When the Customer Is King: Employment Discrimination as Customer Service

Lu-in Wang
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引用次数: 15

Abstract

Employers profit from giving customers opportunities to discriminate against service workers. Employment discrimination law should not, but in many ways does, allow them to get away with it. Employers are driven by self-interest to please customers, whose satisfaction is critical to business success and survival. Pleasing customers often involves cultivating and catering to their discriminatory expectations with respect to customer service — including facilitating customers’ direct discrimination against workers. Current doctrine allows employers to escape responsibility for customers’ discrimination against workers because it takes an overly narrow view of the employment relationship, focusing on the formal lines of authority that run between two parties, the employer and employee. But in fact, the structure of service work relationships is triangular: Customers play a powerful role in determining the terms, conditions, and privileges of employment because of the characteristics of service work and the importance of customer satisfaction to the employer’s bottom line. By separating the employer from discrimination that originates outside the employer-employee dyad and overlooking the realities of the service work environment, the prevailing legal model accepts employers’ rhetoric casting practices that facilitate discrimination against workers as simply “good customer service.”This article argues that the law should not allow discrimination in employment to masquerade as customer service. It should hold employers accountable for the ways in which they facilitate and benefit from customers’ discrimination against service workers. To support this argument, the article draws on the sociology of service work to explain some familiar, problematic employment practices by illuminating how the triangular structure of relationships combines with the culture of “customer sovereignty” to promote discrimination in service work. The article then introduces another common practice that may be less well known to readers — the use of customer feedback to monitor and evaluate workers or “management by customers” — through which employers have drawn the customer directly into the management of employees, leaving workers vulnerable to customer discrimination that is processed through management decisions but may be hard to reach under current doctrine. The article argues that employment discrimination law should and can hold employers accountable when they base employment decisions on discriminatory customer feedback. More broadly, it argues that employment discrimination law needs a model of employer liability to reach discrimination that originates beyond the employer-employee dyad, in recognition of both the triangular structure of, and the power of the customer in, interactive service work.
当顾客为王:就业歧视作为顾客服务
雇主从给顾客歧视服务人员的机会中获利。就业歧视法不应该,但在很多方面确实允许他们逃脱惩罚。雇主出于自身利益的驱使而取悦客户,客户的满意度对企业的成功和生存至关重要。取悦客户通常涉及培养和迎合他们对客户服务的歧视性期望——包括促进客户对员工的直接歧视。目前的原则允许雇主逃避对顾客歧视工人的责任,因为它对雇佣关系的看法过于狭隘,只关注双方——雇主和雇员——之间的正式权力界限。但事实上,服务工作关系的结构是三角形的:由于服务工作的特点和客户满意度对雇主底线的重要性,客户在决定雇佣的条款、条件和特权方面发挥着强大的作用。通过将雇主与源于雇主-雇员二元关系之外的歧视分离开来,并忽视了服务工作环境的现实,现行的法律模式接受了雇主的修辞,将歧视工人的做法简单地视为“良好的客户服务”。这篇文章认为,法律不应该允许以客户服务为幌子的就业歧视。它应该让雇主对他们从顾客对服务工作者的歧视中获得便利和利益的方式负责。为了支持这一论点,本文利用服务工作的社会学来解释一些熟悉的、有问题的雇佣实践,阐明了三角关系结构如何与“客户主权”文化相结合,从而促进了服务工作中的歧视。这篇文章随后介绍了另一种读者可能不太了解的常见做法——利用客户反馈来监控和评估工人或“客户管理”——通过这种做法,雇主将客户直接引入员工的管理,使工人容易受到客户歧视的影响,这种歧视是通过管理决策处理的,但在当前的原则下可能很难达到。本文认为,当雇主根据歧视性的顾客反馈做出雇佣决定时,就业歧视法应该而且能够让雇主承担责任。更广泛地说,它认为就业歧视法需要一个雇主责任模型,以达到超越雇主-雇员二元关系的歧视,以承认互动式服务工作的三角形结构和客户的力量。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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