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Published byAmos Cunningham Modified over 9 years ago
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EEO Context of HR practice EEO = equal employment opportunity Not really what it means though It means “Don’t discriminate on these particular things”
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Early Context Constitutional Republic Constitution – Federal government regulates “commerce among the several states” Also 1 st,3d, 4 th, 5 th, 11 th amendments restrains federal government
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Early Context – part 2 Republic founded with emphasis on private property rights “Employment-at-will” doctrine – a property owner may use her/his property as s/he sees fit People who are employed in that context “serve at the will of the employer” – may be hired and/or fired for any reason, or no reason at all
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Early Context – part 2 still Employment at Will – reciprocal between employer and employee Three erosions on Employment at will doctrine –Competitive market pressures –Written contracts voluntarily entered –Civil Rights Protections
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Civil Right Acts 1866, 1964 Civil Rights Acts Early CRA became 13 th, 14 th amendments Lack of social progress regarding integration in post-slavery era 1964 CRA drives much of current practice
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War-time social justice issues Contributions by African heritage and female citizens to war efforts in WW-I and WW- II Truman executive order after WW-II finally orders desegregation of US military “Separate but equal” doctrine struck down in Brown v. Board of Education (1954)
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Civil Rights Act 1964 Title VII covers employment practices Protected characteristics: race, color, religion, sex, national origin Virtually every employment decision covered Not all organizations covered – excluded are small employers (less than 15), Indian nations, religious organizations, political offices
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Two pairs of Federal Laws –Age Discrimination in Employment Act of 1967 – Older Workers Protection Act of 1990 – Vocational Rehabilitation Act of 1973 – Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990
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Age Discrimination in Employment Act 1967 Cover firms of 20 or more employees Covers workers 40+ years old Original upper limit of coverage (age 65) was phased out No affirmative action requirement Coverage for states was modified through case law
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Americans with Disabilities Act 1990 Affects many aspects of public life Huge untapped pool of talented Americans Unemployment rates 70+% Defining “Disability” (firms 15+ employees covered) –Physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more major life activities –A record of such impairment –Being regarded as having such an impairment
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ADA 1990 Screening, with or without “Reasonable Accommodation” Sexual orientation not part of law AIDS-Related Cases Obesity Genetic Discrimination Courts have affected state coverage here also Courts have also narrowed disability definition
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Two Book-end CRA cases Griggs v Duke Power 1971 –Griggs and others sued for race discrimination –Case defined adverse impact –Case also defined shifting burden of proof –Use of statistical information to prove illegal discrimination
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Second CRA bookend case Wards Cove v Atonio 1989 –Atonio and others sued for race discrimination –Used statistical data to prove point –Court reversed standard, requiring more than statistical data to make prima facie case –Also reversed shifting burden of proof, requiring plaintiff to ‘prove’ guilt –Lead to CRA revisions in 1991
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