© 2015 American Bar Foundation.. This article provides a new account of employers' advantages over employees in federal employment discrimination cases. We analyze the effects of judicial deference, in which judges use institutionalized employment structures to infer nondiscrimination without scrutinizing those structures in any meaningful way. Using logistic regression to analyze a representative sample of judicial opinions in federal EEO cases during the first thirty-five years after the passage of the 1964 Civil Rights Act, we find that when judges uncritically use the presence of organizational structures to reason about whether discrimination occurred, employers are much more likely to prevail. This pattern is especially pronounced in ...
Employment discrimination laws make the “simple but momentous” declaration that it is illegal to den...
This article discusses the use of non-judicial procedures to resolve employment discrimination claim...
For thirty-five years, the civil rights community has paid scant attention to administrative law pri...
This article provides a new account of employers' advantages over employees in federal employment di...
Despite employment gains made by women, older Americans, and racial and religious minorities, employ...
Employment-discrimination plaintiffs swim against the tide. Compared to the typical plaintiff, they ...
One of the most striking changes in labor market policy of the past fifty years has come in the form...
Please do not cite without permission from the authors. Comments are welcome and should be addressed...
This article analyzes the outcomes of employment discrimination lawsuits filed in federal court from...
The phrase equal justice has dubious meaning for persons with disabilities who seek redress of emp...
This article presents the full range of information that the Administrative Office’s data convey on ...
In 2011, the United States Supreme Court struck down a class action suit alleging that Wal-Mart stor...
How and whether judges should be held accountable is a key issue in the design of a legal system. Th...
This Article utilizes the Administrative Office\u27s data to convey the realities of federal employm...
In the 1970s, federal courts began identifying categories of discrimination, such as disparate impac...
Employment discrimination laws make the “simple but momentous” declaration that it is illegal to den...
This article discusses the use of non-judicial procedures to resolve employment discrimination claim...
For thirty-five years, the civil rights community has paid scant attention to administrative law pri...
This article provides a new account of employers' advantages over employees in federal employment di...
Despite employment gains made by women, older Americans, and racial and religious minorities, employ...
Employment-discrimination plaintiffs swim against the tide. Compared to the typical plaintiff, they ...
One of the most striking changes in labor market policy of the past fifty years has come in the form...
Please do not cite without permission from the authors. Comments are welcome and should be addressed...
This article analyzes the outcomes of employment discrimination lawsuits filed in federal court from...
The phrase equal justice has dubious meaning for persons with disabilities who seek redress of emp...
This article presents the full range of information that the Administrative Office’s data convey on ...
In 2011, the United States Supreme Court struck down a class action suit alleging that Wal-Mart stor...
How and whether judges should be held accountable is a key issue in the design of a legal system. Th...
This Article utilizes the Administrative Office\u27s data to convey the realities of federal employm...
In the 1970s, federal courts began identifying categories of discrimination, such as disparate impac...
Employment discrimination laws make the “simple but momentous” declaration that it is illegal to den...
This article discusses the use of non-judicial procedures to resolve employment discrimination claim...
For thirty-five years, the civil rights community has paid scant attention to administrative law pri...