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Legitimacy of Arbitrating Claims of Discrimination (From Arbitration Issues for the 1980s, P 235-240, 1982, James L Stern and Barbara D Dennis, ed. - See NCJ-96502)

NCJ Number
96513
Author(s)
L D Clark
Date Published
1982
Length
6 pages
Annotation
Several features distinguish laws prohibiting discrimination in employment from the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and make it mandatory to maintain open access to private efforts, such as arbitration, to comply with the law.
Abstract
First, there is an enormous difference between the scope of the 1964 Civil Rights Act and the NLRA. The first covers all employers who employ 15 or more people, while the latter focuses on unionized work forces. Title VII, as opposed to the NLRA, relies heavily on private parties litigating against other private parties and builds in a period of conciliation. In the past, proponents of arbitration in discrimination cases argued that it reduced overburdened courts' caseloads. Critics said arbitration was not suited to class action claims, lacked procedural safeguards, was too private a process for a matter of public concern, and had no power to reform contracts. Following the Gardner-Denver decision in 1974 and sweeping reforms at the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) in 1977 to speed up claims processing, there was little debate about the usefulness of arbitration. Many reasons still exist, however, for developing arbitration as an alternative mechanism. Because of the substantial volume of claims now received by the EEOC and budget cutbacks, the potential for a case backlog exists. Also the rapid charge processing system has been severely criticized. Because recent decisions have reinforced the Gardner-Denver ruling that there is an absolute right to a trial de novo in Federal court under Title VII, despite prior arbitration, arbitration ought be incorporated explicitly within the scheme under Title VII. Two notes are supplied.

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