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Unequal - How America's Courts Undermine Discrimination Law (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R963
Discovery Miles 9 630
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Unequal - How America's Courts Undermine Discrimination Law (Hardcover)
Series: Law and Current Events Masters
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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It is no secret that since the 1980s, American workers have lost
power vis-a-vis employers through the well-chronicled steep decline
in private sector unionization. American workers have also lost
power in other ways. Those alleging employment discrimination have
fared increasingly poorly in the courts. In recent years, judges
have dismissed scores of cases in which workers presented evidence
that supervisors referred to them using racial or gender slurs. In
one federal district court, judges dismissed more than 80 percent
of the race discrimination cases filed over a year. And when juries
return verdicts in favor of employees, judges often second guess
those verdicts, finding ways to nullify the jury's verdict and rule
in favor of the employer. Most Americans assume that that an
employee alleging workplace discrimination faces the same legal
system as other litigants. After all, we do not usually think that
legal rules vary depending upon the type of claim brought. The
employment law scholars Sandra A. Sperino and Suja A. Thomas show
in Unequal that our assumptions are wrong. Over the course of the
last half century, employment discrimination claims have come to
operate in a fundamentally different legal system than other
claims. It is in many respects a parallel universe, one in which
the legal system systematically favors employers over employees. A
host of procedural, evidentiary, and substantive mechanisms serve
as barriers for employees, making it extremely difficult for them
to access the courts. Moreover, these mechanisms make it fairly
easy for judges to dismiss a case prior to trial. Americans are
unaware of how the system operates partly because they think that
race and gender discrimination are in the process of fading away.
But such discrimination still happens in the workplace, and workers
now have little recourse to fight it legally. By tracing the modern
history of employment discrimination, Sperino and Thomas provide an
authoritative account of how our legal system evolved into an
institution that is inherently biased against workers making rights
claims.
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