Archive for July, 2004

The Class Maledictorian Hypo

Saturday, July 31st, 2004

Don, over at All Deliberate Speed (”a civil rights blog, devoted to discussions of topics of interest in civil rights law”), has posted an interesting sex discrimination “hypo” (as hypothetical situations having little resemblance to real life legal questions are known in law schools across America).

So I’m reading this hypo, and my first thought [...]

George Lenard on General |

Woman-on-man sexual harassment judgment raises a few interesting points

Friday, July 30th, 2004

The Kentucky Post reports: Man wins sexual harassment judgment (Mike Rutledge)

Flying J Inc. must pay $15,000 in damages and $36,600 in legal costs to a man who demonstrated . . . he rejected advances from his [female] supervisor . . . and suffered a “tangible employment action” as a result. Read moreInitially, the [...]

George Lenard on General |

Implications of the 4/5’s (80%) rule: Check the speedometer while you drive, not after the police officer stops you!

Thursday, July 29th, 2004

Imagine you were caught speeding by a police officer. Think you can tell her that you were too busy to check the speedometer? My guess is that excuse won’t work! Same is true here….

So, one implication for companies about the 80% rule is to keep an eye on and monitor selection rates, promotion rates, and [...]

George Lenard on General |

Employment Discrimination and Statistics: The Art Versus the Science

Thursday, July 29th, 2004

Someone emailed me with the following question: “I’d like to know how practitioners go about collecting the complex data used in statistical analyses.” The question is a great one!

I would contend that this is where the “art” comes into the play; the statistical analyses are more the science part of the process.

The collection [...]

George Lenard on General |

Coming soon: is requiring laborers to have high school diplomas race discrimination? (George’s upcoming posts on statistics & disparate impact)

Wednesday, July 28th, 2004

If Michael can do this so can I:

Here’s a post that’s just a “teaser” for what I plan to write about soon.

Michael’s the expert on the expert statistical and validation analysis applicable to disparate impact cases. I used to understand the legal theory, and I’m boning up on it again, so I can [...]

George Lenard on General |