Is an accommodation reasonable, under the Americans with Disabilities Act, if and only if the benefits are roughly proportional to the costs? How should benefits and costs be assessed? Should courts asks about how much disabled employees are willing to pay to obtain the accommodation, or instead how much they would have to be paid not to have the accommodation? How should stigmatic or expressive harms be valued? This essay, written for a symposium on the work of Judge Richard A. Posner, engages these questions in a discussion of an important opinion in which Judge Posner denied accommodations involving the lowering of a sink in a kitchenette and a request for telecommuting. The problem with the analysis in that opinion is that it does not...
Despite a decade of litigation, there is no consistent understanding of the reasonable accommodation...
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires private employers to offer reasonable accommodati...
Many people deny that their disabilities make them worse off than others, or worse off than they wou...
Is an accommodation reasonable, under the Americans with Disabilities Act, if and only if the bene...
Is an accommodation reasonable under the Americans with Disabilities Act if and only if the benefi...
Is an accommodation "reasonable" under the Americans with Disabilities Act, if and only if the benef...
The Americans with Disabilities Act provides a clear mandate that disabled workers be provided with ...
This Article analyzes authoritative sources concerning the Americans with Disabilities Act accommoda...
This Essay comes in five parts. After this Introduction, Part I begins by briefly sketching the conc...
In theory, a reasonable accommodation mandate can remedy worker marginalization by requiring employe...
This Article addresses the question of whether a person who has a disability that was caused, contin...
One of the essential requirements of the American Disabilities Act (ADA) is that employers make reas...
What is the rationale for benefit-cost analysis (BCA)? The answer is critical for determining how BC...
This Article applies Professor Derrick Bell\u27s interest convergence hypothesis to the disability c...
International audienceWhat is the rationale for benefit-cost analysis (BCA)? The answer is critical ...
Despite a decade of litigation, there is no consistent understanding of the reasonable accommodation...
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires private employers to offer reasonable accommodati...
Many people deny that their disabilities make them worse off than others, or worse off than they wou...
Is an accommodation reasonable, under the Americans with Disabilities Act, if and only if the bene...
Is an accommodation reasonable under the Americans with Disabilities Act if and only if the benefi...
Is an accommodation "reasonable" under the Americans with Disabilities Act, if and only if the benef...
The Americans with Disabilities Act provides a clear mandate that disabled workers be provided with ...
This Article analyzes authoritative sources concerning the Americans with Disabilities Act accommoda...
This Essay comes in five parts. After this Introduction, Part I begins by briefly sketching the conc...
In theory, a reasonable accommodation mandate can remedy worker marginalization by requiring employe...
This Article addresses the question of whether a person who has a disability that was caused, contin...
One of the essential requirements of the American Disabilities Act (ADA) is that employers make reas...
What is the rationale for benefit-cost analysis (BCA)? The answer is critical for determining how BC...
This Article applies Professor Derrick Bell\u27s interest convergence hypothesis to the disability c...
International audienceWhat is the rationale for benefit-cost analysis (BCA)? The answer is critical ...
Despite a decade of litigation, there is no consistent understanding of the reasonable accommodation...
The Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) requires private employers to offer reasonable accommodati...
Many people deny that their disabilities make them worse off than others, or worse off than they wou...