Today, many employers require their employees, as a condition of employment, to agree to arbitrate employment-related legal claims rather than pursue them in court. While arbitration can be mutually beneficial, allowing parties to avoid the cost, time, publicity, and unpredictability associated with traditional litigation, mandatory arbitration often lacks the same procedural safeguards afforded by the justice system. Forced arbitration not only deprives employees of their right to sue their employer in a public court, but it also denies them any meaningful voluntary choice to surrender that right. This Article takes a close look at a variety of workplace grievance procedures with a particular focus on peer-centered processes. This Article ...
Since the Gilmer decision in 1991, the vast potential from using arbitration to resolve statutory em...
Since the Supreme Court\u27s decision Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp. which compelled an emp...
In response to costly legal battles and proliferating causes of action for alleged employer miscondu...
Today, many employers require their employees, as a condition of employment, to agree to arbitrate e...
The number of employers that require employees to agree to mandatory arbitration of disputes as a co...
Mandatory arbitration as used here means that employees must agree as a condition of employment to ...
Mandatory arbitration agreements require employees, as a condition of employment, to agree to arbitr...
When you review the modern employment relationship and the role of contract, you have to start with ...
Federal and state reporters are filled with examples of lopsided arbitration agreements drafted by e...
The enforceability of mandatory arbitration policies contained in employment contracts between emplo...
Although the scholarly literature is replete with discussion of the pros and cons of mandatory arbit...
This article is comprised of six parts. Part I introduces the topic. Part II examines the growing pr...
The proposed Arbitration Fairness Act (AFA) would prohibit all pre-dispute agreements to arbitrate i...
In this Article, I focus on how employees can respond and address excessive bargaining power issues ...
Mediation and arbitration are both different approaches to Alternative Dispute Resolution that can b...
Since the Gilmer decision in 1991, the vast potential from using arbitration to resolve statutory em...
Since the Supreme Court\u27s decision Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp. which compelled an emp...
In response to costly legal battles and proliferating causes of action for alleged employer miscondu...
Today, many employers require their employees, as a condition of employment, to agree to arbitrate e...
The number of employers that require employees to agree to mandatory arbitration of disputes as a co...
Mandatory arbitration as used here means that employees must agree as a condition of employment to ...
Mandatory arbitration agreements require employees, as a condition of employment, to agree to arbitr...
When you review the modern employment relationship and the role of contract, you have to start with ...
Federal and state reporters are filled with examples of lopsided arbitration agreements drafted by e...
The enforceability of mandatory arbitration policies contained in employment contracts between emplo...
Although the scholarly literature is replete with discussion of the pros and cons of mandatory arbit...
This article is comprised of six parts. Part I introduces the topic. Part II examines the growing pr...
The proposed Arbitration Fairness Act (AFA) would prohibit all pre-dispute agreements to arbitrate i...
In this Article, I focus on how employees can respond and address excessive bargaining power issues ...
Mediation and arbitration are both different approaches to Alternative Dispute Resolution that can b...
Since the Gilmer decision in 1991, the vast potential from using arbitration to resolve statutory em...
Since the Supreme Court\u27s decision Gilmer v. Interstate/Johnson Lane Corp. which compelled an emp...
In response to costly legal battles and proliferating causes of action for alleged employer miscondu...