This Article introduces the concept of intimate work — intimate services provided by paid workers to a range of consumers — and seeks to unify its treatment in law. The concept explains multiple exceptions to work law that have previously been viewed as random and even contradictory. From the daycare worker to the divorce lawyer, the nurse to the hairstylist, intimate work introduces an intimate party — the consumer — into the arm’s-length employer-employee dyad on which work law is premised. This disruption leads to limited enforcement of non-compete agreements, the waiver or imposition of fiduciary duties, and exceptions to wage-and-hour law and antidiscrimination law, among other consequences. The current ad hoc approach to intimate work...
This article diagnoses the conceptual and normative crisis of the scope of labour protection as resu...
Work is central to American life and drives us in fundamental ways. And the workplace, as a result, ...
This thesis examines ways in which domestic workers in South Africa could be included within the sco...
This Article introduces the concept of intimate work—intimate services provided by paid workers to a...
A growing body of research reveals what most Americans already know from experience: that our cowork...
With women edging up to become half the workforce, claims of women's economic empowerment now abound...
The rigid divide between a standard employment contract and other work relations has always presente...
In this Essay written for the symposium on For Love or Money? Defining Relationships in Law and Lif...
In recent years, domestic violence legislation has migrated out of its traditional locus in family...
This article considers the status of workers in the new economy, defined as the sharing economy (e...
This chapter explores the way in which two examples of body work - the labour involved in caring for...
The private law method of regulating social relations plays a significant role in labour law, which ...
In our contemporary legal landscape, a student wishing to study the law of the workplace has scarce ...
At some point in their lives, most people who live in the United States labor for pay. By becoming ...
This Article introduces a novel legal paradigm—customer domination at work—to address the sexual har...
This article diagnoses the conceptual and normative crisis of the scope of labour protection as resu...
Work is central to American life and drives us in fundamental ways. And the workplace, as a result, ...
This thesis examines ways in which domestic workers in South Africa could be included within the sco...
This Article introduces the concept of intimate work—intimate services provided by paid workers to a...
A growing body of research reveals what most Americans already know from experience: that our cowork...
With women edging up to become half the workforce, claims of women's economic empowerment now abound...
The rigid divide between a standard employment contract and other work relations has always presente...
In this Essay written for the symposium on For Love or Money? Defining Relationships in Law and Lif...
In recent years, domestic violence legislation has migrated out of its traditional locus in family...
This article considers the status of workers in the new economy, defined as the sharing economy (e...
This chapter explores the way in which two examples of body work - the labour involved in caring for...
The private law method of regulating social relations plays a significant role in labour law, which ...
In our contemporary legal landscape, a student wishing to study the law of the workplace has scarce ...
At some point in their lives, most people who live in the United States labor for pay. By becoming ...
This Article introduces a novel legal paradigm—customer domination at work—to address the sexual har...
This article diagnoses the conceptual and normative crisis of the scope of labour protection as resu...
Work is central to American life and drives us in fundamental ways. And the workplace, as a result, ...
This thesis examines ways in which domestic workers in South Africa could be included within the sco...