Multiple claims have become a fixture of employment discrimination litigation. It is common, if not ubiquitous, for court opinions to begin with a version of the following litany: \u27Plaintiff brings this action under Title VII and the ADEA for race, age, and gender discrimination. Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) statistics show exponential growth in multiple claims in part because its intake procedures lead claimants to describe their multiple identities, at a time when they have little basis upon which to parse a specific category of bias. But increased diversity in workplace demographics suggests that frequently, disparate treatment may in fact be rooted in intersectional or complex bias: although stereotypes for wome...
Despite employment gains made by women, older Americans, and racial and religious minorities, employ...
The pattern or practice cause of action is the most potent, but least understood, of the causes of a...
Substantial confusion exists among lawyers, litigants and the courts about how to identify and prove...
Multiple claims have become a fixture of employment discrimination litigation. It is common, if not ...
Employment discrimination is a fact in our society. Scientific studies continue to show that employe...
This Article joins other voices in challenging what I will call the “implicit bias consensus” in emp...
This Article examines the extent to which employment discrimination litigation conducted under the c...
Modern employment discrimination law is defined by an increasingly complex set of frameworks. These ...
Contemporary discrimination law is in crisis, both methodologically and conceptually. The crisis ari...
This Article joins together threads of ongoing conversations regarding implicit bias and gender disc...
In this article, I hope to contribute to the ongoing debate on how our society treats the problem of...
Has litigation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 reached the limit of its utility in a...
Intersectional discrimination challenges not only the structure of equality law, but also the techni...
In this short Essay, I explore the tendency of courts to summarily dismiss employment discrimination...
The idea that Whites, in particular white males, are the new victims of discrimination is steadily g...
Despite employment gains made by women, older Americans, and racial and religious minorities, employ...
The pattern or practice cause of action is the most potent, but least understood, of the causes of a...
Substantial confusion exists among lawyers, litigants and the courts about how to identify and prove...
Multiple claims have become a fixture of employment discrimination litigation. It is common, if not ...
Employment discrimination is a fact in our society. Scientific studies continue to show that employe...
This Article joins other voices in challenging what I will call the “implicit bias consensus” in emp...
This Article examines the extent to which employment discrimination litigation conducted under the c...
Modern employment discrimination law is defined by an increasingly complex set of frameworks. These ...
Contemporary discrimination law is in crisis, both methodologically and conceptually. The crisis ari...
This Article joins together threads of ongoing conversations regarding implicit bias and gender disc...
In this article, I hope to contribute to the ongoing debate on how our society treats the problem of...
Has litigation under Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 reached the limit of its utility in a...
Intersectional discrimination challenges not only the structure of equality law, but also the techni...
In this short Essay, I explore the tendency of courts to summarily dismiss employment discrimination...
The idea that Whites, in particular white males, are the new victims of discrimination is steadily g...
Despite employment gains made by women, older Americans, and racial and religious minorities, employ...
The pattern or practice cause of action is the most potent, but least understood, of the causes of a...
Substantial confusion exists among lawyers, litigants and the courts about how to identify and prove...