9781531013264-1531013260-Work Law: Cases and Materials

Work Law: Cases and Materials

ISBN-13: 9781531013264
ISBN-10: 1531013260
Edition: Fourth
Author: Michael Selmi, Marion Crain, Pauline Kim, Brishen Rogers
Publication date: 2020
Publisher: Carolina Academic Press
Format: Hardcover 1000 pages
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Book details

ISBN-13: 9781531013264
ISBN-10: 1531013260
Edition: Fourth
Author: Michael Selmi, Marion Crain, Pauline Kim, Brishen Rogers
Publication date: 2020
Publisher: Carolina Academic Press
Format: Hardcover 1000 pages

Summary

Work Law: Cases and Materials (ISBN-13: 9781531013264 and ISBN-10: 1531013260), written by authors Michael Selmi, Marion Crain, Pauline Kim, Brishen Rogers, was published by Carolina Academic Press in 2020. With an overall rating of 3.5 stars, it's a notable title among other Labor & Employment (Business Law, Labor Law, Law Specialties) books. You can easily purchase or rent Work Law: Cases and Materials (Hardcover, Used) from BooksRun, along with many other new and used Labor & Employment books and textbooks. And, if you're looking to sell your copy, our current buyback offer is $56.72.

Description

To view or download the 2022 Supplement to this book, click here.
The law of work has evolved as a patchwork of legal interventions in the labor market, sometimes by statute, and sometimes through the common law of judicial decisions. Most law school curricula divide the law of work into three topical areas―Labor Law, Employment Law, and Employment Discrimination―and offer separate courses in each area. Labor law in the United States is understood to encompass the study of the National Labor Relations Act, the law governing union organizing and collective bargaining. It is the law of collective rights at work. Employment law refers to the statutes and common law governing individual rights at work. It ranges from minimum standards legislation to judicially created doctrines based in tort and contract law. Employment discrimination law deals with the statutes and interpretative case law advancing the antidiscrimination norm in the workplace. These statutes address the problem of status discrimination at work (e.g., discrimination on the basis of race, sex, national origin, ethnicity, religion, disability, or sexual orientation).
This book offers a comprehensive view of the law governing the work relationship by touching on all three topical areas. The book treats individual employment rights in depth, and is most appropriate for an Employment Law course or a broad survey course. The book also adverts to Labor Law principles at a number of points, at a policy level rather than a doctrinal level, as a way of introducing and evaluating an alternative model of employee representation; the book does not assume any knowledge of Labor Law on the part of teacher or student and makes no effort to provide a satisfactory substitute for a Labor Law text. The book offers some detail in the law of Employment Discrimination but does so primarily with an eye toward surveying the field and assessing antidiscrimination regulation as a response to an increasingly diverse workforce, rather than providing an in-depth study of Employment Discrimination principles.
The fourth edition of Work Law: Cases and Materials incorporates new developments in a variety of areas: A new case, Cotter v. Lyft, on the boundaries of the employment relationship in the context of the gig economy; A new case on promissory estoppel as a limit on employment-at-will, Cocchiara v. Lithia Motors, Inc.; New cases on nonsolicitation agreements (Bankers Life & Casualty Co. v. American Senior Benefits) and the duty of loyalty (Salas v. Total Air Services); Expanded materials reflecting recent developments in the use of electronic monitoring and data analytics in the workplace; Updated coverage and a new problem on public employee speech in the internet age; Updated coverage of legal issues surrounding employee voice under the NLRA, including the social media case Triple Play Sports Bar & Grille, and treatment of the impact of the Labor Board's decision in Boeing, Inc. on employer restrictions on collective action; A new disability discrimination case, Hostettler v. College of Wooster, on reasonable accommodation; Coverage of the #MeToo movement and its implications, and discussion of race-specific hiring in the context of the musical Hamilton; Streamlined and updated treatment of the Fair Labor Standards Act, including a new case on the status of interns and trainees, Benjamin v. B&H Educ. Inc., and updated materials on overtime pay eligibility; and Updated materials on arbitration of employment disputes, including Roe v. SFBSC Management, a new unconscionability case involving erotic dancers, and the Court's treatment of pre-dispute waivers of class claims in Epic Systems Corp. v. Lewis.

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