Dobbs and the Complicated Story of Women’s Progress at Work Professor Naomi Schoenbaum writes about four new federal protections for women’s rights in the workplace -- and the Congressional politicking that has accompanied those bills -- in the wake of the Supreme Court's Dobbs decision.
In Groff v. DeJoy, the Supreme Court Left a Key Question Unanswered Despite the Supreme Court's unanimity in Groff v. DeJoy, the ruling remains murky with respect to workers' ability to override union contracts when seeking religious accommodations.
July 2, 2023 News & Commentary SCOTUS strikes down Biden loan forgiveness program and allows discrimination by website designer; SAG-AFTRA extends contract negotiations
June 30, 2023 News & Commentary Two major Supreme Court rulings with significant impact on American life and work.
Another Reminder of Why Federal Judges Matter for Workers Andrew Strom on the important role that federal judges play in determining worker outcomes.
Glacier Northwest Could Have Been Worse, But it’s Still Bad Though the Supreme Court's decision in Glacier could have been worse, the ruling still marks a definitive victory for employers.
Glacier and Justice Thomas’ Preemption Breadcrumbs Justice Thomas' brief concurrence in Glacier indicates his preference to move labor preemption doctrine in a conflict/impossibility direction
May 19, 2023 News & Commentary Minnesota Democrats pass a sweeping labor bill; SCOTUS held that the FLRA has jurisdiction over state National Guard technicians; the EEOC released new guidance regarding employer use of automated hiring tools; Handy settled a worker misclassification lawsuit for $6 million