Equal Employment Opportunity
The modern history of employment equity begins with the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which extended employment equity rights to Americans regardless of gender, religion, national origin, race or color (National Archives, 2014). The CRA was, in essence, fulfilling the promise of the 14th Amendment, which introduced the idea of equal protection under the law. Employment in the United States is typically governed under the doctrine of employment at will, which grants employers considerable leeway in firing people, but the CRA established that people needed equal opportunity and protection regardless of the state outward characteristics. This paper will examine the history of equal employment opportunity and the moral and ethical dimensions of this concept.
History
The Civil Rights Act of 1964 did not invent the concept of employment equity, but it has proven to be the foundation of modern equal employment opportunity. The text of that law, and the protections that is extended to Americans, has remained in place since that time, surviving various court challenges. The Civil Rights Act has been used as the basis of similarly-structured laws that have basically expanded worker protections. Such acts include protections of disabled workers and older workers from discrimination in the workplace. A recent extension curtailed the ability of companies to discriminate on the basis of genetic information, under Title II of the Genetic Information Nondiscrimination Act of 2008 (EEOC, 2009). The recent coming out of Apple CEO Tim Cook highlights the reality that sexual orientation is not a protected class, despite ample evidence that LGBT individuals suffer discrimination in the workplace (Zillman, 2014).
The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission was created as a regulatory body that would provide oversight and guidance to business with respect to the enforcement of equal employment opportunity provisions. The EEOC notes that the laws regarding equal employment opportunity apply to almost all employers, and that there are protections not just for workers, but for whistleblowers as well (EEOC, 2009).
Since the passage of the Civil Rights Act of 1964, however, the concept of equal employment opportunity has come under several challenges in the court system. Initially, the court system expanded the scope of the CRA, for example in Griggs v. Duke Power, where the concept of "disparate impact" was invoked to find that the company has systematically discriminated against black workers by only hiring them for menial jobs, while hiring white workers exclusively for the better-paying jobs (Blake, 2014). But more recently, the CRA has seen its architecture eroded by an activist conservative court, moves some argue are weakening the law while leaves its facade, but making it much more difficult to file suit under Title VII's provisions (Blake, 2014). The Obama administration was forced to sign the Lilly Ledbetter Fair Pay Act into law as a response to a ruling from the five conservative Supreme Court judges that limited the ability of women to seek redress under the CRA, highlighted that there is an ongoing attempt to undermine the civil rights act, and that government must continue to reinforce its provisions even fifty years after it was passed (Ledbetter v. Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co., 2007).
In addition to the federal anti-discrimination framework, there are a number of state-level provisions that have been enacted. States that use evidence and critical thinking in setting policy will typically take the lead in adopting more progressive legislation where employment equity is concerned. The ACLU website (2014) provides information on the state-level differences in worker protections that have been implemented to augment the Civil Rights Act.
There are two key takeaways from the legislative history of employment equity. The first is that, even fifty years after the Civil Rights Act was passed, there remains considerable opposition to the idea of treating all human beings as equals. This opposition to human rights will be discussed later in more detail, but the evidence from judicial cases has shown that even Supreme Court justices are keen to launch assaults on equality, legislating from the bench in direct contrast to the will of Congress in enacting the Civil Rights Act and its extensions.
The second takeaway that emerges is that equal employment opportunity continues to be a work in progress. This is not just the defense of the gains that have already been made, but the extension of those gains to eliminate workplace discrimination. The recent passage of laws preventing discrimination on the basis of genetic information represents an adaptation of civil rights to modern technology, and the issue of LGBT rights is still on the table at the federal level, and in many states as well. So there remains areas where progress is necessary....
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