Employment at will, the doctrine holding that employees have no legal remedy for unfair terminations because they hold their jobs at the will of the employer, has become mired in incoherence. State courts praise the common law rule as essential to free enterprise and central to the free market, but in recent years they increasingly have riddled the rule with exceptions, allowing employee claims for whistleblowing, fraud, etc. Yet states have neither rejected employment at will nor shown any consistency in recognizing exceptions. Strikingly, states cite the same rationales to adopt and reject opposite exceptions, as a case study of two states illustrates: One state accepts exception X to protect employees while rejecting exception Y to m...
Like many other types of contracts, employment contracts are frequently incomplete, with important t...
The .employment-at-will rule, which permits termination of employment without cause, has been the su...
Employment at-will is the default rule of termination for the vast majority of American employment r...
Employment at will, the doctrine holding that employees have no legal remedy for unfair terminations...
Employment at will, the doctrine holding that employees have no legal remedy for unfair terminations...
Employment at will, the doctrine holding that employees have no legal remedy for unfair terminations...
Representing a client who seeks relief for an employment discharge is a lot like playing bingo: you ...
In recent years, the traditional common law rule known as “employment at will,” has come under attac...
This article examines the origins and evolution of employment-at-will, investigates judicially creat...
Includes bibliographical references.This thesis explores the employment "at will" doctrine. It is co...
The goal of this article is to articulate a coherent framework for understanding the default rules f...
The doctrine of at-will employment is undergoing serious erosion. At-will employment has traditional...
For over a century, the employment at-will doctrine has formed an important part of American jurispr...
This Note examines the extent to which courts should apply the public policy exception to abrogate t...
Scope of Study: This report Examines the evaluation of the Employment-At-Will Doctrine. It looks at ...
Like many other types of contracts, employment contracts are frequently incomplete, with important t...
The .employment-at-will rule, which permits termination of employment without cause, has been the su...
Employment at-will is the default rule of termination for the vast majority of American employment r...
Employment at will, the doctrine holding that employees have no legal remedy for unfair terminations...
Employment at will, the doctrine holding that employees have no legal remedy for unfair terminations...
Employment at will, the doctrine holding that employees have no legal remedy for unfair terminations...
Representing a client who seeks relief for an employment discharge is a lot like playing bingo: you ...
In recent years, the traditional common law rule known as “employment at will,” has come under attac...
This article examines the origins and evolution of employment-at-will, investigates judicially creat...
Includes bibliographical references.This thesis explores the employment "at will" doctrine. It is co...
The goal of this article is to articulate a coherent framework for understanding the default rules f...
The doctrine of at-will employment is undergoing serious erosion. At-will employment has traditional...
For over a century, the employment at-will doctrine has formed an important part of American jurispr...
This Note examines the extent to which courts should apply the public policy exception to abrogate t...
Scope of Study: This report Examines the evaluation of the Employment-At-Will Doctrine. It looks at ...
Like many other types of contracts, employment contracts are frequently incomplete, with important t...
The .employment-at-will rule, which permits termination of employment without cause, has been the su...
Employment at-will is the default rule of termination for the vast majority of American employment r...