Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
- Keyword
-
- Labor law (6)
- Equal Pay Act (3)
- Fair Labor Standards Act (3)
- NLRA (3)
- Title VII (3)
-
- Discrimination (2)
- Employee (2)
- Employment law (2)
- FLSA (2)
- Pay discrimination (2)
- Retaliation (2)
- ADA (1)
- Americans with Disabilities Act (1)
- Amicus curiae briefs (1)
- Anti-retaliation (1)
- Anti-retaliation provision (1)
- Australia (1)
- Baltimore (1)
- But-so causation (1)
- CAFTA (1)
- Civil rights (1)
- EEOC (1)
- Employee seniority (1)
- Employees rights (1)
- Employer (1)
- Employment discrimination (1)
- Equal pay act (1)
- European Union (1)
- Executive compensation (1)
- Fair Pay Act (1)
- Publication Year
Articles 1 - 30 of 32
Full-Text Articles in Law
Maryland's New Remedy For Wage Theft, Martha M. Ertman, Doris N. Weil
Maryland's New Remedy For Wage Theft, Martha M. Ertman, Doris N. Weil
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Heffernan V. City Of Paterson: Watering Down The First Amendment Retaliation Doctrine To Create A Perception Of Protection For Public Employees, Peter J. Artese
Heffernan V. City Of Paterson: Watering Down The First Amendment Retaliation Doctrine To Create A Perception Of Protection For Public Employees, Peter J. Artese
Maryland Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
An Uberdilemma: Employees And Independent Contractors In The Sharing Economy, Grant E. Brown
An Uberdilemma: Employees And Independent Contractors In The Sharing Economy, Grant E. Brown
Maryland Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
The Restorative Workplace: An Organizational Learning Approach To Discrimination, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
The Restorative Workplace: An Organizational Learning Approach To Discrimination, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Faculty Scholarship
On the fiftieth anniversary of Title VII of the Civil Rights Act, many employers continue to search for ways to implement the law’s antidiscrimination and equal opportunity mandates into the workplace. The current litigation-based approach to employment discrimination under Title VII and similar laws focuses on weeding out “bad apples” who are explicitly prejudiced. This “victim-villain” paradigm may fail to correct the complex, nuanced causes of workplace discrimination, or exacerbate the problem. This article explores an alternative approach—restorative practices—that may integrate the policy goals of antidiscrimination laws into the practical realities of managing an organization. Restorative practices engage everyone in …
The Market Myth And Pay Disparity In Legal Academia, Paula A. Monopoli
The Market Myth And Pay Disparity In Legal Academia, Paula A. Monopoli
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Colorism Among South Asians: Title Vii And Skin Tone Discrimination, Taunya L. Banks
Colorism Among South Asians: Title Vii And Skin Tone Discrimination, Taunya L. Banks
Faculty Scholarship
In 2013 Nina Davuluri, an Asian Indian from Syracuse, NY, became the first South Asian-American Miss America. The largely congratulatory comments from South Asian bloggers while reveling in the significance of her win, also commented on her skin tone, characterizing the new Miss America as dark brown, some adding that Davuluri would have never won the Miss Indian America USA title because she is “too dark.” Early discussions of colorism, skin tone bias, by legal scholars focus on how the practice impacts black Americans or other persons with some African ancestry. Yet the comments from South Asians about Davuluri’s skin …
University Of Texas Southwestern Medical Center V. Nassar: Undermining The National Policy Against Discrimination, Matthew A. Krimski
University Of Texas Southwestern Medical Center V. Nassar: Undermining The National Policy Against Discrimination, Matthew A. Krimski
Maryland Law Review Online
No abstract provided.
Access To Justice: Ensuring Equal Pay With The Paycheck Fairness Act, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Access To Justice: Ensuring Equal Pay With The Paycheck Fairness Act, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Congressional Testimony
No abstract provided.
Narrowing The Gender Pay Gap By Providing Equal Opportunities: The Need For Tenured Female Professors In Higher Stem Institutions In An Effort To Recast Gender Norms, Claire R. Rollor
Student Articles and Papers
No abstract provided.
Dellinger V. Science Applications International Corporation: Missing An Opportunity To Expand The Meaning Of "Employee" Under The Fair Labor Standards Act, Ashley Sharif
Proxy
No abstract provided.
Christopher V. Smithkline Beecham Corporation: An Unsurprising Loss For Pharmaceutical Sales Representatives And An Erosion Of Power For Administrative Agencies, Anna Johnston
Proxy
No abstract provided.
Regulation By Amicus: The Department Of Labor's Policy Making In The Courts, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Regulation By Amicus: The Department Of Labor's Policy Making In The Courts, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Faculty Scholarship
This Article examines the practice of “regulation by amicus”: that is, an agency’s attempt to mold statutory interpretation and establish policy by filing “friend of the court” briefs in private litigation. Since the United States Supreme Court recognized agency amicus interpretations as a source of controlling law entitled to deference in Auer v. Robbins, agencies have used amicus curiae briefs—in strategic and at times aggressive ways—to advance the political agenda of the President in the courts.
Using the lens of the U.S. Department of Labor’s amicus activity in wage and hour cases, this Article explores the tension between the …
Kasten V. Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics: Protecting Oral Complaints At The Expense Of Workplace Complaints, Shaun O'Donnell
Kasten V. Saint-Gobain Performance Plastics: Protecting Oral Complaints At The Expense Of Workplace Complaints, Shaun O'Donnell
Proxy
No abstract provided.
Wal-Mart Stores V. Dukes: Lessons For The Legal Quest For Equal Pay, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Wal-Mart Stores V. Dukes: Lessons For The Legal Quest For Equal Pay, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Faculty Scholarship
The Supreme Court’s decision in Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes provides a unique opportunity to reflect on whether and how the legal system should address unjustified pay disparities between men and women who perform similar jobs. This Article describes the Court’s decision and analyzes the insights it offers about the legal quest for equal pay. First, Wal-Mart demonstrates the tension between Title VII’s focus on the employer’s intent and the economic realities of how pay discrimination happens in the modern workplace. As the women at Wal-Mart experienced and research confirms, pay disparities tend to be the greatest when employers delegate …
Money, Sex, And Sunshine: A Market-Based Approach To Pay Discrimination, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Money, Sex, And Sunshine: A Market-Based Approach To Pay Discrimination, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Faculty Scholarship
The Equal Pay Act had a distinct market purpose. Congress made a policy choice to modify the existing compensation market so that employees who perform jobs requiring substantially “equal skill, effort, and responsibility” earn equal wages, regardless of sex. The Act aimed not simply to promote individual fairness, but to foster a more efficient, equitable wage market on a systemic level. Congress recognized that paying lower wages to women constituted “an unfair method of competition,” burdened “commerce and the free flow of goods in commerce,” and prevented the “maximum utilization of available labor resources.” Over time, however, the “market” in …
Shattering The Equal Pay Act's Glass Ceiling, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Shattering The Equal Pay Act's Glass Ceiling, Deborah Thompson Eisenberg
Faculty Scholarship
This Article provides the first empirical and rhetorical analysis of all reported Equal Pay Act (EPA) federal appellate cases since the Act’s passage. This analysis shows that as women climb the occupational ladder, the manner in which many federal courts interpret the EPA imposes a wage glass ceiling, shutting out women in non-standardized jobs from its protection. This barrier is particularly troubling in light of data that shows that the gender wage gap increases for women as they achieve higher levels of professional status. The Article begins by examining data regarding the greater pay gap for women in upper-level jobs. …
State Of Maryland V. Louis Hyman: Did Progressivism, Concern For Public Health, And The Great Baltimore Fire Influence The Court Of Appeals?, Justin Haas
Legal History Publications
In the latter half of the nineteenth century, increased immigration from eastern Europe and a growing garment industry in Baltimore led to vast growth in so-called sweatshops: cramped workspaces in which clothing was partially or completely sewn for market. As the sweatshops grew, integrated clothing factories were also emerging, finally becoming a real force in the Baltimore garment industry around the turn of the twentieth century. As the integrated factories grew, the workers joined in the growing organized labor movement, and then began to push for greater protections for the health and safety of workers, as well as fair wages. …
New Governance And Decentralisation In Employment Policy, Milena Buchs, Mariely Lopez-Santana
New Governance And Decentralisation In Employment Policy, Milena Buchs, Mariely Lopez-Santana
International Collaborative on Social Europe
When thinking about the traditional boundaries of the welfare state, particularly of labour and employment policies, we tend to place them within the boundaries of the nation-state. However, with contemporary processes of European economic integration and devolution of competences to sub-national entities, our understanding of the spatial configuration of the welfare state has been challenged. These developments are also partially related to 'new governance' patterns in social policy. The authors explore the 'downward' movement of employment and labour market policies (LMP) in Germany, the United Kingdom, and Italy and explore cross-national differences regarding the characteristics and degree of decentralisation. The …
Ruminations On The Past, Present And Future Of International Labor Standards: Empowering Law In The Brave New Economic World, Marley S. Weiss
Ruminations On The Past, Present And Future Of International Labor Standards: Empowering Law In The Brave New Economic World, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
International labor standards are among the oldest international standards pertaining to the conduct of private, as well as public, economic actors. Far from being settled, however, nearly every aspect of the current international labor standards regime is in flux: the role of labor standards in the international legal, economic, political, and social order, as well as in the parallel domestic orders; the modes by which standards are brought into being; the manner and means of their implementation and enforcement; the degree to which they may be binding solely on nation-state parties, and enforceable only at their behest; and the extent …
The Temporally-Flawed Concept Of Binding Promises In American Collective Bargaining And Employee Benefits Law: A Source Of The Concurrent Crises In The U.S. Industrial Relations, Retirement, And Health Care Systems, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
The American collective bargaining system is in serious trouble, as is the employee benefits system providing pensions and health care benefits for millions of non-union as well as unionized workers and retirees. The portion of the labor force covered by collective bargaining has dropped so low that one can barely refer to it as a system. Simultaneously, the American private employer-based pension system is moving towards a crisis. Large employers with the finest pension plans, covering thousands of workers and retirees, in industry after industry, are terminating their pension plans, or replacing them with cheaper, weaker retirement programs, often while …
Kentucky River At The Intersection Of Professional And Supervisory Status: Fertile Delta Or Bermuda Triangle?, Marley S. Weiss
Kentucky River At The Intersection Of Professional And Supervisory Status: Fertile Delta Or Bermuda Triangle?, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Regulation Of The Work Performance Relationship: Independent Contractors, Labor Subcontractors, And Joint Control Over An Employment-Like Relationship, Marley S. Weiss
Regulation Of The Work Performance Relationship: Independent Contractors, Labor Subcontractors, And Joint Control Over An Employment-Like Relationship, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
I. Introduction. II. Who is covered and who is excluded from the protective scope of labor law, and the legal consequences for those excluded as independent contractors or owners. III. Benefits and burdens of the “employment relationship” characterization compared to a contract for services. IV. Speculations about solutions to the work relationship problem.
Two Steps Forward, One Step Back- Or Vice Versa: Labor Rights Under Free Trade Agreements From Nafta, Through Jordan, Via Chile, To Latin America, And Beyond, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Colorism: A Darker Shade Of Pale, Taunya Lovell Banks
Colorism: A Darker Shade Of Pale, Taunya Lovell Banks
Faculty Scholarship
In this article, Professor Banks argues that colorism, skin tone discrimination against dark-skinned but not light-skinned blacks, constitutes a form of race-based discrimination. Skin tone discrimination coexists with more traditional forms of race discrimination that impact all blacks without regard to skin tone and phenotype, yet courts seem unwilling to recognize this point. Professor Banks uses employment discrimination cases to illustrate some courts' willingness to acknowledge subtler forms of race-based discrimination, like skin tone discrimination, for white ethnic and Latina/o plaintiffs, but not for black plaintiffs. The inability of courts to fashion coherent approaches to colorism claims involving black claimants …
The Right To Strike In Essential Services Under United States Labor Law, Marley S. Weiss
The Right To Strike In Essential Services Under United States Labor Law, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
SUMMARY: I. Introduction. II. A Brief History of U.S. Collective Labor Relations Laws. III. The Structure of Labor-Management Relations in The U.S. IV. The Right to Strike. V. Private Sector “Essential Services” Provisions: LMRA National. VI. Conclusion.
Toward A Global Critical Feminist Vision: Domestic Work And The Nanny Tax Debate, Taunya Lovell Banks
Toward A Global Critical Feminist Vision: Domestic Work And The Nanny Tax Debate, Taunya Lovell Banks
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Supreme Court 1997- 1998 Labor And Employment Law Term (Part Ii): The Nlra, Takings Clause, And Ada Cases, Marley S. Weiss
The Supreme Court 1997- 1998 Labor And Employment Law Term (Part Ii): The Nlra, Takings Clause, And Ada Cases, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
Innovations In Collective Bargaining: Nummi - Driven To Excellence, Marley S. Weiss
Innovations In Collective Bargaining: Nummi - Driven To Excellence, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
The Impact Of The European Community On Labor Law: Some American Comparisons, Marley S. Weiss
The Impact Of The European Community On Labor Law: Some American Comparisons, Marley S. Weiss
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.
A Look At Labor Law In The Land Down Under: Industrial Relations In Australia, David S. Bogen
A Look At Labor Law In The Land Down Under: Industrial Relations In Australia, David S. Bogen
Faculty Scholarship
No abstract provided.