Vol. 66 No. 6, June - June 2014
Index
- The Civil Rights Act at fifty: past, present, future.
- The unrelenting libertarian challenge to public accommodations law.
- Public accommodations under the Civil Rights Act of 1964: why freedom of association counts as a human right.
- Public accommodations under the Civil Rights Act of 1964: why freedom of association counts as a human right.
- Lawyering that has no name: Title VI and the meaning of private enforcement.
- Legal protections for the "personal best" of each employee: Title VII's prohibition on sex discrimination, the legacy of Price Waterhouse v. Hopkins, and the prospect of ENDA.
- Bias in the air: rethinking employment discrimination law.
- Articulating a "rational connection" requirement in Article III standing.
- Communicating with vegetative state patients: the role of neuroimaging in American disability law.