5 Reasons Why You Need an Employment Lawyer

Employment law is the field of law that covers the legal relationship between an employer and employee.Employment law deals with the employees' right to collectively bargain and workplace safety issues.Disputes over the minimum wage, maximum working hours and, importantly, civil rights and discriminatory hiring practices are all within the purview of an employment lawyer.Workplace Discrimination and EEOC You should contact an employment lawyer if you feel that you have been discriminated against based on your race, gender or disability.The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC) is a federal agency that specifically looks into cases of workplace discrimination.In 2011, the EEOC added sex discrimination to Title VII of the Civil Rights Act. This means that employers aren't legally allowed to discriminate against you for reasons of sexual orientation.If you suffered discrimination or sexual harassment from an employer based on your religion, age, or ethnicity…
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The Difference Between: Employment, Business and Labor Law

With new laws for employee privacy rights, hiring practices, tax dodging and even disability accommodations changing from one year to the next, it can be helpful to have an overarching framework to sort through these different regulations.Labor, Employment and Business Law The most accessible way of thinking about the smorgasbord of all of these laws is by breaking them off into three areas: labor law, employment law and business law.Labor Law Labor law in many respects is the most specific general domain of law. Labor law relates to laws linking labor unions, employees and employers.On the macro level, the National Labor Relations Act is probably the most important piece of legislation that lynchpins all of the laws that dictate an employee's right to collectively organize into trade unions.Rules governing collective bargaining, higher wages and better working conditions, and joint action like labor strikes are all protected under the National Labor Relations Act…
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Unfair Labor Practices By Employers

Unfair labor practices are laid out in the National Labor Relations Act (NLRA) and concern a set of unlawful actions that employers and labor unions can be prosecuted for.

Refusing to bargain or hear arguments from a labor union, for instance, is an unlawful action for an employer to take against his or her employees.

National Labor Relations Act 

Section eight of the National Labor Relations Act delineates unfair labor practices that employers or labor unions sometimes engage in.

If, for instance, an employer attempts to disrupt the forming or administration of a labor union, then that employer might open himself up to investigation by the National Labor Relations Board (NLRB), which enforces the National Labor Relations Act and protects workers' rights.

Unlawf…

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