exclusionary policies by their professed concerns for the well-being of unborn children and potential liability. Although recent court cases have stimulated academic interest in this issue, a historical review of the public health and medical literature reveals that this debate is not new. To understand the logic behind the emergence of "fetal protection" policies, one must examine the scientific history of occupational teratogens and the socio-political and economic forces that have driven scientific research in this field. Using lead as an example, the author argues that research on the ...
This article will examine the problem of workers\u27 exposure to toxic substances that affect human ...
The increase in female employment is associated with a greater presence of women, especially in cert...
There is a significant public health concern about the potential effects of occupational exposure to...
Over the past two decades, several U.S. companies have sought to bar women from jobs that expose the...
Exclusionary work policies, known as fetal-protection policies, have a rationale and focus on women ...
Many commentators and judges consider cases involving fetal protection policies the most important s...
Early in the twentieth century, states and courts began limiting the workplace hours of wage-earning...
As women have increasingly entered what have been traditionally male-dominated industries, there has...
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, employers, such as General Motors, St. Joe’s Minerals, Allied...
In its recent interpretation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the U.S. Supreme Court leaves lit...
The U.S. Supreme Court ruling in United Automobile Workers versus Johnson Controls prohibits hiring ...
As workers become more aware that occupational exposure to toxic substances can impair their ability...
"The many observable dysfunctions classified as disorders of reproduction include infertility, impot...
To provide occupational health professionals and employers with guidelines for reproductive health p...
[Excerpt] This term the U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case called UAW vs. Johnson Controls. The Cou...
This article will examine the problem of workers\u27 exposure to toxic substances that affect human ...
The increase in female employment is associated with a greater presence of women, especially in cert...
There is a significant public health concern about the potential effects of occupational exposure to...
Over the past two decades, several U.S. companies have sought to bar women from jobs that expose the...
Exclusionary work policies, known as fetal-protection policies, have a rationale and focus on women ...
Many commentators and judges consider cases involving fetal protection policies the most important s...
Early in the twentieth century, states and courts began limiting the workplace hours of wage-earning...
As women have increasingly entered what have been traditionally male-dominated industries, there has...
During the late 1970s and early 1980s, employers, such as General Motors, St. Joe’s Minerals, Allied...
In its recent interpretation of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, the U.S. Supreme Court leaves lit...
The U.S. Supreme Court ruling in United Automobile Workers versus Johnson Controls prohibits hiring ...
As workers become more aware that occupational exposure to toxic substances can impair their ability...
"The many observable dysfunctions classified as disorders of reproduction include infertility, impot...
To provide occupational health professionals and employers with guidelines for reproductive health p...
[Excerpt] This term the U.S. Supreme Court will hear a case called UAW vs. Johnson Controls. The Cou...
This article will examine the problem of workers\u27 exposure to toxic substances that affect human ...
The increase in female employment is associated with a greater presence of women, especially in cert...
There is a significant public health concern about the potential effects of occupational exposure to...