Courts often hold that antidiscrimination law protects “immutable” characteristics, like sex and race. In a series of recent cases, gay rights advocates have persuaded courts to expand the concept of immutability to include not just those traits an individual cannot change, but also those considered too important for anyone to be asked to change. Sexual orientation and religion are paradigmatic examples. This Article critically examines this new concept of immutability, asking whether it is fundamentally different from the old one and how it might apply to characteristics on the borders of employment discrimination law’s protection, such as obesity, pregnancy, and criminal records. It argues that the new immutability does not avoid the old ...
This essay argues that when LGBTQ advocates raise equal protection arguments, they should resist the...
For decades, courts read employment anti-discrimination laws’ prohibition of sex discrimination to e...
The immutability factor is possibly the most disputed of the four factors of the Frontiero test, a t...
Courts often hold that antidiscrimination law protects “immutable” characteristics, like sex and rac...
This Article argues that recent developments in employment discrimination law require a renewed focu...
Over the last forty years, the concept of immutability has been central to Equal Protection doctrine...
Over the past few decades, questions about the chosen or compelled nature of sexual orientation have...
A popular and intuitively plausible type of argument for the rights of lesbians, gay men, and bisexu...
We review scientific research and legal authorities to argue that the immutability of sexual orienta...
Antidiscrimination law faces a fundamental design question: the choice between symmetry and asymmetr...
The panelists discussed the issue of immutability. Professor Goldberg explored the legal landscape, ...
Sex discrimination law has not kept pace with the lived experience of discrimination. In the early y...
Times change, and when they do, the law must as well. Much of the most important employment discrimi...
Modern employment discrimination law is defined by an increasingly complex set of frameworks. These ...
The distinction between antisubordination and anticlassification has existed since the 1970s and has...
This essay argues that when LGBTQ advocates raise equal protection arguments, they should resist the...
For decades, courts read employment anti-discrimination laws’ prohibition of sex discrimination to e...
The immutability factor is possibly the most disputed of the four factors of the Frontiero test, a t...
Courts often hold that antidiscrimination law protects “immutable” characteristics, like sex and rac...
This Article argues that recent developments in employment discrimination law require a renewed focu...
Over the last forty years, the concept of immutability has been central to Equal Protection doctrine...
Over the past few decades, questions about the chosen or compelled nature of sexual orientation have...
A popular and intuitively plausible type of argument for the rights of lesbians, gay men, and bisexu...
We review scientific research and legal authorities to argue that the immutability of sexual orienta...
Antidiscrimination law faces a fundamental design question: the choice between symmetry and asymmetr...
The panelists discussed the issue of immutability. Professor Goldberg explored the legal landscape, ...
Sex discrimination law has not kept pace with the lived experience of discrimination. In the early y...
Times change, and when they do, the law must as well. Much of the most important employment discrimi...
Modern employment discrimination law is defined by an increasingly complex set of frameworks. These ...
The distinction between antisubordination and anticlassification has existed since the 1970s and has...
This essay argues that when LGBTQ advocates raise equal protection arguments, they should resist the...
For decades, courts read employment anti-discrimination laws’ prohibition of sex discrimination to e...
The immutability factor is possibly the most disputed of the four factors of the Frontiero test, a t...