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College of Law Faculty Scholarship

Discrimination

Publication Year

Articles 1 - 3 of 3

Full-Text Articles in Law

Integrating The Internet, Brad Areheart Jan 2015

Integrating The Internet, Brad Areheart

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

This Article argues that the paradigmatic right of people with disabilities “to live in the world” naturally encompasses the right “to live in the Internet.” It further argues that the Internet is rightly understood as a place of public accommodation under antidiscrimination law. Because public accommodations are indispensable to integration, civil rights advocates have long argued that marginalized groups must have equal access to the physical institutions that enable one to learn, socialize, transact business, find jobs, and attend school. The Web now provides all of these opportunities and more, but people with disabilities are unable to traverse vast stretches …


Accommodating Every Body, Brad Areheart Jan 2014

Accommodating Every Body, Brad Areheart

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

This Article contends that workplace accommodations should be predicated on need or effectiveness instead of group identity status. It proposes that, in principle, “accommodating every body” be achieved by extending Americans with Disabilities Act type reasonable accommodation to all work-capable members of the general population for whom accommodation is necessary to enable their ability to work. Doing so shifts the focus of accommodation disputes from the contentious identity-based contours of “disabled” plaintiffs to the core issue of alleged discrimination. This proposal likewise avoids current problems associated with excluding “unworthy” individuals from employment opportunity — people whose functional capacity does not …


Intersectionality And Identity: Revisiting A Wrinkle In Title Vii, Brad Areheart Jan 2006

Intersectionality And Identity: Revisiting A Wrinkle In Title Vii, Brad Areheart

College of Law Faculty Scholarship

This article revisits intersectionality, a way of postulating legal identity. Simply put, intersectionality acknowledges that one person's identity can never be reduced to solely one characteristic, such as religion or sex. Rather, each person's identity is constructed of the various intersections of ways one might describe oneself.In the legal context, intersectionality has typically arisen in cases of employment discrimination, where those who theoretically could file a claim under more than protected category are forced to choose only one for their claim - for example, parsing one's identity as either race or sex, even though a statute like Title VII provides …