Can Issue Preclusion Approximate Class Arbitration? Darin Dalmat on using issue preclusion as a strategy to approximate class arbitration.
Muldrow v. City of St. Louis: The Title VII Balancing Act Dallas Estes on the Supreme Court's Title VII decision in Muldrow v. City of St. Louis.
The Chicken-and-Egg of Law and Organizing Ben Sachs on his recent piece with Kate Andrias addressing the chicken-and-egg dilemma of social-movement organizing.
Tracking Attacks on the NLRB: SpaceX Suit Heads to California John Fry on the procedural developments that allowed the case's transfer to proceed.
When Courts Review Agency Decisions, the Legal Standard May not Matter That Much Andrew Strom on two appellate courts' recent failures to defer to NLRB decisions.
A New Remedy for Bad-Faith Bargaining? John Fry on the possible significance of a recent settlement for the duty to bargain.
Finland Rattled by Political Strikes Against the Conservative Governments’ Anti-Union Agenda German Bender and Anders Kjellberg on the recurring political strikes against Finland's conservative government's anti-union policies.
Tracking Attacks on the NLRB: Fifth Circuit Draws Scrutiny as Venue Dispute Heats Up John Fry on the Fifth Circuit's unusual order to the NLRB's attorneys in the SpaceX case
Tracking Attacks on the NLRB: Law Professors File Amicus Brief in SpaceX Case John Fry on law professors' amicus brief in a venue dispute over SpaceX's suit against the NLRB.
Can States Use Economic Incentives to Discourage Card Check Agreements? John Fry on labor law's market participant exception and recent state efforts to discourage organizing.