Arkansas Law Review (1968-present)BlairKeithS.BLAIR, K. "Better Disabled than Devout? Why Title VII Has Failed to Provide Adequate Accommodations Against Workplace Religious Discrimination." Arkansas Law Review 63 no. 3 (2010): 515
According to the employee, religious beliefs allegedly prevented her from working on Sundays and from asking other individuals to work in her place. She was terminated after failing to perform and essential job function. The U.S. District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania ruled that ...
GEE, STEPHENChicago Kent Law Review
K. Engle, `The Persistence of Neutrality: the failure of the religious accommodation provision to redeem Title VII' (1997) 76 Texas Law Review 317.The Persistence of Neutrality: the failure of the religious accommodation provision to redeem Title VII - Engle - 1997...
Request Denied: Retaliation under Title VII for a Request for Religious AccommodationI. INTRODUCTION "Ask and you shall receive" may be helpful for many aspects of one's faith, but...Buchmiller, RhettUniversity of Missouri at ColumbiaMissouri Law Review...
These employees contend that Title VII of the Civil Rights Adoi:10.1007/s10979-006-9025-0Amy BergquistSocial Science Electronic PublishingBergquist A. Pharmacist Refusals: Dispensing (with) Religious Accommodation under Title VII. Minn L Rev. 2005 2006;90:1073. Available from: http://ssrn.com/...
A Snapshot of the Current State of Religious Accommodation in the US Workplacedoi:10.2307/979704degradationneotropical birdspoint countssouth americatropical forest***Cunningham, BrentBorstorff, Patricia CClark, Louise JAmericas
The article highlights the Ninth Circuit Court's ruling in "Cook v. Lindsay Olive Growers." It was held that an employee's claim under a California law prohibiting religious discrimination in the workp...
As enacted in 1964, Title VII prohibited discrimination on the basis of religion, but it soon became obvious that for meaningful protection of religious beliefdoi:doi:10.1177/0964663909103633Roberto L. CorradaUniversity of Cincinnati law review. University of Cincinnati. College of LawTowards an ...