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Full-Text Articles in Law
Equal Opportunity In Economic Downturn - Are Women And Minorities Sacrificing More Than Their Fair Share? Prepared Statements And Correspondence, Assembly Select Committee On Equal Opportunity
Equal Opportunity In Economic Downturn - Are Women And Minorities Sacrificing More Than Their Fair Share? Prepared Statements And Correspondence, Assembly Select Committee On Equal Opportunity
California Assembly
No abstract provided.
Equal Opportunity In Economic Downturn - Are Women And Minorities Sacrificing More Than Their Fair Share? Hearing, Assembly Select Committee On Equal Opportunity
Equal Opportunity In Economic Downturn - Are Women And Minorities Sacrificing More Than Their Fair Share? Hearing, Assembly Select Committee On Equal Opportunity
California Assembly
No abstract provided.
Employment Equality, Affirmative Action, And The Constitutional Political Consensus, Robert A. Sedler
Employment Equality, Affirmative Action, And The Constitutional Political Consensus, Robert A. Sedler
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Equality Transformed: A Quarter-Century of Affirmative Action by Herman Belz and A Conflict of Rights: The Supreme Court and Affirmative Action by Melvin I. Urofsky
The Quest For Justice, James S. Fishkin
The Quest For Justice, James S. Fishkin
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Affirmative Action and Justice: A Philosophical and Constitutional Inquiry by Michel Rosenfeld
Affirmative Action At Work: Law Politics, And Ethics, Michael K. Ross
Affirmative Action At Work: Law Politics, And Ethics, Michael K. Ross
Michigan Law Review
A Review of Affirmative Action at Work: Law Politics, and Ethics by Bron Raymond Taylor
Supreme Court Philosophy On Labor And Employment Issues, Theodore J. St. Antoine
Supreme Court Philosophy On Labor And Employment Issues, Theodore J. St. Antoine
Other Publications
It would not take a confirmed cynic to suggest that the title of this paper amounts to an oxymoron. That soft-hearted but tough-minded commentator, Florian Bartosic, and his collaborator, Gary Minda, came close to putting it in so many words: " [T]he Supreme Court lacks a consistent and coherent theory of labor law" (1982). My own view is somewhat different. First, lack of a consistent judicial philosophy is not all bad; at least it is better than a consistently wrong philosophy. Second, the vacillating theories of the Supreme Court tend to reflect the divergent attitudes of American society toward labor …