{"title":"A Metamorphosis: How Forced Arbitration Arrived in the Workplace","authors":"C. Comsti","doi":"10.15779/Z38PP97","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Over the past twenty years, there has been movement away from the public enforcement of statutory workplace rights in favor of a private system of forced arbitration of employment disputes. Forced arbitration — what in legal jargon is commonly referred to as “binding pre-dispute mandatory arbitration” or “employer-promulgated arbitration” — has its roots in the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”), a ninety-year-old statute passed by Congress in 1925. It was not until the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1991 watershed decision in Gilmer v. Interstate Johnson/Lane Corporation that the Court allowed statutory employment claims to be submitted to arbitration under the FAA. Forced arbitration was transformed from a rarely used form of dispute resolution into a juggernaut that has changed the nature of statutory enforcement of worker protection laws in the United States.The shift from public enforcement of workplace laws to private forced arbitration has been characterized by a number of trends. This Article examines some of them. Part I sets the stage by providing a brief overview of the distinctions between voluntary arbitration and forced arbitration. Part II describes the elevation of the FAA to a “super-statute” and the limited scope of judicial review of forced arbitration provisions and awards. Part III discusses how the courts have misapplied traditional labor law jurisprudence to justify the expansion of forced arbitration of employment disputes under the FAA. Finally, Part IV explores how forced arbitration has eroded the statutory purposes and protections of our nation’s workplace laws, focusing on the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”). These developments have transformed the employee-employer relationship from one that is regulated by worker protection statutes enforced in our public justice system to one that operates in private tribunals where workers are forced to arbitrate their claims as a condition of employment and without due process guarantees.","PeriodicalId":215343,"journal":{"name":"Labor Law eJournal","volume":"1 1","pages":"0"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2014-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"4","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Labor Law eJournal","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.15779/Z38PP97","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 4
Abstract
Over the past twenty years, there has been movement away from the public enforcement of statutory workplace rights in favor of a private system of forced arbitration of employment disputes. Forced arbitration — what in legal jargon is commonly referred to as “binding pre-dispute mandatory arbitration” or “employer-promulgated arbitration” — has its roots in the Federal Arbitration Act (“FAA”), a ninety-year-old statute passed by Congress in 1925. It was not until the U.S. Supreme Court’s 1991 watershed decision in Gilmer v. Interstate Johnson/Lane Corporation that the Court allowed statutory employment claims to be submitted to arbitration under the FAA. Forced arbitration was transformed from a rarely used form of dispute resolution into a juggernaut that has changed the nature of statutory enforcement of worker protection laws in the United States.The shift from public enforcement of workplace laws to private forced arbitration has been characterized by a number of trends. This Article examines some of them. Part I sets the stage by providing a brief overview of the distinctions between voluntary arbitration and forced arbitration. Part II describes the elevation of the FAA to a “super-statute” and the limited scope of judicial review of forced arbitration provisions and awards. Part III discusses how the courts have misapplied traditional labor law jurisprudence to justify the expansion of forced arbitration of employment disputes under the FAA. Finally, Part IV explores how forced arbitration has eroded the statutory purposes and protections of our nation’s workplace laws, focusing on the Fair Labor Standards Act (“FLSA”) and Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 (“Title VII”). These developments have transformed the employee-employer relationship from one that is regulated by worker protection statutes enforced in our public justice system to one that operates in private tribunals where workers are forced to arbitrate their claims as a condition of employment and without due process guarantees.
在过去的二十年里,已经出现了一种趋势,即从法定工作场所权利的公共执行转向雇佣纠纷的私人强制仲裁制度。强制仲裁——在法律术语中通常被称为“有约束力的争议前强制仲裁”或“雇主颁布的仲裁”——源于《联邦仲裁法》(FAA),这是国会于1925年通过的一项有90年历史的法规。直到1991年美国最高法院在Gilmer v. Interstate Johnson/Lane Corporation一案中做出分水岭裁决,法院才允许根据FAA将法定就业索赔提交仲裁。强制仲裁从一种很少使用的争议解决形式转变为一种强大的力量,改变了美国工人保护法的法定执行性质。从公共执行工作场所法律到私人强制仲裁的转变有以下几个趋势。本文将研究其中的一些。第一部分简要概述了自愿仲裁和强制仲裁之间的区别,以此为基础。第二部分描述了将FAA提升为“超级法规”以及强制仲裁条款和裁决的有限司法审查范围。第三部分讨论了法院如何误用传统的劳动法判例来证明《联邦航空法》下就业纠纷强制仲裁的扩张是正当的。最后,第四部分探讨了强制仲裁如何侵蚀了我国工作场所法律的法定目的和保护,重点是《公平劳动标准法》(“FLSA”)和1964年《民权法案》第七章(“第七章”)。这些发展已经将雇员与雇主的关系从一种由公共司法系统执行的工人保护法规所规范的关系转变为一种在私人法庭上运作的关系,在私人法庭上,工人被迫将他们的索赔作为雇佣条件进行仲裁,而没有正当程序保证。