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Saint Louis University School of Law

Series

2021

Proposition 22

Articles 1 - 2 of 2

Full-Text Articles in Law

Dispatch – United States: “Proposition 22: A Vote On Gig Worker Status In California”, Miriam Cherry Jan 2021

Dispatch – United States: “Proposition 22: A Vote On Gig Worker Status In California”, Miriam Cherry

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Under California court decisions and then the California Legislature's 2019 AB5 bill, gig workers were poised to become employees under the law. But all that changed when in November 2020 the voters approved Proposition 22, which provides for a complicated set of new rules that gives gig workers some rights of employees, but not others, (like the right to bargain collectively). This "Dispatch" examines the events around the passage of Proposition 22 in more detail.


Challenges For Black Workers After 2020: Antiracism In The Gig Economy?, Michael C. Duff Jan 2021

Challenges For Black Workers After 2020: Antiracism In The Gig Economy?, Michael C. Duff

All Faculty Scholarship

Black workers’ fortunes in the coming decades are tied to the expansion of the Gig economy, the impact of which is to destroy employee status. Because much antiracism law and policy has been transmitted to society through the medium of employment law, the disappearance of employee status should be of concern to all foes of racism. This short essay argues that Section 1981 of the Civil Rights Act of 1866 should be expanded to cover all forms of racist workplace conduct. Regulatory arbitrage will continue to challenge the definition of employment for the foreseeable future. It is fitting that one …