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Discrimination Laundering
The Rise of Organizational Innocence and the Crisis of Equal Opportunity Law
This book uncovers legal shifts founded on misunderstandings about discrimination and describes how law and organizations can do better.
Tristin K. Green (Author)
9781316506998, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 14 November 2016
207 pages
22.7 x 15.2 x 1.2 cm, 0.32 kg
'Tristin Green, one of the nation's leading employment discrimination scholars, has written a book that will change the way we understand the processes of workplace inequality and what should be done to prevent ongoing biases and discrimination. With compelling storytelling and sophisticated analysis, Discrimination Laundering provocatively shows that, perversely, the law increasingly shields organizations from responsibility for patterned institutional discrimination. Green skillfully weaves together developments in law, legal scholarship, and social science in a way that deepens and furthers the debate about workplace equality. The book is important, imaginative, and a must-read for anyone who cares about next generation anti-discrimination policies.' Orly Lobel, University of San Diego
While discrimination in the workplace is often perceived to be undertaken at the hands of individual or 'rogue' employees acting against the better interest of their employers, the truth is often the opposite: organizations are inciting discrimination through the work environments that they create. Worse, the law increasingly ignores this reality and exacerbates the problem. In this groundbreaking book, Tristin K. Green describes the process of discrimination laundering, showing how judges are changing the law to protect employers, and why. By bringing organizations back into the discussion of discrimination, with real-world stories and extensive social-science research, Green shows how organizational and legal efforts to minimize discrimination - usually by policing individuals over broader organizational change - are taking us in the wrong direction, and how the law could do better, by creating incentives for organizational efforts that are likely to minimize discrimination, instead of inciting it.
1. The threads of organizational innocence
Part I. Discrimination Laundering: 2. Individual discrimination: the emerging law of complaint and response
3. Systemic discrimination: erasing the aggregate and entrenching a law of complaint and response
4. Class, culture, and limiting the purview of Title VII
Part II. What's Wrong with Discrimination Laundering: 5. The laundered workplace
6. How organizations discriminate - and what they can do to stop
Part III. Reversing Discrimination Laundering: 7. Reversing discrimination laundering.
Subject Areas: Discrimination in employment law [LNHD], Employment & labour law [LNH], Laws of Specific jurisdictions [LN], Law [L]