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The Supreme Court on Thursday sent the case of an Ohio woman who contends that she was the victim of reverse discrimination back to the lower courts. In a unanimous ruling […] ...
The Supreme Court on Thursday sided with a straight woman in Ohio who filed a “reverse discrimination” lawsuit against her ...
A recent Supreme Court ruling in a case of so-called reverse discrimination is significant for employers and employees alike.
The court unanimously ruled that members of majority groups do not face a higher legal standard than minorities to prevail in so-called reverse discrimination lawsuits under Title VII, the federal ...
Why is the Ames decision potentially so significant It may very well signal the death knell of reverse discrimination as a ...
The Supreme Court on Thursday revived a lawsuit from an Ohio woman who​ claimed she was the victim of reverse discrimination.
The Supreme Court ruled in favor of a straight woman who sued her gay boss for discrimination ...
Early this month the U.S. Supreme Court ruled on the idea that victims of so-called "reverse discrimination" — discrimination ...
A Supreme Court ruling about discrimination claims was a win for the rule of law, not a judicial ideology, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Noah Feldman writes.
An Ohio woman will be allowed to pursue a case alleging she was denied a promotion and demoted because she is heterosexual.
DEI under fire: Why more businesses are being accused of ‘reverse discrimination’ David Glasgow, executive director of the Meltzer Center for Diversity, Inclusion and Belonging at the NYU ...
A Supreme Court ruling about discrimination claims was a win for the rule of law, not a judicial ideology, Bloomberg Opinion columnist Noah Feldman writes.