People with criminal records must find and keep work to reintegrate into society. But private employers often categorically exclude candidates with criminal record histories, especially if the candidate is African American or Latinx. The conventional wisdom is that workplace laws offer little to address this problem. People with criminal records are not a protected class under Title VII, and many employers fear that hiring people with criminal records invites negligent hiring liability. Ban the Box privacy laws delay but may not deter overbroad criminal background checks. This Article challenges this standard account by shifting focus to the state in imposing arbitrary barriers to work. I expose a dignity interest in the removal of these...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
This article examines the important and controversial topic of criminal background checks in employm...
Should a nation extend legal rights to those who enter the country illegally? The Supreme Court rece...
People with criminal records must find and keep work to reintegrate into society. But private employ...
The harms of mass incarceration do not end when an individual is released from prison. Instead, crim...
This Article diagnoses a phenomenon, “criminal employment law,” which exists at the nexus of employm...
Poor individuals of color disproportionately carry the weight of a criminal record. They confront an...
One of America’s largest workforces, comprised of 1.5 million incarcerated workers, remains unprotec...
Both discrimination by private employers and governmental restrictions in the form of statutes that ...
In the United States, over 600,000 offenders rejoin society annually, though little has been done to...
Past literature has established that individuals who have been incarcerated face difficulties reente...
Traditionally, retributive models of criminal justice rely on incarceration as punishment for a crim...
Employment is essential to the rehabilitation of offenders, yet employers routinely check criminal r...
This article examines the important and controversial topic of criminal background checks in employm...
Federal and state policies that make immigrant work putatively illegal are in tension with a constit...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
This article examines the important and controversial topic of criminal background checks in employm...
Should a nation extend legal rights to those who enter the country illegally? The Supreme Court rece...
People with criminal records must find and keep work to reintegrate into society. But private employ...
The harms of mass incarceration do not end when an individual is released from prison. Instead, crim...
This Article diagnoses a phenomenon, “criminal employment law,” which exists at the nexus of employm...
Poor individuals of color disproportionately carry the weight of a criminal record. They confront an...
One of America’s largest workforces, comprised of 1.5 million incarcerated workers, remains unprotec...
Both discrimination by private employers and governmental restrictions in the form of statutes that ...
In the United States, over 600,000 offenders rejoin society annually, though little has been done to...
Past literature has established that individuals who have been incarcerated face difficulties reente...
Traditionally, retributive models of criminal justice rely on incarceration as punishment for a crim...
Employment is essential to the rehabilitation of offenders, yet employers routinely check criminal r...
This article examines the important and controversial topic of criminal background checks in employm...
Federal and state policies that make immigrant work putatively illegal are in tension with a constit...
This Article analyzes the use of after-acquired evidence to defeat a discrimination victim\u27s clai...
This article examines the important and controversial topic of criminal background checks in employm...
Should a nation extend legal rights to those who enter the country illegally? The Supreme Court rece...