This article provides an overview of the legal system for regulating workers and the workplace in the United States. Broadly speaking, workplace protections are available on a somewhat unequal basis, depending on whether the worker is classified as an employee or an independent contractor. Independent contractors are not protected under various employment laws. For workers that qualify as employees, state and federal laws provide protection relating to discrimination, retaliation, and workplace safety. State and federal law also provide for minimum wage and overtime.Employees generally do not have additional legal protections relating to wages and hours unless their workplace is unionized. However, union membership in the United States has ...
Relying on the Federal Arbitration Act, the Supreme Court in Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson-Lane Corp....
This article considers the status of workers in the new economy, defined as the sharing economy (e...
As arbitration processes have improved over the last ten years, the negative perception of mandatory...
This article provides an overview of the legal system for regulating workers and the workplace in th...
Workers today face a rapidly evolving workplace. The gig economy has shaken up expectations about wh...
[Excerpt] There are many federal, state and local laws that affect the American workplace, and it is...
This article will examine the extent to which, and the methods by which, individual rights are prote...
This Article examines the regulation, by antitrust law, of collective action by low-wage workers who...
Structures of employment in low-wage industries, a diminished wage and hour inspectorate, and an unw...
This article will first review the Supreme Court\u27s arbitration jurisprudence, concentrating on la...
This Article examines the effect of the Meyers Industries decision on the protection available to wo...
This article describes and analyzes the considerable surge in state and local government activity pr...
This article proposes shared federal-state authority over labor relations policy. As private sector ...
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) of 1938 is a comprehensive federal statute that regulates minimu...
Due to a lack of competition among employers in the labor market, employers have monopsony power, or...
Relying on the Federal Arbitration Act, the Supreme Court in Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson-Lane Corp....
This article considers the status of workers in the new economy, defined as the sharing economy (e...
As arbitration processes have improved over the last ten years, the negative perception of mandatory...
This article provides an overview of the legal system for regulating workers and the workplace in th...
Workers today face a rapidly evolving workplace. The gig economy has shaken up expectations about wh...
[Excerpt] There are many federal, state and local laws that affect the American workplace, and it is...
This article will examine the extent to which, and the methods by which, individual rights are prote...
This Article examines the regulation, by antitrust law, of collective action by low-wage workers who...
Structures of employment in low-wage industries, a diminished wage and hour inspectorate, and an unw...
This article will first review the Supreme Court\u27s arbitration jurisprudence, concentrating on la...
This Article examines the effect of the Meyers Industries decision on the protection available to wo...
This article describes and analyzes the considerable surge in state and local government activity pr...
This article proposes shared federal-state authority over labor relations policy. As private sector ...
The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) of 1938 is a comprehensive federal statute that regulates minimu...
Due to a lack of competition among employers in the labor market, employers have monopsony power, or...
Relying on the Federal Arbitration Act, the Supreme Court in Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson-Lane Corp....
This article considers the status of workers in the new economy, defined as the sharing economy (e...
As arbitration processes have improved over the last ten years, the negative perception of mandatory...