Drawing Power: How Redistricting Can Strengthen Political Responsiveness to the Working Class 

For decades, political scientists have documented a stark reality: Economically marginalized Americans struggle to exert meaningful influence over public policy. Studies show that the preferences of low- and middle-income constituents exert “little or no independent influence” on federal decision-making, while elected officials give “no weight” to the views of constituents in the bottom third of the income distribution. The […]

The Fifth Circuit Further Limits How Municipal Employees Can Prove Discrimination

A seventeenth-century French poet’s reinterpretation of an old fable, the Monkey and the Cat, tells the story of a monkey that persuades a cat to reach into a fire. The cat retrieves chestnuts, burning its paw in the process, and the monkey makes off with the tasty reward. Modern English speakers have derived the term “cat’s paw,” meaning […]

Driving People Out of Work: The Trump Administration’s Commercial Drivers’ Licenses Revocation

Jorge Rivera Lujan, a Dreamer protected under DACA, runs his own trucking business; Aleksei Semenovskii sought asylum from Russia and has been driving in the U.S. for more than five years. Both have complied with every requirement for commercial licenses, yet their livelihoods are under threat. Nearly 40 years after federal regulations first recognized the importance […]

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Benjamin Sachs is the Kestnbaum Professor of Labor and Industry at Harvard Law School and a leading expert in the field of labor law and labor relations.

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From the Shop Floor to “World Court”: the Right to Strike and the Scope of International Labor Law

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