就业歧视法的演变:因社会条件的变化而改变的理论

M. Selmi
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引用次数: 7

摘要

时代变了,法律也要跟着变。许多最重要的就业歧视判例法都是在20世纪70年代建立的,当时歧视既公开又普遍。四十年过去了,歧视已经显著减少,不再被视为职场决策或劳动力统计不平衡的默认解释。与此同时,遗留下来的歧视更复杂,本质上更微妙,更难以识别。这篇文章探讨了最高法院是如何处理日益减少但更为复杂的就业歧视的。在最近的一系列案件中,包括具有里程碑意义的沃尔玛诉杜克斯性别歧视案,最高法院已经着手对就业歧视法的基础进行司法更新,法院悄悄地宣布旧的判例法不再适用于当代的歧视主张。换句话说,在20世纪70年代被认为是歧视的东西在今天已经不复存在了。尽管法院因其裁决而受到批评,但我的结论是,法院抛弃其旧理论是正确的,因为在较早时期允许的歧视推论已不能解释我们已发生变化的社会条件。最高法院最近更新原则的真正问题不在于抛弃旧的原则,而在于它留下了什么——最高法院未能调整其原则,以捕捉现代歧视的复杂性,因此在法律定义的歧视和我们所知道的揭露微妙歧视的困难之间留下了实质性的差距。本文还批评了最近学术界对“隐性偏见”的强调,并提出了一些建议,以便更好地使法律理论适应现代歧视的复杂性。这包括使用测试人员来记录工作场所的歧视,更多地强调教育法院和陪审员关于微妙歧视(而不是隐性偏见)的性质,以及雇主自身利益在为工作场所带来更大多样性方面可能发挥的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
The Evolution of Employment Discrimination Law: Changed Doctrine for Changed Social Conditions
Times change, and when they do, the law must as well. Much of the most important employment discrimination case law was established in the 1970s during an era when discrimination was both overt and pervasive. Moving forward forty years, discrimination has receded dramatically and is no longer seen as a default explanation for workplace decisions or statistical imbalances in a workforce. At the same time, the discrimination that remains is more complex, more subtle in nature and more difficult to identify. This article explores how the Supreme Court has navigated the declining but more complex nature of employment discrimination. In a series of recent cases, including the landmark sex discrimination case of Wal-Mart v. Dukes, the Supreme Court has embarked on a judicial updating of the foundation of employment discrimination law with the Court quietly announcing that the old case law no longer fits contemporary claims of discrimination. In other words, what counted as discrimination in the 1970s no longer does today. Despite the criticism the Court has received for its decisions, I conclude that the Court was right to shed its old doctrine as the inferences of discrimination that were permissible during an earlier era fail to account for our changed social conditions. The real problem with the Court’s recent updating of the doctrine is not the shedding of the old but what it has left in its place – the Supreme Court has failed to adapt its doctrine to capture the complexities of modern discrimination, thus leaving a substantial gap between what the law defines as discrimination and what we know about the difficulties of uncovering subtle discrimination. This article also critiques the recent academic emphasis on “implicit bias” and instead offers some suggestions for moving forward in a way that might better adapt the legal doctrine to the complexities of modern discrimination. This includes the use of testers to document workplace discrimination, more emphasis on educating courts and jurors regarding the nature of subtle discrimination (not implicit bias) and the role employer self-interests might play in bringing greater diversity to the workplace.
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