Building Worker Power in a Precarious Federal Landscape: Funding Labor Organizations to Build Power

Labor unions and other worker organizations serve vital roles in our economy, protecting workers and fighting for their voice in the workplace and in politics. But despite skyrocketing public support for labor unions and surveys suggesting that large percentages of workers would join a union if they could, too many worker organizations lack adequate and stable funding needed to effectively achieve their missions of organizing workers, advocating for stronger labor protections, and facilitating strong implementation and enforcement of existing laws.

The Trouble with Policing Adjudicatory Rulemaking

This month, two judges made a strong bid — perhaps the strongest of the century — to limit when agencies may make law through adjudication rather than rulemaking. In Brown-Forman Corp. v. NLRB, the Sixth Circuit declined to enforce a bargaining order that relied on Cemex Construction Materials Pacific, LLC, which announced a new standard for remedial bargaining […]

Employers Keep Trying to Impose Forced Arbitration on as Many Workers as Possible 

In Flowers Foods v. Brock, for the third time in four years, the Supreme Court is deciding whether an employer may impose mandatory arbitration on a certain group of workers as a condition of employment. The reason for all this litigation is the Supreme Court’s 2001 five-to-four opinion in Circuit City v. Adams. Darin Dalmat has a recent post providing […]

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From The Editor

From The Editor

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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Building Worker Power in a Precarious Federal Landscape: Funding Labor Organizations to Build Power

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