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Employment Arbitration - 2nd EditionThomas E. Carbonneau
Price: $125.00
550 pages.
1 Hardcover Volume. Table of Cases. Index. Published June 2006. |
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Dedication
Preface Acknowledgments Section I. An Introduction to the Process and the Issues Section II. Arbitration: A Definition (i) Its Appeal to the Commercial Community (ii) The Reality of Its Operation (iii) The Actual Operation 1. “Basic Organization” 2. “Arbitrators and Disclosure Requirements” 3. “Establishing the Scope of the Arbitration” 4. “The Basic Hearing” 5. “Third-Party Intervention” 6. “Awards and Judicial Scrutiny” 7. “Arbitral Costs” 8. “A Final Evaluation” (iv) Arbitration and Lawyers Section III. The Law of Arbitration: Basic Concepts (i) Party Autonomy (ii) Arbitration Agreements (iii) Arbitrability (iv) The Separability and Kompetenz-Kompetenz (v) Amiable Composition (vi) Duty to Arbitrate in Good Faith (vii) Consolidation and Class Action in Arbitration (viii) Selecting Arbitrators (ix) Adjudicatory Powers of the Arbitrators (x) Review and Enforcement of Awards (xi) The Contribution of Practice: Fast-Track Arbitration (xii) The “Modern” Arbitration Statute Section IV. A Critical Political Assessment (i) The Civil Rights Procedures Protection Act (ii) EEOC Notice (iii) U.S. Labor Department Position Section V. The Fountainhead Cases (i) The Ruling in Gardner-Denver (ii) The Ruling in Gilmer Section VI. The Employment Contract Exclusion (FAA §1) (i) Circuit City Stores, Inc. v. (ii) The Aftermath of (iii) The Law Before Section VII. Fairness in the Employment Arbitration Contract (i) The Ruling in Armendariz (ii) Other Rulings Section VIII. The Allocation of Costs in Employment Arbitration Agreements (i) The Ruling in Green Tree and Other Cases (ii) The Green Tree Progeny Section IX. The Defense of Unconscionability (i) Tarulli v. Circuit City Stores, Inc. (ii) (iii) Fitz v. NCR Corp (iv) (v) Hightower v. GMRI, Inc. Section X. The Effect of an Employment Arbitration Agreement on EEOC (i) The Prior Cases (ii) EEOC v. Waffle House, Inc. (iii) Subsequent Cases Section XI. Employment Arbitration Agreements and Third-Party Beneficiaries (i) An Introduction to the Issue and the Case (ii) Penn v. Ryan’s Family Steak Houses, Inc. Section XII. The Basic Judicial Position (i) The Standard Policy (ii) The Standard Construction Great Western Mortgage Corp. v. Peacock A Note on the Arbitrability of Title VII Claims (iii) Maintaining the Effectiveness of Adjudication Maye v. Smith Barney, Inc. (iv) Distinguishing Between Gilmer and Gardner-Denver Pryner v. Tractor Supply Co.and Sobierajski v. Theosen Tractor & Equipment Co A Note on the Judicial Assessment of the Opposing Doctrine Nieves v. Individualized Shirts Section XIII. Minority Judicial Positions (i) An Aggressive Interpretation of Gilmer (ii) Seeking Fairness in Employment Arbitration Agreements Cole v. Burns International Security Services (iii) The Arbitrability of Civil Rights Claims Prudential Insurance Co. of A Note on the Progeny Willis v. Dean Witter Reynolds, Inc. (iv) The Exception of Unconscionability Stirlen v. Supercuts, Inc. Section XIV. Aspects of the Continuing Debate on the Arbitrability of Title VII Claims (i) Desiderio v. National Association of Securities Dealers (NASD), 2 F. Supp. 2d 516 (S.D.N.Y. 1998) (ii) The Decision in (iii) (a) Hooters of America v. Phillips, 39 F. Supp. 2d 582 (D.S.C. 1998) (b) Hooters and the (iv) Seus v. John Nuveen & Co., 146 F.3d 175 (3d Cir. 1998), cert. denied, 525 (v) Title VII and the Award of Attorney’s Fees in Employment Arbitration (vi) State Courts Uphold the Arbitrability of Title VII Claims (vii) The Seventh Circuit Adopts Arbitrability Section XV. The Settlements in the Smith Barney and Merrill Lynch Class Action Lawsuits (i) Smith Barney, An Update (ii) Merrill Lynch Section XVI. The (i) The Ruling in Wright Wright v. Universal Maritime Service Corp. (ii) Subsequent Cases Section XVII. “Makeshift” Employment Arbitration Agreements (i) Employee Handbooks (ii) E-mail Agreements (iii) Agreements by Implication (iv) Agreements by Conduct Section XVIII The Institutional Position: Integrating the Legal Doctrine into Corporate Policy (i) The AAA’s Resolving Employment Disputes: A Practical Guide (ii) The AAA’s National Rules for The Resolution of Employment Disputes (Including Mediation and Arbitration Rules) Section XIX. A Model Agreement and Arbitral Process (i) Basic Considerations (ii) Provisions of a Model Agreement Index and Table of Cases Book Overview | Table of Contents | Chapters |
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