University of Richmond Law Review
Volume 43 | Issue 2
Article 3
1-1-2009
Human Dignity and American Employment Law
David C. Yamada
Suffolk University Law School
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David C. Yamada, Human Dignity and American Employment Law, 43 U. Rich. L. Rev. 523 (2009).
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ESSAY
HUMAN DIGNITY AND AMERICAN
EMPLOYMENT LAW
David C. Yamada *
I. INTRODUCTION
American employment law has been dominated by a belief system that embraces the idea of unfettered free markets and regards limitations on management authority with deep suspicion.
Under this "markets and management" framework, the needs for
unions and collective bargaining, individual employment rights,
and, most recently, protection of workers amid the dynamics of
globalization, are all weighed against these prevailing norms. The
creation of New Deal labor and social legislation during the 1930s
and the expansion of employment rights during the 1960s and
1970s provided tangible benefits to workers in terms of collective
bargaining and minimum wage, safeguards against discrimination, and modest wrongful discharge protections. These gains
have been under continuous and vigorous attack for several decades, however, to the point where today, the state of American
employment relations is at a critical juncture.
* Professor of Law and Director, New Workplace Institute, Suffolk University Law
School, Boston, Mass. J.D., 1985, New York University School of Law. I have been closely
affiliated in a pro bono capacity with two of the organizations mentioned in this essay, the
Workplace Bullying Institute and Americans for Democratic Action. The opinions expressed herein are solely my own.
This essay is an attempt to advance the theme of human dignity in the workplace, rather than a claim to have written the 'last word" on the topic. I hope that it will encourage
others to draw from the ideas and sources contained herein to further their own work, and
I welcome exchanges about how "dignitarian" principles can be applied to future employment law scholarship and advocacy.
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[Vol. 43:523
For the sake of workers and organizations alike, we must rethink this dominant framework. Concerns about income, job security, and working conditions now cut across the socioeconomic
spectrum. Consistent trends such as lower union membership levels, growing wealth inequality, and globalization of markets
raise important questions about the well-being of everyday workers and their role in shaping the modern workplace. Despite the
seeming abundance of potential legal protections for many American workers, effectuating one's employment-related rights can be
a lengthy, expensive, and stressful undertaking. Legal process is
costly and time-consuming for both employees and employers.
This essay posits that human dignity should supplant "markets
and management" as the central framework for analyzing and
shaping American employment law. Simply put, we need to reframe the intellectual and rhetorical debate over employment law
and policy to focus on the dignity and well-being of workers. Illuminative on this point is the work of linguistics professor George
Lakoff,1 who has attracted considerable attention with his theories about how public issues are framed and discussed in the
United States. According to Lakoff, "Frames are the mental
structures that allow human beings to understand reality-and
sometimes to create what we take to be reality."2 These frames
"facilitate our most basic interactions with the world-they structure our ideas and concepts, they shape the way we reason, and
they even impact how we perceive and how we act." 3 Lakoff has
urged progressives to communicate their basic values more effectively by framing issues in ways that resonate with stakeholders
and the general public. 4
Lakoffs ideas are equally applicable to employment relations.
For too long, the ideas of unfettered free markets and management control have framed how we look at regulating the
workplace. We must change that frame in order to build public
support for stronger labor protections and better enforcement,
1.
See generally GEORGE LAKOFF, THINKING POINTS: COMMUNICATING OUR AMERI-
CAN VALUES AND VISION (2006) (discussing how progressives can better communicate their
values to the American public).
2. Id. at 25.
3. Id.
4. See id. at 12. Lakoffs main vehicle for public dissemination of these ideas is the
Rockridge Institute, a non-profit research and education center. See About Us-Rockridge
Institute, http://www.rockridgeinstitute.org/aboutus.html (last visited Dec. 8, 2008).
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HUMAN DIGNITY
and we can do so by making the case for human dignity in the
workplace. Within such a "dignitarian"5 framework, there is plenty of room for market-based competition, entrepreneurship, individual responsibility, and sound management prerogative. Furthermore, the call for dignity in the workplace is not a rallying
cry for state ownership, runaway taxation, or regulatory micromanagement of the workplace. Rather, it is about promoting the
complementary goals of healthy, productive, and socially responsible workplaces within a mix of robust private, public, and nonprofit sectors.
This argument needs to be developed and advanced, and so the
discussion is organized as follows: Part II examines the dominant
markets and management framework. Part III sets out the theoretical and policy considerations of an employment law framework grounded in individual dignity. The sources range from the
writings of Enlightenment philosopher John Locke and the drafters of America's Declaration of Independence and the United
States Constitution, to the more recent works of Carol Gilligan
and Jean Baker Miller and the emerging fields of therapeutic jurisprudence, relational psychology, and occupational health psychology. Part IV applies these ideas to a small cluster of important employment law issues, including unions and collective
bargaining, job security, workplace bullying, employment discrimination, dispute resolution, and globalization. Finally, Part V
closes the essay by considering how worker dignity can become
the dominant framework for American employment law.
II. MARKETS AND MANAGEMENT
Markets and management can be very good things. In their
best light, markets remind us of the affirmative value of enterprise and entrepreneurship. Healthy competition can provide a
variety of quality goods and services at reasonable prices. The
transformation of ideas into tangible products, the dream of starting one's own business, and the building of a successful enterprise
are all opportunities provided by a society that allows for free
5. "Dignitarian" is a term used by Robert Fuller in his examinations of dignity in our
society, and I am happy to adopt it for this essay. See generally ROBERT W. FULLER, ALL
RISE: SOMEBODIES, NOBODIES, AND THE POLITICS OF DIGNITY (2006) [hereinafter FULLER,
ALL RISE]; ROBERT W. FULLER, SOMEBODIES AND NOBODIES: OVERCOMING THE ABUSE OF
RANK (2003) [hereinafter FULLER, SOMEBODIES AND NOBODIES].
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND LAW REVIEW
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markets. Similarly, good management practices can lead to energized organizations, healthy and productive workers, and satisfied consumers.
Unregulated markets and unchecked management authority,
however, can take us down a dangerous path. This has occurred
in the United States, and the discussion below will explain these
developments in relation to the workplace. Part A examines the
emergence and effects of this dominant framework and Part B
considers its confluence with the development of modern employment law and policy.
A. Dominance of the Markets and Management Framework
In the late 1990s, political economist and journalist Robert
Kuttner wrote that America "is in one of its cyclical romances
with a utopian view of laissez-faire."6 A decade later, it is clear
that this has been an awfully long romance. During the past
quarter of a century, belief in a mixed economy that tempers the
excesses, inequities, and uncertainties of the market with government regulation and a safety net has given way to the conviction that "[u]nfettered markets are deemed both the essence of
human liberty, and the most expedient route to prosperity." 7
It is clear, to borrow from Lakoff, that staunch supporters of
the free market have succeeded in "framing" the debate.8 Communications professor James Arnt Aune, examining "several rhetorical strategies of economic analysis" that have been deployed
by free market defenders, concluded that defining "any object,
person, or relationship as a commodity that can be bought or
sold" has been a key to their success. 9 He used the term "economic correctness" to capture how free market rhetoric has come to
dominate everyday political debate in America.1O Along these
lines, social commentator Thomas Frank has observed that "[tlo
6.
ROBERT KUTTNER, EVERYTHING FOR SALE: THE VIRTUES AND LIMITS OF MARKETS 4
(1997).
7. Id. at 3.
8. See supra note 2 and accompanying text.
9.
JAMES ARNT AUNE, SELLING THE FREE MARKET: THE RHETORIC OF ECONOMIC
CORRECTNESS 36 (2001).
10. Id. at 4.
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HUMAN DIGNITY
protest against markets is to surrender one's very personhood, to
put oneself outside the family of mankind."11
Ironies abound, as it fairly can be argued that the very dominance of the markets and management framework has caused
many workers to surrender their personhood, at least on the job.
Political writer William Greider trenchantly described these realities of work in modern America:
In pursuit of "earning a living" most Americans go to work for someone else and thereby accept the employer's right to command their
behavior in intimate detail. At the factory gate or the front office,
people implicitly forfeit claims to self-direction and are typically
barred from participating in the important decisions that govern
their daily efforts. Most employees lose any voice in how the rewards
of the enterprise are distributed, the surplus wealth their own work
helped to create. Basic rights the founders said were inalienablefree speech and freedom of assembly, among others-are effectively
suspended, consigned to the control of others. In some ways, the em12
ployee also surrenders essential elements of self.
Economist Julie Nelson has described evolution of economic
discourse as a transformation from the organic to the mechanistic. Traditionally, economics was "about the provisioning of goods
and services to meet our material needs," examining the ways
"we manage our time and money so we can obtain groceries and
shelter and thus 'keep body and soul together."'13 In contemporary discussions about economics, however, "it seems that body
and soul grow ever farther apart," with "money, profits, markets,
and corporations" serving as "parts of an 'economic machine,"' to
the neglect of normative questions about ethics and morality. 14
The economic machine imagery invoked by Nelson resonates
with the emergence of the profession of management. The early
twentieth century gave rise to this new profession, most notably
via theories of "scientific management" championed by Frederick
Taylor, a mechanical engineer and management consultant.15
Analyzing productivity in America's burgeoning manufacturing
sector, Taylor believed that management's inability "to set accu-
11. THOMAS FRANK, ONE MARKET UNDER GOD: EXTREME CAPITALISM, MARKET POPULISM, AND THE END OF ECONOMIC DEMOCRACY xiii (2000).
12. WILLIAM GREIDER, THE SOUL OF CAPITALISM 49 (2003).
13. JULIE A. NELSON, ECONOMICS FOR HUMANS 1 (2006).
14. Id.
15. RONALD L. FILIPPELLI, LABOR IN THE USA 60 (1984).
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[Vol. 43:523
rate standards for each job" allowed workers to "manipulate their
jobs and connive to set output levels far below their actual capacity."1 6 Taylor's response was to use time-and-motion studies to determine what levels of productivity could be expected of factory
workers and what wages they should receive. 17
Leaders of organized labor protested Taylor's methods, claiming his techniques reduced workers to the status of machines. 1 8
However, those leaders lost this battle, as "[c]ompanies embraced
time study with great enthusiasm," applying it to rationalize assembly lines and piecework payment. 19 In fact, organized labor
was the lone dissenting voice on this question, as "[c]apitalists,
managers, and Progressive reformers all embraced Taylor and his
concepts." 2 0 The latter group included the likes of Walter Lippmann, co-founder of the New Republic, and, ironically, as we will
see below, Louis Brandeis.21 According to organizational behavior
scholar Rakesh Khurana, scientific management helped to
achieve "the triumph of management over labor, skilled craft
workers, and foremen for control of the shop floor, providing ideological and cultural justification for that control."2 2
Today, management control remains a central priority for corporate America, and companies devote considerable resources to
applying psychological methods to select, motivate, and manipulate workers. 2 3 As explained by leadership expert Joanne Ciulla,
amid the expansion of the white-collar workforce, employers have
applied "management techniques and organization theories
honed during World War II," with the goal of "mold[ing] their
employees into their image of a good corporate citizen." 24 These
practices keep workers in line while improving the lot of high-
16.
17.
18.
19.
20.
Id.
Id. at 60-61.
Id. at 61.
Id.
RAKESH KHURANA, FROM HIGHER AIMS TO HIRED HANDS: THE SOCIAL TRANS-
FORMATION
OF AMERICAN
BUSINESS
SCHOOLS AND
THE
UNFULFILLED
PROMISE OF
MANAGEMENT AS A PROFESSION 96 (2007).
21. Id.
22. Id. at 95.
23.
See JOANNE B. CIULLA, THE WORKING LIFE: THE PROMISE AND BETRAYAL OF
MODERN WORK 110-16 (2000) (discussing how employers apply psychological principles to
management practices).
24. Id. at 108.
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HUMAN DIGNITY
level managers. 2 5 John Kenneth Galbraith, in his last major writing, reminded us that in the modern corporation, "[m]anagement
authority remains unimpaired, including the setting of its own
compensation in cash or stock options," bolstered by "a corporate
26
system based on the unrestrained power of self-enrichment."
Organizational psychologist Harvey Hornstein has used the term
"we-boosting" to capture "how powerful, privileged members of
some companies are providing themselves with preferential
treatment to the detriment of other employees, their own firms,
and society at-large."2 7
Meanwhile, our culture has celebrated leaders who rule by fiat
and intimidation, conferring upon those who terminate workers
an inexplicably perverse fame. For example, "Chainsaw Al" Dunlap was regarded as the savior of the ailing Sunbeam Corporation
by severely cutting jobs and pitting stakeholders against each
other, until it became evident that he had run the company toward bankruptcy. 2 8 "Neutron" Jack Welch was hailed for rescuing
General Electric by eliminating some 130,000 jobs while managing in a way that was "criticizing, demeaning, ridiculing, [and]
humiliating" to his employees. 2 9 Donald Trump regained some
lost fame through his reality television show about corporate ladder climbing, The Apprentice, and in the process managed to popularize the phrase "You're fired!"30
B. Harms Under the Markets and Management Framework
If the practices underlying the markets and management
framework were delivering the promised utopia, then there would
be much less room for quarrel. However, the benefits of this approach are not being shared by all. Income inequality has grown
25. See id. (discussing corporate managers' post-World War II goal of "creat[ing] the
kind of commitment that they had seen in the war effort").
26. JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH, THE ECONOMICS OF INNOCENT FRAUD: TRUTH FOR
OUR TIME 30 (2004).
27. HARVEY A. HORNSTEIN, THE HAVES AND THE HAVE NOTS: THE ABUSE OF POWER
AND PRIVILEGE IN THE WORKPLACE... AND How TO CONTROL IT xv (2003).
28.
See BARBARA KELLERMAN, BAD LEADERSHIP: WHAT IT Is, How IT HAPPENS, WHY
IT MATTERS 129-42 (2004).
29. STEVEN GREENHOUSE, THE BIG SQUEEZE: TOUGH TIMES FOR THE AMERICAN
WORKER 85-87 (2008).
30. Trump Sees Silver Lining, CBS News, Nov. 23, 2004, http://www.cbsnews.coml
stories/2004/03/31/national/main609576.shtml.
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substantially over the past three decades, to the point where "the
gap between rich and poor is bigger than in any other advanced
country." 3 1 According to a 2006 National Bureau of Economic Research report, from World War II until the 1970s, the income
share of the top decile (10%) held steady at just above 30% of the
nation's total income. 3 2 That share has increased sharply during
the past twenty-five years, however, reaching over 40% by the
1990s. 33 During the 1980s and 1990s, the top 0.1% of income
earners enjoyed the strongest gains in income share, receiving
over 7% of the total income by the end of the century. 3 4
Figures drawn from the U.S. Bureau of the Census showing
real income growth among families between 1979 and 2003 tell a
similar story:
Bottom 20%: -2%
Second 20%: +8%
Middle 20%: +15%
Fourth 20%: +26%
Top 20%: +51%35
The top 5% ($170,100 and above) realized a 75% gain in real family income during that period.36
Insecurity and stress about jobs and the future cut across socioeconomic lines, reaching low-income and professional workers
alike.37 The human impact is best told through stories, such as
Barbara Ehrenreich's chronicles of the challenges facing both
working families who are struggling to make ends meet in the
31. Inequality in America: The Rich, the Poor and the Growing Gap Between Them,
ECONOMIST, June 17, 2006, at 28, available at http://www.economist.com/world/displaysto
ry.cfm?story-id=ElSDVVJTT.
32. Thomas Piketty & Emmanuel Saez, The Evolution of Top Incomes: A Historical
and InternationalPerspective 3 fig.1 (Nat'l Bureau of Econ. Research, Workingpaper No.
11955, 2006), available at http://www.nber.org/papers/w1l955.
33. See id.
34. See id. at fig.3.
35.
See CHUCK COLLINS & FELICE YESKEL, ECONOMIC APARTHEID IN AMERICA: A
PRIMER ON ECONOMIC INEQUALITY & INSECURITY 41 (rev. ed. 2005) (bar graph summarizing statistical data from Census Bureau).
36. Id.
37.
Compare BETH SHULMAN, THE BETRAYAL OF WORK: How LoW-WAGE JOBS FAIL 30
MILLION AMERICANS AND THEIR FAMILIES (2003) (examining working conditions and compensation for individuals in low-wage jobs), with JILL ANDRESKY FRASER, WHITE-COLLAR
SWEATSHOP: THE DETERIORATION OF WORK AND ITS REWARDS IN CORPORATE AMERICA
(2001) (examining working conditions in the white-collar corporate sector).
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HUMAN DIGNITY
low-wage workforce and unemployed professionals who are attempting to rebuild their self-esteem, careers, and incomes following layoffs.38 Unfortunately, the increasing levels of income inequality summarized above, in addition to growing levels of
income instability, support the palpable anxiety and despair evident in the subjects of Ehrenreich's reportage. A 2008 Economic
Policy Institute study documented growing levels of income volatility as measured by "the share of working-age individuals who
experienced a drop in family income of 50% or greater over a twoyear period," with large spikes occurring during economic downturns and a generally upward trend between the early 1970s and
the early 2000s, "peaking at nearly 10% in 2002."39
The everyday experience of work is delivering negative health
consequences as well. A 1999 report on work-related stress by the
National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health concluded
that job stress is linked to higher levels of cardiovascular disease,
musculoskeletal disorders, and psychological disorders.40 The report also suggested a possible correlation between job stress and
higher levels of workplace injuries, suicides, cancer, ulcers, and impaired immune function.41 According to one insurance company
study referenced in the report, "Problems at work are more strongly
associated with health complaints than are any other life stressormore so than even financial problems or family problems."42
In addition, the workplace subjects many workers to severe
bullying and psychological abuse. Gary and Ruth Namie have defined workplace bullying as "the repeated, malicious, healthendangering mistreatment of one employee.., by one or more
employees."43 In 2007, their non-profit Workplace Bullying Institute partnered with Zogby International pollsters to conduct the
38. See BARBARA EHRENREICH, BAIT AND SWITCH: THE (FUTILE) PURSUIT OF THE
AMERICAN DREAM (2005) (reporting on the lives of the white-collar unemployed); BARBARA
EHRENREICH, NICKEL AND DIMED: ON (NOT) GETTING BY IN AMERICA (2001) (reporting on
the experience of working in full-time, poverty-level wages).
39. Jacob S. Hacker & Elisabeth Jacobs, The Rising Instability of American Family
Incomes, 1969-2004: Evidence from the Panel Study of Income Dynamics 8 (Econ. Policy
Inst., Briefing Paper No. 213, 2008), available at http://www.epi.org/content.cfmbp213.
40. NAT'L INST. FOR OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY & HEALTH, U.S. DEP'T OF HEALTH &
HUMAN SERVS., PUB. No. 99-101, STRESS... AT WORK 11 (1999), available at http://www.
cdc.gov/niosh/pdfs/stress.pdf.
41. See id.
42. Id. at 5 (citing STACEY KOHLER & JOHN KAMP, ST. PAUL FIRE & MARINE INS. CO.,
AMERICAN WORKERS UNDER PRESSURE TECHNICAL REPORT 13 tbl. 7 (1992)).
43. GARY NAMIE & RUTH NAMIE, THE BULLY AT WORK 3 (rev. ed. 2003)
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND LAW REVIEW
[Vol. 43:523
first comprehensive U.S. survey of workplace bullying.44 Among
the significant findings were that 37% of respondents had been
subjected to workplace bullying at some point in their work lives
and that 45% of bullying targets experienced stress-related
health consequences. 4 5 Targets further responded that when they
reported bullying, their employers either ignored the problem or
46
made it worse 62% of the time.
C. Workers'Rights Under the Markets and Management
Framework
The general legal status of workers reinforces the model of unilateral management control. By the early 1900s, employment at
will, that is, the right of an employer to discharge a worker for
any reason or no reason at all, had become the presumptive employment relationship in the United States.47 It remains so today.
As Clyde Summers has observed, America, "unlike almost every
other industrialized country and many developing countries," has
adopted neither general protections against unfair dismissal nor
even minimum periods of notice.48 Such protections are reserved
largely for union members working under collective bargaining
agreements. 4 9
1. Unions
Management resistance, even antipathy, towards unions is
nothing new. Paul Weiler has reminded us, "For the last century
management in the United States has been vigorously opposed to
union representation, as much if not more so than management
in any other industrialized nation."50 The decades that followed
the enactment of the National Labor Relations Act of 1935,51
44. See WORKPLACE BULLYING INST. & ZOGBY INT'L, U.S. WORKPLACE BULLYING
SURVEY (2007), http://www.bullyinginstitute.org/zogby2OO7/WBIsurvey2OO7.pdf.
45. Id. at 1.
46. Id.
47. Clyde W. Summers, Employment at Will in the United States: The Divine Right of
Employers, 3 U. PA. J. LAB. & EMP. L. 65, 67-68 (2000).
48. Id. at 65.
49. See id. at 85.
50. PAUL C. WEILER, GOVERNING THE WORKPLACE: THE FUTURE OF LABOR AND
EMPLOYMENT LAW 13 (1990).
51. National Labor Relations Act of 1935, Pub. L. No. 74-198, 49 Stat. 449 (codified as
amended at 29 U.S.C. §§ 151-69 (2000)).
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HUMAN DIGNITY
which provides employees the rights to join unions and engage in
collective bargaining, and the conclusion of World War II in 1945,
saw the emergence of a tripartite structure of industrial relations,
with less confrontational unions joining management and government as partners in workplace governance. 5 2 Although commentators disagree over whether this period constituted a social
compact or "labor peace" between management and labor,53 it is
fair to say that it was short-lived.
The percentage of workers who belong to unions has declined
sharply over the past fifty years. In the 1950s, just over a third of
the American workforce was unionized.54 That percentage fell to
24% in 1973 and to 12% in 2006.55 Although there are many reasons behind the decline of organized labor, one of the major causes is the extreme level of sophisticated, aggressive, and generously funded anti-union activity on the part of many employers. 5 6
Labor researcher Kate Bronfenbrenner found that 75% of employers facing organizing drives hired anti-union consultants. 5 7
Employer retaliation against workers who support unionization is
one of the most common violations of federal labor law. 58 When
unions win representation elections, many employers successfully
52. See WEILER, supra note 50, at 7-12.
53. Compare JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH, THE NEW INDUSTRIAL STATE, 290-91 (3d ed.,
rev. 1979) (opining that "acceptance of the union by the industrial firm and the emergence
thereafter of an era of comparatively peaceful industrial relations" actually represented
"Jonah's triumph over the whale"), with GREENHOUSE, supra note 29, at 75-79 (discussing
the "social contract" that existed between management and labor, benefitting workers in
terms of job security, wages, and benefits), and NELSON LICHTENSTEIN, STATE OF THE
UNION: A CENTURY OF AMERICAN LABOR 98-99 (2002) (criticizing the notion of a social
compact and concluding that "[a]t best it was a limited and unstable truce, largely confined to a well-defined set of regions and industries").
54. COLLINS & YESKEL, supranote 35, at 81.
55. Barry T. Hirsch & David A. Macpherson, Union Membership, Coverage, Density,
and Employment Among All Wage and Salary Workers, 1973-2007, http://unions
tats.gsu.edu.
56. See generally GREENHOUSE, supra note 29, at 247-49 (detailing employer resistance to unions); Kate L. Bronfenbrenner, Employer Behavior in Certification Elections
and First-Contract Campaigns: Implications for Labor Law Reform, in RESTORING THE
PROMISE OF AMERICAN LABOR LAW 75-89 (Sheldon Friedman et al. eds., 1994) (discussing
employer resistance to unions and testing whether labor law reform will diminish that resistance); John Logan, Consultants, Lawyers, and the "Union Free" Movement in the USA
Since the 1970s, 33 INDUST. REL. J. 197, 197-99 (2002) (detailing the growth of anti-union
consulting and strategizing in the United States).
57. GREENHOUSE, supra note 29, at 247 (citing Bronfenbrenner, supra note 56, at 80).
58. See id. at 247-48; see, e.g., Tasty Baking Co. v. NLRB, 254 F.3d 114, 125 (D.C. Cir.
2001) ("It is well settled that an employer violates the NLRA by taking an adverse employment action, such as issuing a disciplinary warning, in order to discourage union activity.").
UNIVERSITY OF RICHMOND LAW REVIEW
[Vol. 43:523
engage in bargaining tactics designed to defeat efforts to secure a
59
first collective bargaining agreement.
These anti-union tactics are aided by inadequate government
enforcement of labor protections. In 2000, Human Rights Watch,
an international non-governmental organization, issued a report
on labor rights in America concluding, among other things, that
"workers' freedom of association is under sustained attack in the
United States, and the government is often failing its responsibility under international human rights standards to deter such attacks and protect workers' rights."6 0 In her frank assessment of
the current state of federal collective bargaining law, Wilma
Liebman, a senior member of the National Labor Relations
Board, concluded, "Somewhere along the way, New Deal optimism has yielded to raw deal cynicism about the law's ability to deliver on its promise. The National Labor Relations Act, by virtually all measures, is in decline if not dead."61
2. At-Will Employees
The low union density in America means that most workers are
not covered by collective bargaining agreements and presumptively are at-will employees. In terms of voice in the workplace,
the typical at-will employee enjoys, at best, the ability to make
62
requests of, or submit non-binding suggestions to, an employer.
Only the most fortunate individuals, notably those with special
skills or in high-demand professional, athletic, or artistic vocations, possess the leverage to engage in individual negotiations
over job security, compensation, and working conditions.
Consequently, in most non-union workplaces, the power to set
internal employment policies, as well as compensation and benefits, remains largely in the hands of management, but is subject
to compliance with regulatory standards. At larger companies,
59.
See Logan, supranote 56, at 209-10.
60. HUMAN RIGHTS WATCH, UNFAIR ADVANTAGE: WORKERS' FREEDOM OF ASSOCIATION
IN THE UNITED STATES UNDER INTERNATIONAL HUMAN RIGHTS STANDARDS 8 (2000).
61.
Wilma B. Liebman, Decline and Disenchantment:Reflections on the Aging of the
NationalLabor Relations Board, 28 BERKELEY J. EMP. & LAB. L. 569, 572 (2007).
62.
For commentary on the free speech rights of workers, see generally BRUCE BARRY,
SPEECHLESS: THE EROSION OF FREE EXPRESSION IN THE AMERICAN WORKPLACE (2007);
David C. Yamada, Voices from the Cubicle: Protectingand EncouragingPrivate Employee
Speech in the Post-IndustrialWorkplace, 19 BERKELEY J. EMP. & LAB. L. 1 (1998).
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HUMAN DIGNITY
high-level executives establish broad parameters for employment
relations, human resources offices administer personnel policies,
and mid-level managers supervise and evaluate the work of subordinates. They are supported by in-house lawyers who provide
advice, counsel, and litigation support.
Of course, at-will employees are not without labor protections
and safeguards. In particular, the 1960s and 1970s witnessed the
emergence of a large body of statutory, administrative, and common-law protections granting various employment rights to individuals. The most notable of these are the Civil Rights Act of
1964 and other employment discrimination laws, the Occupational Safety and Health Act, and various wrongful discharge claims
grounded in contract and tort law doctrine. 6 3 The ongoing development of this body of law has resulted in greater safeguards
against physical and dignitary harms, created several exceptions
to the rule of at-will employment, and forged a modest safety net
of wage and benefit protections. 64
For most American workers, this somewhat unwieldy legal
smorgasbord serves as their primary source of legal protections
on the job. Although the creation of individual employment protections was spurred in part by civil rights advocacy backed by
the solidarity of social movements, workers often must effectuate
these rights in solitary fashion, pursuing stressful, lengthy, and
expensive legal proceedings, typically without the benefit of large
group or union support. 6 5 Modern employment litigation all too
often encompasses the David versus Goliath scenario of an aggrieved worker and a small plaintiffs' law firm vying against a
large company armed with an overstaffed team of attorneys. 6 6
63. See MARK A. ROTHSTEIN ET AL., EMPLOYMENT LAW 3-4 (3d ed. 2005).
64. See BARRY, supra note 62, at 46-54.
65. The experiences of plaintiffs in employment discrimination litigation underscore
this point. See, e.g., BARI-ELLEN ROBERTS WITH JACK E. WHITE, ROBERTS VS. TEXACO: A
TRUE STORY OF RACE AND CORPORATE AMERICA (1998) (personal account by lead plaintiff
in major racial discrimination case); Beth Ann Faragher, Faragher v. City of Boca Raton:
A PersonalAccount of a Sexual DiscriminationPlaintiff,22 HOFSTRA LAB. & EMP. L.J. 417
(2005) (personal account by plaintiff in sexual harassment case that led to Supreme Court
decision setting standards for employer liability); Ann Hopkins, Price Waterhouse v.
Hopkins: A Personal Account of a Sexual DiscriminationPlaintiff, 22 HOFSTRA LAB. &
EMP. L.J. 357 (2005) (personal account by plaintiff in sexual discrimination case that led
to Supreme Court decision examining sex stereotyping).
66. See supra note 65.
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Labor lawyer Thomas Geoghegan has captured well how the
demise of labor unions has led to courts and administrative agencies serving as the primary venues for employment-related dispute resolution. 6 7 Whereas the grievance process in a unionmanagement setting often contemplates a continuing employment relationship, or perhaps the re-establishment of one, legal
process for most non-union workers is so imbued with anger, accusation, and expense that the parties only grow further apart,
even if they move closer to a legal resolution of their differences.68
Geoghegan concluded:
[T]his tort-type legal system, which replaces contract, is a system
that feeds on unpredictability and rage. A white-hot, subjective tortbased system with the threat of "discovery" replaces a cooler, more
rational, contract-based one which was modest, and cheap, and kept
69
us from peering, destructively, into one another's hearts.
Of course, the resolution of certain types of claims, such as actions for discrimination and harassment, may be unavoidably
confrontational and emotional even in a labor-management style
grievance and arbitration system. Nonetheless, Geoghegan's larger point about the human and economic costs of employment litigation holds true.
Although employers exercise considerable power in the individual employment rights regime, some leading disciples of the
markets and management framework are deeply critical of these
new protections. For example, Richard Epstein has defended employment at will as a proper manifestation of market forces. 70 He
has characterized employment discrimination laws as an "assault" on common-law ideals and concluded that any social or
economic benefits brought by these protections do not justify their
costs. 71 Leading "tort reform" advocate Walter Olson has claimed
that the new employment rights have "begun to stifle free expression, curb the sense of limitless possibility that characterizes the
best jobs, and ...actually subtract from the pleasing 'diversity' of
67. See THOMAS GEOGHEGAN, THE LAw IN SHAMBLES 18-26 (2005). Geoghegan is a
practicing attorney and noted author of books and articles about the labor movement,
workers' rights, and politics in America.
68. See id. at 26.
69. Id.
70. See generally Richard A. Epstein, In Defense of the Contract at Will, 51 U. CHI. L.
REV. 947 (1984).
71. See RICHARD A. EPSTEIN, FORBIDDEN GROUNDS: THE CASE AGAINST EMPLOYMENT
DISCRIMINATION LAWS 27 (1992).
HUMAN DIGNITY
2009]
which we hear so much today."72 These objections have been entirely consistent with the broad anti-regulatory emphasis of free
market rhetoric and policy.
3. Globalization
Globalization often is portrayed as a phenomenon so powerful
and inevitable that mere mortals can only marvel at it and embrace it. Modern technologies, noted Thomas Friedman, who is
perhaps the leading chronicler of developments in global trade
and communication, "are making it possible not only for traditional nation-states and corporations to reach farther, faster,
cheaper and deeper around the world than ever before, but also
for individuals to do so."73 Among the forces that have "flattened
the world" are the World Wide Web, outsourcing and offshoring of
work, and creation of global supply chains. 7 4
But when it comes to workers, we have been here before. Operating under the banner of free trade, we see that globalization is
driven by the old fashioned desire to expand profits by accessing
new markets and reducing the costs of production and distribution, usually through technology and automation, vastly lower
wages, and deregulated non-union workplaces. 7 5 These business
practices have been aided by the very "flattening" forces so enthusiastically recounted by Friedman. American trade policy is
deeply rooted in the markets and management framework.
This quality is most evident in the form of the North American
Free Trade Act ("NAFTA"), effective since 1994, which was designed to facilitate the movement of goods between the United
72. WALTER OLSON, THE EXCUSE FACTORY: How EMPLOYMENT LAW IS PARALYZING
THE AMERICAN WORKPLACE 13 (1997).
73.
THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, THE LEXUS AND THE OLIVE TREE xviii (rev. ed. 2000).
74.
See generally THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN, THE WORLD IS FLAT: A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE
TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY 50-200 (rev. ed. 2006) (explaining "the ten forces that flattened
the world").
75. This dynamic is captured well in WILLIAM M. ADLER, MOLLIE'S JOB (2000), an account of one factory job and the different people who held it as an employer moved its
manufacturing operations from New Jersey to Mississippi and finally to Mexico. For general commentary describing the nature of globalization and its impact on workers, see
SARAH ANDERSON ET AL., FIELD GUIDE TO THE GLOBAL ECONOMY (rev. ed. 2005) (providing
an explanation of global economics, with special attention to impact on workers and consumers); WILLIAM GREIDER, ONE WORLD, READY OR NOT: THE MANIC LOGIC OF GLOBAL
CAPITALISM 11-26 (rev. ed. 1998) (discussing overall practices of global capitalism).
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States, Mexico, and Canada.76 The evidence so far, according to
an Economic Policy Institute report, indicates that while NAFTA
has helped raise corporate earnings, it has contributed to job
77
losses and income inequality in all three signatory countries.
Co-author Robert Scott found that in the United States, "NAFTA
has contributed to the reduction of employment in high-wage,
traded-goods industries, the growing inequality in wages, and the
steadily declining demand for workers without a college education."7 8
NAFTA also has negatively affected the labor movement in the
United States. Kate Bronfenbrenner documented that, in the
wake of NAFTA, employers in mobile industries became increasingly likely to use threats of plant closings to oppose unionization drives. 79 Threats to move jobs to Mexico or Southeast Asia
following a successful union campaign are much more likely to be
taken seriously "in an auto parts plant, textile mill or telecommunications call center" than "in a nursing home, retail store, social service agency or hotel."80 Consequently, in "the least mobile
industries, such as health care and passenger transportation,"
the win rate in union campaigns where closing threats were made
was around 60%, while in manufacturing, the win rate in union
campaigns with closing threats was 28%.81
America also is exporting its anti-labor and anti-regulatory
corporate practices. A study by John Logan found that Americanstyle union opposition tactics are now being applied successfully
in Great Britain.82 One of America's largest anti-union consulting
76. See JEFF FAUX, THE GLOBAL CLASS WAR: How AMERICA'S BIPARTISAN ELITE LOST
OUR FUTURE-AND WHAT IT WILL TAKE To WIN IT BACK 10 (2006).
77. See Jeff Faux, Introduction to ROBERT E. SCOTT, CARLOS SALAS & BRUCE
CAMPBELL, REVISITING NAFTA: STILL NOT WORKING FOR NORTH AMERICA'S WORKERS 1
(Econ. Policy Inst., Briefing Paper No. 173, 2006), available at http://www.epi.orgfbriefing
papers/173/bp173.pdf; see also FAUX, supra note 76, at 30-48 (discussing the negative impacts of NAFTA).
78. Robert E. Scott, NAFTA's Legacy: Rising Trade Deficits Lead to Significant Job
Displacement and Declining Job Quality for the United States in ROBERT E. SCOTT,
CARLOS SALAS & BRUCE CAMPBELL, supra note 77, at 3.
79. Kate Bronfenbrenner, Raw Power: Plant-ClosingThreats and the Threat to Union
Organizing, MULTINAT'L MONITOR, Dec. 2000, at 24, available at http://www.multination
almonitor.org/mm2000/OOdecember/power.html.
80. Id.
81. Id.
82.
See JOHN LOGAN, U.S. ANTI-UNION CONSULTANTS: A THREAT TO THE RIGHTS OF
BRITISH WORKERS 16-20 (Trades Union Congress 2008), available at http://www.tuc.org.
uk/extras/loganreport.pdf.
2009]
HUMAN DIGNITY
firms, the Burke Group, "has established an international division that operates in Canada, Mexico, South America, United
Kingdom, Belgium, France and Germany, telling clients that it
enjoys an international reputation for 'eliminating union incursions."' 8 3 When China was considering adoption of ambitious labor reforms that would strengthen protections for workers, multinational corporations actively opposed provisions that would
have "limited the use of temporary workers and required obtaining approval from the state-controlled union for layoffs."84 Even
though the law eventually enacted was a watered-down version of
what was originally drafted, "lawyers representing some big global companies doing business [in China] complained ...that the
new law still imposed a heavy burden."85
Economist Joseph Stiglitz observed, "Labour policy has in
many countries been subsumed under broader economic policies
which, all too often, have come to be dominated by commercial
and financial interests."8 6 He added, "Those defending such interests have been successful in propagating the idea that policies
which advance their interests benefit all-a new version of
trickle-down economics which suggests that workers do not even
have to wait long, or at all, to receive the benefits of these wise
policies."8 7 America has embraced these ideas and policies with
great fervor, to the benefit of a few and at the expense of the
many. It is well past time for us to look for a better way.
III. "DIGNITARIAN" THEORY FOR THE WORKPLACE
A focus on human dignity provides a more viable, sustainable
framework for examining and shaping the law of the workplace.
Such a focus can help us to define both rights and responsibilities
that promote healthy and productive workplaces. It also can
guide us toward developing legal safeguards for those who have
been mistreated at work and a safety net for those who have lost
their jobs.
83. Id. at 16.
84. Joseph Kahn & David Barboza, China Passes a Sweeping Labor Law, N.Y. TIMES, June
30, 2007, http://www.nytimes.com/2007/06/30/business/worldbusiness/30chlabor.html.
85. Id.
86. Joseph E. Stiglitz, Employment, Social Justice and Societal Well-Being, 141 INT'L
LAB. REV. 9, 25 (2002).
87. Id.
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Concededly, dignity is a somewhat abstract. concept, despite its
common presence in the modern language of human rights. The
New Oxford American Dictionary defines dignity as "the state or
quality of being worthy of honor or respect."ss Political scientist
Michael Zuckert identifies "the constituents of human dignity" as
being "free, equal, rights bearing, capable of morality, and uniquely valuable or worthy."8 9 In his broad-ranging examination of
"dignity at work," sociologist Randy Hodson defines it as "the
ability to establish a sense of self-worth and self-respect and to
appreciate the respect of others." 90
These definitions help us to understand the broader picture,
but we need to illuminate more precisely the meaning and substance of dignity. Accordingly, Part A will examine the evolution
of a traditional conceptualization of dignity rooted in Enlightenment philosophy and the founding of the United States. Part B
will examine a new conceptualization grounded in positive rights
and benefits, recognition of the power of private actors, and protections against discrimination. Finally, Part C will examine dignity in the light of emerging fields, such as therapeutic jurisprudence, relational theory, and occupational health psychology.
A. A Traditional Conceptualizationof Dignity
The writings of Enlightenment philosophers, especially John
Locke, along with historical writings and documents surrounding
America's struggle for independence and adoption of a constitution, are central sources in our attempt to develop what might be
called a traditional conceptualization of human dignity. This early understanding of dignity was shaped by three overarching precepts. First, dignity is grounded in an inherent right to be free of
harm to one's person or property. Second, the government can be
both a violator and protector of individual dignity. Third, unchecked power can lead to abuses of power.
88.
NEW OXFORD AMERICAN DICTIONARY 477 (Elizabeth J. Jewell & Frank Abate eds.,
2001).
89. See Michael Zuckert, Human Dignity and the Basis of Justice: Freedom, Rights,
and the Self, 9 HEDGEHOG REV. 32, 45 (2007).
90. RANDY HODSON, DIGNITY AT WORK 3 (2001).
2009]
HUMAN DIGNITY
1. Freedom from Harm
John Locke held that all men existed in a "state of nature," in
which everyone was in a "state of perfect freedom" and equality,
with "no one having more than another."91 In this state of equality, liberty, and independence, "no one ought to harm another in
his life, health, liberty, or possessions." 9 2 Zuckert, a Lockean
scholar, has credited Locke for giving us an understanding of
natural equality that "embodied a notion of fundamental human
dignity and demand for equality and the equivalent of human
dignity in social norms." 9 3 These rights may be characterized as
"negative" ones, meaning that the "duty in some person or persons other than the rights holder" is "merely to forbear from taking action in hindrance of the right or the rights-bearer."9 4
These notions of fundamental rights now intersect with more
recently developed ideas about privacy and what has been termed
the "right to be let alone." In 1890, the HarvardLaw Review published a seminal article by Samuel Warren and Louis Brandeis,
which asserted that American law must recognize a right to privacy grounded in tort law. 9 5 Paying primary attention to the
growing ability of the press and modern communications technologies to delve into and make public the personal lives of private
citizens, the authors reasoned that invasions of privacy now subjected individuals to "mental pain and distress, far greater than
could be inflicted by mere bodily injury."96 Accordingly,
"[t]houghts, emotions, and sensations demanded legal recognition," which should be in the form of "the 'right to be let alone."' 9 7
91. JOHN LOCKE, Two TREATISES OF GOVERNMENT 118 (Everyman's Library 1986)
(1691).
92. Id. at 119.
93. Zuckert, supra note 89, at 39.
94. Id. at 40.
95. See Samuel D. Warren & Louis D. Brandeis, The Right to Privacy, 4 HARv. L. REV.
193, 213 (1890).
96. Id. at 195-96.
97. Id. at 195 (quoting THOMAS M. COOLEY, A TREATISE ON THE LAW OF TORTS OR THE
WRONGS WHICH ARISE INDEPENDENT OF CONTRACT 29 (Chicago, Callaghon & Company,
2d ed. 1988)).
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2. The Role of Government
The second precept concerning traditional notions of dignity is
a focus on the state as potential violator and protector of basic
human rights. These core concerns about the state's proper role
framed the political and intellectual substance behind the American Revolution and the creation of the United States Constitution. Thomas Paine's writings about the exercise of power by the
British Crown over its colonial subjects helped to galvanize public
opinion in favor of separation from Great Britain.98 The "inalienable rights" of "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" were
enshrined in America's Declaration of Independence, authored
primarily by Thomas Jefferson.99 The Bill of Rights both encompassed a strong suspicion of central government as a potential
transgressor upon fundamental rights such as freedom of speech
and association, and it imposed a concomitant obligation on government to safeguard those rights.
3. Unchecked Power
The drafters of the U.S. Constitution also understood the corruptive and abusive potential of unchecked power, and the resulting document would incorporate two principles to address this
concern. First, there would be a separation of powers between the
legislative, executive, and judicial branches. As James Madison
wrote in The Federalist,"[T]he accumulation of all powers legislative, executive and judiciary in the same hands, whether of one, a
few or many, and whether hereditary, self appointed, or elective,
may justly be pronounced the very definition of tyranny."10 0
Second, a system of checks and balances would exist between
the branches to help prevent an abusive exercise of power by any
single branch. On this point, Madison recognized the deeply human meaning of power, writing, "Ambition must be made to counteract ambition.... It may be a reflection on human nature, that
such devices should be necessary to contro[l] the abuses of gov98.
See CRAIG NELSON, THOMAS PAINE: ENLIGHTENMENT, REVOLUTION, AND THE
BIRTH OF MODERN NATIONS 78-100 (2006) (recounting the publication of, and response to,
COMMON SENSE).
99. THE DECLARATION OF INDEPENDENCE (U.S. 1776).
100.
1977).
THE FEDERALIST NO. 47, at 324 (James Madison) (Jacob E. Cooke ed., 8th prtg.
2009]
HUMAN DIGNITY
ernment. But what is government itself but the greatest of all reflections on human nature?"io
4. Assessing the Traditional Approach to Dignity
John Locke, the Founding Fathers, and Warren and Brandeis
did not invoke the word "dignity" in their writings. They penned
their words well before modern psychology had staked its claim
as a core social science, and before concepts such as stress and
trauma were named and comprehended.102 Nonetheless, they
grasped the essence of dignity: they understood that being human
is as much an emotional experience as it is a physical one, that
both physical and emotional injuries can cause great harm, and
that power vested in large institutions can lead to harmful
abuses.
This forward vision also had significant blind spots. Women
were treated as second class citizens, socially and legally. There
was little, if any, recognition of potential abuse of power by private and public actors, operating as employers, toward individual
workers. America of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries had
little comprehension of workers' rights. Our original Constitution
anticipated the continuation of slavery, and its primary author,
Thomas Jefferson, was a slave owner. If workers were injured on
the job and unable to work, they were simply promptly discharged.103 When workers sued their employers for unsafe working conditions, courts routinely dismissed their claims, holding
that they had assumed the risks of being injured.104 In sum, this
early idea of dignity was sound in concept, but less than comprehensive in its application.
101. THE FEDERALIST, No. 51, at 348 (James Madison) (Jacob E. Cooke ed., 8th prtg.
1977).
102. The term "stress" was "almost unknown outside of the engineering profession"'
prior to the 1940s. CARY L. COOPER & PHILIP DEWE, STRESS: A BRIEF HISTORY 1 (2004)
(quoting LIONEL R.C. HAWARD, THE SUBJECTIVE MEANING OF STRESS, BRIT. J. MED.
PSYCHOL. 185, 185 (1960)); see also FIONA JONES & JIM BRIGHT, STRESS: MYTH, THEORY
AND RESEARCH 5 (2001)). Psychological trauma has received intermittent attention, as
[p]eriods of active investigation have alternated with periods of oblivion." JUDITH LEWIS
HERMAN, TRAUMA AND RECOVERY 7 (1992).
103.
See generally JOHN FABIAN WITT, THE ACCIDENTAL REPUBLIC (2004) (discussing
the history of workers' compensation law).
104. See Eugene Wambaugh, Workmen's Compensation Acts: Their Theory and Their
Constitutionality,25 HARV. L. REV. 129, 129-30 (1912) (discussing that in the absence of
Workers' Compensation statutes, the financial burden of on-the-job injuries fell on the
worker).
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B. A New Conceptualizationof Dignity
The term "dignity" itself began entering our political and social
policy discourse with the formation of the United Nations and, in
particular, the advent of the Universal Declaration of Human
Rights, (the "Universal Declaration") both of which were strongly
shaped by the appalling human rights abuses of World War 11.105
Article 1 of the Universal Declaration began with a statement
that echoed John Locke: "All human beings are born free and
equal in dignity and rights."106 The Universal Declaration went
on to articulate specific social and economic rights:
Everyone... has the right to social security... the right to work...
the right to equal pay for equal work. .. the right to just and favourable remuneration ... the right ... to join trade unions ... the
right to rest and leisure. . . [and] the right to a standard of living
adequate for the health and well-being of himself and of his family .... 107
Translated into legislative and programmatic language, the
Universal Declaration went well beyond the mandates of American employment law, then and now, especially concerning the
rights to a job providing a living wage and to vacation time. Nevertheless, these international developments would coincide
roughly with the evolution of a new conceptualization of dignity
in American law, which supplemented, rather than supplanted,
the traditional one. In terms of employment law and policy, the
new conceptualization arose out of three basic principles: First,
the law should encompass certain "positive" rights or obligations,
to be effectuated by the state and perhaps by private actors.
Second, the law should recognize that private actors, as well as
the government, could engage in abuses of power against individuals. Third, the law should protect individuals against serious infringements upon their dignity motivated by bias due to intrinsic
characteristics such as race or sex.
105. Zuckert, supra note 89, at 32.
106. Universal Declaration of Human Rights, G.A. Res. 217A, at 72, U.N. GAOR, 3d
Sess., 1st plen. mtg., U.N. Doc. A/810 (Dec. 12, 1948).
107. Id. at 75-76.
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HUMAN DIGNITY
1. New Rights
The first half of the twentieth century found workers receiving
new rights that obligated employers and the government to provide them with tangible benefits. Workers' compensation was the
first major development, providing a no-fault compensation system of payments to assist workers who were partially or fully incapacitated owing to work-related injuries.1 0 8 During the 1930s,
New Deal legislative initiatives provided minimum wage and
overtime protections, the right to join unions and collectively bargain, and a Social Security system. These rights went well beyond
the "negative" rights inherent in the traditional idea of dignity;
they imposed obligations on other parties both to provide property in the way of wages and benefits and to engage in bargaining
over compensation and working conditions. 1 0 9
2. Private Actors
As industrial economies helped to fuel the power of large corporations and wealthy business magnates, it became increasingly
evident that private actors exerted just as much control over an
individual's life as did the government, and hence could engage in
harmful abuses of power.1 1 0 In this context, as well, workers'
compensation and New Deal labor legislation helped to curb exploitation of workers by private employers. A few decades later,
the enactment of employment discrimination laws and the judicial recognition of common-law contract and tort claims for
wrongful discharge reflected a continuing recognition of the potentially abusive exercises of power by private employers.
During the 1950s, when organized labor was at its strongest
level, John Kenneth Galbraith wrote that "private economic power is held in check by the countervailing power of those who are
108. See Wambaugh, supra note 104, at 130.
109. See Zuckert, supra note 89, at 47-48 (contrasting negative rights with new positive rights).
110. This was a central point of professor Lawrence Blades's seminal critique of the
rule of employment at will, in which he observed "that large corporations now pose a
threat to individual freedom comparable to that which would be posed if governmental
power were unchecked." Lawrence E. Blades, Employment at Will vs. Individual Freedom:
On Limiting the Abusive Exercise of Employer Power, 67 COLUM. L. REV. 1404, 1404
(1967).
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subject to it."111 Strong labor unions, he observed, exercised countervailing power by engaging in collective bargaining, a process
that decided "the division of profits."112 In this manner, the countervailing power held by organized labor in relation to private industry and the government served as a rough, industrial relations
brand of checks and balances, furthering a shift in how power
was sorted and distributed in the American workplace.
3. Status-Based Mistreatment
In practice, the traditional notion of dignity ignored the plight
of slaves, women, and other marginalized groups, but the new
conceptualization embraced these concerns. Social movements
confronting discrimination against people of color, women, disabled individuals, and gays and lesbians have all contributed to
our understanding of how entire groups of individuals can be denied dignity on the basis of an intrinsic characteristic. This recognition has manifested itself in federal and state employment
discrimination statutes. 11 3 In fact, much of the American legal
system's recognition of dignitary harm in the workplace is concentrated in discrimination law and the idea of protected class
status.
C. New Insights About Dignity
The potential relationship between modern employment law
and the two conceptualizations of dignity is informed by new
theories and fields of inquiry, and emerging insights from psychology are of special significance. Accordingly, therapeutic jurisprudence, a movement launched in the 1980s by a small group of
law professors and practicing attorneys, is the starting point for
this exploration. In addition, the communitarian movement and a
111. JOHN KENNETH GALBRAITH, AMERICAN CAPITALISM: THE CONCEPT OF COUNTERVAILING POWER 118 (1952).
112. Id. at 137.
113. For just several examples of such statutory provisions, see 42 U.S.C. § 12112
(2000) (prohibiting discrimination against qualified disabled individuals in employment
decisions); 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-2 (2000) (prohibiting employment discrimination on the basis
of race, color, religion, sex, or national origin); N.J. STAT. ANN. § 10:5-12 (West 2002) (prohibiting employment discrimination on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, or
sexual orientation).
2009]
HUMAN DIGNITY
new look at the notion of countervailing power are relevant to our
discussion.
1. Therapeutic Jurisprudence
Therapeutic jurisprudence, according to David Wexler, one of
its founders, involves "the 'study of the role of the law as a therapeutic agent"' by "focus[ing] on the law's impact on emotional life
and on psychological well-being."ll4 It "regards the law as a social
force that produces behaviors and consequences."115 As explained
by Michael Perlin, "[T]herapeutic jurisprudence recognizes that
substantive rules, legal procedures and lawyers' roles may have
either therapeutic or anti-therapeutic consequences and questions whether such rules, procedures and roles can or should be
reshaped so as to enhance their therapeutic potential, while preserving due process principles."11 6
Therapeutic jurisprudence is welcomed evidence of the growing
recognition of the importance of psychological insights to American substantive and procedural law. 1 17 Employment law has been
largely invisible, however, in the developing scholarly and practice-related commentary on therapeutic jurisprudence. 1 18 Under
a dignitarian framework, this would change dramatically, leading
us to consider next what psychological theories should guide our
analysis. This point merits a longer, separate examination, for
possibilities abound. For now, let us recognize two emerging
114. David Wexler, Therapeutic Jurisprudence:An Overview, 17 T.M. COOLEY L. REV.
125, 125 (2000) (quoting DAVID B. WEXLER & BRUCE J. WINICK, LAW IN THERAPEUTIC KEY:
DEVELOPMENTS IN THERAPEUTIC JURISPRUDENCE xvii (1996)).
115. Id. (citing WEXLER & WINICK, supra note 114, at xvii).
116. Michael L. Perlin, A Law of Healing, 68 U. CIN. L. REV. 407, 408 (2000).
117. See generally Mark I. Satin, Note, Law and Psychology: A Movement Whose Time
Has Come, 1994 ANN. SURV. AM. L. 581 (broad ranging survey of the interplay of law and
psychology perspectives).
118. North American exceptions include Susan Daicoff, Making Law Therapeutic for
Lawyers: Therapeutic Jurisprudence, Preventive Law and the Psychology of Lawyers, 5
PSYCHOL. PUB. POL'Y & L. 811, 819-27 (1999) (applying therapeutic jurisprudence and
preventive law principles to employment scenarios); Katherine Lippel, Therapeutic and
Anti-Therapeutic Consequences of Workers' Compensation, 22 INT'L J.L. & PSYCHIATRY 521
(1999).
See generally PRACTICING THERAPEUTIC JURISPRUDENCE: LAW AS A HELPING
PROFESSION (Dennis B. Stolle, David B. Wexler & Bruce J. Winick eds., 2000) (covering
doctrinal and practice areas addressed by therapeutic jurisprudence); David B. Wexler,
Two Decades of Therapeutic Jurisprudence,24 TOURO L. REV. 17 (2008) (describing major
developments of therapeutic jurisprudence).
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fields-relational psychology and occupational health psychology-which yield especially useful and important insights.
a. Relational Psychology
Relational psychology holds that relationships, not the individual as an isolated self, constitute the primary basis of our psychological development.11 9 Relational theory has its roots in the pioneering work of Carol Gilligan, most notably In a Different Voice,
which continues to frame many discussions about gender differences in psychological growth and development.1 20 Gilligan posited that, on the whole, women and men frame moral decisions
differently: the female approach has an orientation of responsibility, which appears as "an injunction to care, a responsibility to
discern and alleviate the 'real and recognizable trouble' of this
world... integrat[ing] rights and responsibilities... through an
understanding of the psychological logic of relationships";1 2 1 the
male approach has an orientation of justice, which appears "as an
injunction to respect the rights of others and thus to protect from
interference the rights to life and self-fulfillment."122
During the mid-1980s, psychiatrist Jean Baker Miller took a
lead role in developing relational psychology applications. Miller
set forth some basic tenets of relational theory, starting with the
premise "that each person becomes a more developed and more
active individual only as s/he is more fully related to others."12 3
When examining an individual's psychological development, we
should ask two questions. First, "What kinds of relationships lead
to the psychological development of the people in them?" Second,
"[W]hat kinds of relationships diminish or destroy people, lead to
trouble, and lead to what is eventually called 'pathology'?"12 4 According to Miller, "at least five 'good things"' happen to people in
growth-fostering relationships:
119.
See CHRISTINA ROBB, THIS CHANGES EVERYTHING: THE RELATIONAL REVOLUTION
IN PSYCHOLOGY ix (2006). The story of how relational psychology developed is the subject
of Christina Robb's treatise.
120. CAROL GILLIGAN, IN A DIFFERENT VOICE: PSYCHOLOGICAL THEORY AND WOMEN'S
DEVELOPMENT (1982).
121. Id. at 100.
122. Id.
123. Jean Baker Miller, What Do We Mean by Relationships?, The Stone Ctr. for Dev.
Servs. & Studies at Wellesley Coll. Colloquium 1, 2 (1986).
124. Id.
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HUMAN DIGNITY
Each person feels a greater sense of "zest" (vitality, energy).
Each person feels more able to act and does act.
Each person has a more accurate picture of her/himself and the other
person(s).
Each person feels a greater sense of worth.
Each person feels more connected to the other person(s) and feels a
greater motivation for connections with other people beyond those in
the specific relationship. 125
Much of the conversation about relational theory has been in
the context of concerns specific to women. As important as these
discussions are, we all benefit when relational theory enjoys more
general application. In the employment realm, relational theory
helps to explain how work can be a good or bad experience for anyone. For example, psychologists Linda Hartling and Elizabeth
Sparks applied relational theory and Miller's "five good things" to
clinical work environments in which they practiced. 12 6 In
workplaces with a relational culture, clinicians stated they experienced
increased energy for the work we are doing, empowerment to take
action on behalf of our clients, increased clarity and knowledge about
others and ourselves in our work setting, increased sense of worth
with regard to ourselves and others, and a desire for more connection
12 7
to others in these work situations.
However, those "working in situations that are moving in a nonrelational direction" were likely "to experience the opposite of the
five good things": (1) diminished energy for the work we are
doing, (2) feeling disempowered or stifled in our ability to take action on behalf of our clients, (3) less clarity and more confusion
about others and ourselves, (4) diminished sense of worth, and (5)
a desire to withdraw from or defend against relationships in these
settings. 128
Relational theory reminds us that our own sense of dignity is
affected profoundly by the quality of our relationships with others. For all but the most misanthropic among us, it is difficult to
imagine "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness" without
strong social components. This is no less the case at work, where
the "five good things" are main ingredients of a recipe for human
125. Id. at 2-3.
126. Linda Hartling & Elizabeth Sparks, Relational-CulturalPractice: Working in a
NonrelationalWorld 1 (2002).
127. Id. at 3.
128. Id.
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dignity in the workplace, whereas the five bad things cited by
Hartling and Sparks can sabotage one's sense of security and belonging on the job. These qualities capture the strong connection
between the well-being of individual workers and the overall success (of lack thereof) of organizations. A relational workplace is
likely to be zestful and productive, whereas a non-relational
workplace is likely to be depressed and underperforming.
b. Occupational Health Psychology
The purpose of the new multidisciplinary field of occupational
health psychology ("OHP") "is to develop, maintain, and promote
the health of employees directly and the health of their families."12 9 According to industrial psychologists Lois Tetrick and
James Campbell Quick:
Key areas of concern are work organization factors that place individuals at risk of injury, disease, and distress. This requires an interdisciplinary, if not transdisciplinary, approach ... across multiple
disciplines within and beyond psychology.... Integration of these
disciplines with a primary focus on prevention is the goal of occupa13 0
tional health psychology.
OHP recognizes that the U.S. economy has experienced "a substantial shift in the number of jobs in various sectors, with fewer
jobs in manufacturing and more jobs in service industries."1 3 1 This
has meant "that employees are potentially exposed to different occupational hazards, including psychosocial stressors in the work
environment that have been linked to ill-health."132 Here, we see
how OHP's understanding of the changing workforce can inform future developments in employment law and policy. The main concern of the federal Occupational Safety and Health Act remains the
prevention of physical injuries at manufacturing and construction
sites,133 but insights from OHP research help to make the case for
129. Lois E. Tetrick & James Campbell Quick, Prevention at Work: Public Health in
Occupational Settings, in HANDBOOK OF OCCUPATIONAL HEALTH PSYCHOLOGY 3, 4 (James
Campbell Quick & Lois E. Tetrick, eds. 2003).
130. Id. (citing Lynne M. MacLean, Ronald C. Plotnikoff & Alwyn Moyer, Transdisciplinary Work with Psychology from a Population Health Perspective: An Illustration, 5 J.
HEALTH PSYCHOL. 173, 175 (2000)).
131. Id. at 5.
132.
Id.
133.
See MARK A. ROTHSTEIN, OCCUPATIONAL SAFETY AND HEALTH LAW 4-5 (4th ed.
1998) (observing that Congress focused on industrial accidents in weighing the need for
federal workplace safety standards).
HUMAN DIGNITY
2009]
expanding the scope of our workplace safety and health standards. 134
OHP is already having a salutary effect on discussions about
dignity in the workplace. A new learned society, the Society for Occupational Health Psychology, has been formed to encourage OHP
research and education.13 5 The Society publishes a scholarly journal, the Journal of OccupationalHealth Psychology, and engages in
international outreach to other scholars and organizations. 136 It also co-sponsors a multidisciplinary international conference on work,
stress, and health with the American Psychological Association and
the National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health, featuring presentations by scholars and practitioners.13 7 All of these initiatives are contributing to a dialogue that can inform workplace
governance and policy.
2. Communitarian Rights and Responsibilities
Advancing human dignity requires each of us to assume obligations in addition to claiming rights. This duality parallels the
communitarian movement, which advocates for a new balance between individual rights and social responsibilities.1 38 A basic tenet of communitarian thinking is that too many Americans have
claimed rights for themselves while imposing growing responsibilities on the government. 1 39 According to sociologist Amitai Etzioni, the leading communitarian scholar and advocate, correcting
the imbalance requires "a moratorium on the minting of most, if
not all, new rights; reestablishing the link between rights and responsibilities; recognizing that some responsibilities do not entail
rights; and, most carefully, adjusting some rights to the changed
circumstances."140
134. See Tetrick & Quick, supra note 129, at 4.
135. See Society for Occupational Health Psychology-About SOHP, http://sohp.psy.u
conn.edu/About.htm (last visited Dec. 8, 2008).
136. See Society for Occupational Health Psychology-Research Resources, http://sohp.
psy.uconn.edu/Research.htm (last visited Dec. 00, 2008).
137. See Society for Occupational Health Psychology-Upcoming Conferences, http://so
hp.psy.uconn.edu/Conferences.htm (last visited Dec. 8, 2008).
138.
See, e.g., AMITAI ETZIONI, THE SPIRIT OF COMMUNITY: RIGHTS, RESPONSIBILITIES,
AND THE COMMUNITARIAN AGENDA (1993). Etzioni's book is the seminal work outlining the
parameters of communitarian thinking.
139. See id. at 4.
140.
Id.
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In the context of the workplace, Etzioni's claim that we have
too many rights is debatable, but he makes a vital connection between rights and responsibilities. A dignitarian employment law
framework should not be tantamount to placing a unilateral obligation upon employers to pay and treat their workers well. Workers who are compensated fairly and treated with dignity have a
corresponding obligation to perform their jobs competently and
ethically. When a worker consistently performs poorly, mistreats
others, or acts unethically, then discipline or dismissal is entirely
warranted.
3. "Hard" and "Soft" Countervailing Power?
Unfortunately, organized labor no longer holds the level of the
countervailing power that it possessed when Galbraith invoked
the term in the 1950s. 14 1 If we can reframe our view of employment relations to emphasize individual dignity, however, then
two forms of countervailing power may emerge as a result. International relations authority Joseph Nye has articulated a theory
of leadership built around the dual concepts of "hard power" and
"soft power."142 Hard power is that which "can be used to get others to change their position," such as "[p]olice power, financial
power, and the ability to hire and fire."143 Soft power involves
getting "the outcomes one wants by setting the agenda and attracting others without threat or payment ... rest[ing] on the
ability to shape the preferences of others to want what you
want."144
A dignitarian framework for employment relations could yield
both hard and soft power on behalf of worker dignity. An energized labor movement and strengthened employment protections
would deliver the hard power by using law, negotiation, and political leverage to advance the interests of workers. A dignitarian
culture would exercise soft power by persuasively framing human
dignity as a worthwhile objective that benefits all of society, in
contrast to focusing on free markets and management control as
ends in themselves.
141.
142.
143.
144.
See supra notes 111-12 and accompanying text.
See JOSEPH S. NYE, JR., THE POWERS To LEAD (2008).
Id. at 29.
Id.
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HUMAN DIGNITY
4. The Limits of the Law
Despite the dominance of the markets and management
framework, there are signs that we may be ready for a significant, perhaps dramatic, shift in focus. For example, dignityaffirming practices are entering the realm of management education and decisionmaking. Multiple generations of experts on
management practice have exhorted employers to treat workers
with respect, to encourage employee input and feedback, and to
create fair and respectful organizational climates.145 Companies
such as Southwest Airlines and Harley-Davidson have consciously refrained from or limited large-scale layoffs that hurt morale
and productivity.14 6 Some employers include prohibitions on
workplace bullying and generalized harassment in their employment policies, even though the law does not require that they do
so.14 7 Every year, companies vie for recognition in the American
Psychological Association's annual Psychologically
Healthy
Workplace Awards program, which highlights employers based on
their commitment to employee involvement, health and safety, employee growth and development, work-life balance, and employee
recognition.148 On a broader scale, the tumult within the American
and world economies that came to a head in 2008 has caused even
ardent free market advocates to revisit longstanding objections to
government regulation. 149
The labor movement, despite ongoing union-avoidance tactics by
employers and an unfriendly federal government, is showing signs
of renewed life. In recent years, visible, successful organizing campaigns have added home health care workers, janitors, and even
145. See, e.g., PETER F. DRUCKER, MANAGING FOR THE FUTURE 107 (1992) (stating that
"partnership with the responsible worker is the only way" to succeed in today's knowledge
and service economy); MARSHALL GOLDSMITH ET AL., GLOBAL LEADERSHIP: THE NEXT
GENERATION 143 (2003) (urging organizations to "create an organizational climate that is
respectful and fair"); THOMAS J. PETERS & ROBERT H. WATERMAN, JR., IN SEARCH OF
EXCELLENCE: LESSONS FROM AMERICA'S BEST-RUN COMPANIES 238 (1982) (stating that
treating workers with respect is necessary for productivity and business success).
146. LOUIS UCHITELLE, THE DISPOSABLE AMERICAN: LAYOFFS AND THEIR CONSEQUENCES xi (2006).
147.
See David C. Yamada, Crafting a Legislative Response to Workplace Bullying, 8
EMP. RTS. & EMP. POL'Y 475, 496-97 & nn.112-13 (2004).
148. See generally PHWA-The Awards, http://www.phwa.org/awards (last visited Dec.
8, 2008).
149. See, e.g., Michael Mandel, Is It the Dawn of the ReregulationEra?, BUS. WK., Sept.
18, 2008, available at www.businessweek.com/print/bwdaily/dnflash/content/sep2008/db
20080917_918673.htm.
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adjunct university professors to union ranks.150 In 2007, union
density increased over the previous year, albeit by only 0.1%, marking the first annual increase in over twenty-five years.151 In the political arena, organizations such as Americans for Democratic Action, a union-friendly policy and advocacy group, are working
closely with labor and community groups in the so-called "battleground" states to raise awareness of pocketbook issues among voters. 1 52
By comparison, employment law, in and of itself, is a more limited device for shaping behavior in the workplace. The law cannot force organizations to care about the health and well-being of
their employees, require workers to vote for union representation,
or simply order everyone to be "nice" to one another. But, by safeguarding the rights of association and collective bargaining, the
law can support greater employee voice, implement legal incentives for employers to act preventively in terms of mistreatment
of workers though training and education, and provide a genuine
safety net of benefits and support for unemployed workers. The
law also can intercede when voluntary practices and "soft power"
fail: if workplace behaviors become abusive and cause tangible
harm, the legal system should require compensation and assistance. Some of these possibilities are explored in Part IV below.
IV. TOWARDS A "DIGNITARIAN" EMPLOYMENT LAW AGENDA153
To some extent, current American employment law encompasses both the traditional and new conceptualizations of dignity
discussed above. From limited common-law protections against
wrongful discharge, to an array of statutory provisions covering
wages, discrimination, retaliation, unemployment compensation,
and other matters, the law of the workplace acknowledges the
right to be let alone and provides some tangible, affirmative bene-
150. NOW: Interview: Kate Bronfenbrenner on American Labor Unions, http:lwww.
pbs.org/now/shows/250/unions.html (last visited Dec. 8, 2008).
151. Union membership rose from 12.0% to 12.1% between 2006 and 2007. See Hirsch
& Macpherson, supra note 55.
152. See generally Americans for Democratic Action, http://www.adaction.org/pages/
issues/economic-energy-amp-env.php (last visited Dec. 8, 2008).
153. The forthcoming commentary incorporates brief portions of a discussion in my recent review essay, David C. Yamada, Dignity, "Rankism," and Hierarchy in the Workplace:
Creatinga "Dignitarian"
Agenda for American Employment Law, 28 BERKELEY J. EMP. &
LAB. L. 305, 315-24 (2007) (reviewing FULLER, ALL RISE, supra note 5).
2009]
HUMAN DIGNITY
fits. However, as the discussion in Part II indicated, the dominance of the markets and management framework has rendered
many of these protections much stronger in theory than in practice.
Fortunately we are not lacking in good ideas for positive
change. Over the years, numerous scholars have offered constructive analyses of the broad sweep of modern employment law and
policy, and many have concluded that both substance and procedure need fixing.154 For example, Stephen Befort's comprehensive
proposal for employment law reform includes enactment of an
employment security statute, major amendments to labor and collective bargaining law, legal recognition of employee participation
programs, and protections for the contingent workforce.155 Ann
Hodges has called for a twin emphasis on restoring the primacy of
collective rights in the workplace and creating labor courts to
consolidate and hear employment-related claims.15 6 Ellen Dannin
has advocated for strategies similar to those used by the civil
rights movement to reclaim labor and collective bargaining law
for workers.1 57
A comprehensive dignitarian agenda for American employment
law would regard favorably many of these proposals, but it is not
the purpose of this essay to review the entire body of work. Rather, it is worth examining several important areas of employment law against the backdrop of dignitarian theories and prin-
154. See generally, e.g., ELLEN DANNIN, TAKING BACK THE WORKERS' LAW: How TO
FIGHT THE ASSAULT ON LABOR RIGHTS (2006) (examining strategies for labor law reform);
RESTORING THE PROMISE OF AMERICAN LABOR LAW, supra note 56; WEILER, supra note 50
(examining the future of employment and labor law and workplace governance); Stephen
F. Befort, Labor and Employment Law at the Millennium: A Historical Review and Critical Assessment, 43 B.C. L. REV. 351 (2002) (recommending new international labor norms);
William R. Corbett, Waiting for the Labor Law of the Twenty-First Century: Everything
Old is New Again, 23 BERKELEY J. EMP. & LAB. L. 259 (2002) (calling for new vision of labor and employment law centered around a revival of the National Labor Relations Act);
Ann C. Hodges, The Limits of Multiple Rights and Remedies: A Call for Revisiting the Law
of the Workplace, 22 HOFSTRA LAB. & EMP. L. J. 601 (2005) (examining collective versus
individual orientations and the multitude of employment claims and dispute resolution
mechanisms); Katherine V.W. Stone, The New Psychological Contract: Implications of the
Changing Workplace for Labor and Employment Law, 48 UCLA L. REV. 519 (2001) (calling
for a new psychological contract containing expectations of employability, training, human
capital development, and networking opportunities).
155. See Befort, supra note 154, at 424-58 (containing detailed explanation of reform
agenda).
156. See Hodges, supra note 154, at 622-23.
157. See DANNIN, supra note 154, at 1-15.
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ciples described in Part III, to understand how to change the way
we frame these issues.
A. Unions and Collective Bargaining
Strong, inclusive, and effective unions serve as an invaluable
source of countervailing power in society and a necessary component for advancing a dignitarian agenda in the workplace. By
conferring rights and voice to their members, unions can support
a "justice orientation" and the "right to be let alone" at work, al8
lowing a worker to do her job without undue interference.15
Through collective bargaining, unions help to provide workers
with the dignity of a living wage and the ability to pay for life's
necessities. 15 9 They also can promote a sense of shared obligation
to self and others, and they can help build a spirit of community
among members. 160 In fact, American workers appear to be especially favorable to unions and other forms of employee representation that advocate for their interests without unnecessary confrontation and labor-management conflict. 161
Union membership and the collective bargaining process typically result in better wages and benefits; one study concluded
that union members enjoy a 28% wage and benefit compensation
advantage over their non-union peers. 162 Union members also enjoy greater job security via provisions against wrongful discharge,
accompanying due process rights, and improved working conditions.163 The grievance resolution process, although sometimes
contentious, provides workers with substantive and procedural
158.
See supraPart III.A.1.
159.
See LAWRENCE
MISHEL WITH MATHEW
WALTERS,
How UNIONS
HELP ALL
WORKERS 15 (Econ. Policy Inst., Briefing Paper No. 143, 2003), available at http://www.
epi.org/content.cfmlbriefingpapers bp143.
160. See Marion Crain, Images of Power in Labor Law: A Feminist Deconstruction, 33
B.C. L. REV. 481, 486 (1992) (affirming the value of unions by appealing to communitarian
and relational feminist theory and practice).
161.
See RICHARD B. FREEMAN & JOEL ROGERS, WHAT WORKERS WANT 182-83 (up-
dated ed. 2006) (reporting on an extensive survey on employees' attitudes about participation in the workplace, which showed, among other things, strong public support for greater
employee voice and representation in an atmosphere of cooperative, collegial workermanagement relationships).
162. See MISHEL, supra note 159, at 1-2.
163. See id. at 11-14 (explaining the integral role unions play in disseminating information and assisting members in taking advantage of programs like unemployment insurance, workers' compensation, OSHA enforcement, FMLA leave, and FLSA compliance).
2009]
HUMAN DIGNITY
protections while striving to preserve employment relationships
between employers and employees.
Unions are especially important to workers in industries and
services where exploitation and low wages predominate. "Good
jobs at good wages" is a popular phrase uttered by candidates for
public office, usually referring to manufacturing jobs offering decent pay and benefits and safe working conditions. 16 4 But labor
lawyer Beth Shulman has reminded us of how "good jobs" became
that way:
Today's "good jobs" in large-scale manufacturing were not always
good. Working in a factory is hard work. It can be dirty and unsafe.
At one time, it paid poor wages and had few benefits. But factory
jobs became "good" jobs in this country when employers were forced
to make them so through worker power in unions. This success also
forced nonunion employers to change their wage and benefit pack16 5
ages to compete for workers.
Today there is no shortage of jobs that provide low pay, few
benefits, and harsh working conditions. The labor movement can
and must play the same organizing, advocacy, and representational role for home health care workers, retail store employees,
fast food servers, and others who find themselves in the low-wage
16 6
sector of the workforce, as it has for manufacturing workers.
Of course, like certain large corporations, some unions may
abuse the power conferred by their numbers and resources and
engage in very undemocratic behaviors.16 7 Some do a terrible job
at advocating for their members, some are corrupt, and still others engage in thuggish threats or, more rarely, actual commission
of violence. Such practices are as inconsistent with the goals of
dignity in the workplace as abusive employer behaviors. Nevertheless, the presence of bad unions does not negate the critical
164. See, e.g., Michael Dukakis, 1988 Candidate for President of the United States,
Speech Accepting Democratic Nomination (July 21, 1988), in N.Y. TIMES, July 22, 1998, at
A10, available at http://www.nytimes.conarchives (select the "since 1981" date range,
then search by title).
165. SHULMAN, supranote 37, at 10.
166. See JOHN SCHMIr ET AL., CTR. FOR ECON. & POLICY RESEARCH, UNIONS AND UPWARD
MOBILITY FOR LOW-WAGE WORKERS (2007), available at http://www.cepr.netlindex.php/publica
tions/reports/unions-and-upward-mobility-for-low-wage-workers/ (documenting positive impact
of unions on pay and benefits to workers in low-wage occupations).
167. See Michael J. Goldberg, In the Cause of Union Democracy, 41 SUFFOLK U. L. REV.
759, 764-65 (2008).
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importance of organized labor as a dignitarian force on behalf of
working people.
Building a resurgent, grassroots labor movement will require a
combination of energized and creative organizing, advocacy, and
law reform efforts.168 On the legal front, the leading proposal for
federal labor law reform is the Employee Free Choice Act,
("EFCA") a bill that provides for streamlined employee selection
of a union through signed authorization cards in lieu of a lengthy
election campaign, mandatory arbitration when a new union is
unable to negotiate a first collective bargaining agreement, and
enhanced penalties for unfair labor practices.16 9 Passage of EFCA
would help to offset the considerable resources being devoted to
defeat union organizing efforts and resist collective bargaining. 170
Even as we support unionization and collective bargaining, we
must understand that strengthening our employment protections
will have to encompass both collective and individual interests. A
strong labor movement is critical for advancing worker dignity,
but even at labor's high water mark, union membership levels
never came close to reaching half of the American workforce.171 A
tripling of the current labor union membership level would not
make collective bargaining and union-management grievance
systems the dominant form of workplace governance. 17 2 Those
not covered by collective agreements still will need safeguardsgrounded in individual employment rights-against mistreatment and unfair dismissal.
B. Layoffs, Job Security, and At-Will Employment
Few experiences undermine one's dignity like an involuntary
job loss and a subsequent period of unemployment.17 3 When
168. See generally Seth D. Harris, Don't Mourn-Reorganize! An Introduction to the
Next Wave Organizing Symposium Issue, 50 N.Y.L. SCH. L. REV. 303 (2005-2006) (discussing the context of contemporary union organizing); Symposium, Next Wave Organizing
Symposium, 50 N.Y.L. SCH. L. REV. 303 (2005-2006) (collection of articles and notes on
new labor organizing tactics and strategies).
169. Employee Free Choice Act, H.R. 800, 110th Cong., §§ 2, 3, 4 (2007).
170. See supra Part II.C.
171. See Hirsch & Macpherson, supra note 55 (24.1% in 1979).
172. See id. (indicating that union membership was only 12.1% in 2007).
173. See NICK KATES ET AL. THE PSYCHOSOCIAL IMPACT OF JOB LOSS 37-48 (1990)
(summarizing studies on the effects of job loss). See generally UCHITELLE, supra note 146,
at 178-204 (2006) (examining the psychological impact of layoffs).
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journalist Louis Uchitelle began researching his book about the
consequences of job loss, he did not anticipate that he "would be
drawn so persistently into the psychiatric aspect of layoffs," but
he soon understood that "[t]he emotional damage was too palpable to ignore."174 For the suddenly unemployed, "a layoff is an
emotional blow from which very few fully recover .... The laid-off
are cut loose from their moorings and rarely achieve in their next
jobs a new and satisfactory sense of themselves."17 5 Indeed, for a
person who finds herself unemployed, self-esteem, self-confidence,
and concerns about mortgage or rent payments and health insurance coverage can all come crashing together with brutal swiftness. Unsurprisingly, layoffs and subsequent periods of unemployment carry negative health consequences such as increased
risk for cardiovascular disease, depression, and even suicide.1 76
Larger layoffs and individual terminations may be bad for employers, too, even if many are not cognizant of the effects. According to Uchitelle,
[L]ayoffs damage companies by undermining the productivity of
those who survive but feel vulnerable, as well as the productivity of
those who are laid off and get jobs again. All lose some of the commitment, trust, and collegial behavior that stable employment or the
expectation of stable employment normally engenders. 17 7
Even individual terminations, if perceived as unfair by the
workers who remain, can have negative effects on morale, loyalty,
and productivity, as virtually anyone who has ever experienced
such a situation can attest.
The human and organizational costs of job loss and layoffs do
not lead to an easy legal or policy response. After all, most employers neither engage in arbitrary firings of productive employees nor relish the prospect of large-scale downsizing, and the
174. UCHITELLE, supra note 146, at 180.
175. Id. at x.
176. See KATES ET AL., supra note 173, at 51-55, 57-59 (discussing the impact of unemployment on physical and mental health and suicide rates); Sarah Moore et al., Physical and Mental Health Effects of Surviving Layoffs: A Longitudinal Examination 23 (Inst.
of Behavioral Sci., Working Paper No. PEC2003-0003, 2003), availableat http://www.colo
rado.edulibs/pec/pubs/wp.html (last visited Dec. 8, 2008) (concluding there is "strong evidence that large-scale layoffs often produce damaging psychological and physical effects on
survivors' well-being").
177. UCHITELLE, supra note 146, at x-xi; see also Moore et al., supra note 176, at 24
(reporting "there is some evidence that companies who engage in mass layoffs experience
declines in employee morale, commitment, and performance").
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disadvantages of legally micromanaging employment decisions
are considerable. In terms of safeguarding job security, it appears
that the role of the law should be limited to protecting employees
from unfair or unjust dismissal-in other words, terminations not
supported by poor performance, economic necessity, or misconduct.
During the 1970s and 1980s, state courts began to recognize an
array of wrongful discharge claims grounded in tort and contract
law. Most prominent among these is the public policy exception to
at-will employment, or "public policy tort," which prohibits an
employer from dismissing a worker in violation of some established public policy, such as reporting for jury duty.178 In addition, some courts have recognized implied-in-fact contractual protections based on company and industry practices, statements in
employee handbooks, and verbal representations from supervisors. 17 9 Despite this growing list of recognized wrongful discharge
claims, however, most non-union workers do not have general
protections against unjust or unfair dismissal.180
Although sound model unfair dismissal statutes have been
proposed,iS1 only Montana provides broad statutory just-cause
protections through its Wrongful Discharge from Employment
Act,182 and it is hardly a windfall for plaintiffs. Under the statute, "A discharge is wrongful ... if it was in retaliation for the
employee's refusal to violate public policy," contravenes an express provision of the employer's personnel policies, or "was not
for good cause and the employee had completed the employer's
probationary period of employment."1 83 The statute limits compensatory damages to lost wages and benefits, permits punitive
damages only in cases of fraud or malice, and precludes damages
178. See Daniele Marchesani, A New Approach to Fiduciary Duties and Employees:
Wrongful Discharge in Violation of Public Policy, 75 U. CIN. L. REV. 1453, 1426 (2007).
179. See Nicole B. Porter, The Perfect Compromise: Bridging the Gap Between At-Will
Employment and Just Cause, 87 NEB. L. REV. 62, 67 (2008).
180. See id. at 70-71.
181. See, e.g., Theodore J. St. Antoine, The Making of the Model Employment Termination Act, 69 WASH. L. REV. 361, 371-76 (1994) (discussing protections and remedies under
the Model Employment Termination Act).
182. MONT. CODE ANN. §§ 39-2-901 to -915 (2007).
183. Id. § 39-2-904.
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HUMAN DIGNITY
for pain and suffering and emotional distress. 18 4 It also preempts
other tort and contract remedies for wrongful discharge. 185
The Montana statute precludes damages that are relevant to
the psychological costs of unjust dismissals, and this is a severe
limitation from the standpoint of therapeutic jurisprudence.
Thus, even with the just-cause provision, it is understandable
that Montana employers were the primary backers of the statute
when it was under deliberation in the state legislature.18 6 However, the Montana statute does hint at the possibility of a compromise-hopefully in a more balanced form-that provides atwill employees with broad protections against unfair dismissal,
while limiting the risks of unpredictable damages that employers
understandably fear.
More complicated is the question of how employment law
should respond to large-scale layoffs. In some unionized settings,
collective bargaining may address such contingencies.18 7 For atwill employees who have little individual bargaining power with
an employer, current options are very limited. Here is where the
letter and spirit of a dignitarian framework for employment law
could make a difference. In such situations, a combination of
"hard power" by way of enacting just-cause protections that require the employer to demonstrate economic necessity, and "soft
power" via a dignitarian culture that recognizes the damage
wrought by layoffs and values job preservation, may help to reduce this business practice.
When layoffs and terminations are necessary, private and public transitional help should provide adequate unemployment benefits, job and psychological counseling, and health insurance for
those who face unavoidable periods without work.188 These programs should be easy to access and of sufficient duration and
amount to serve as a genuine safety net. They should be complemented by support for retraining and further education, with the
ultimate goal of facilitating an individual's return to work.
184. Id. § 39-2-905.
185. Id. § 39-2-913.
186. See Andrew P. Morriss, The Story of the Montana Wrongful Dischargefrom Employment Act: A Drama in 5 Acts, in EMPLOYMENT LAW STORIES 237, 252 (Samuel Estreicher & Gillian Lester eds., 2007); see also Porter, supra note 179, at 70.
187. See UCHITELLE, supra note 146, at 222.
188. See Yamada, supra note 153, at 319.
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C. Workplace Bullying
Workplace bullying is a profound violation of the "right to be let
alone," and its methods are many. It may come in the form of the
yelling and screaming boss who regularly inflicts high-decibel tirades upon an underling, or a supervisor who imposes excessive
workloads on a subordinate and intentionally withholds resources
that are necessary for her to succeed at her job. It may be in the
way of workers who sabotage the work and reputation of a coworker by spreading lies and rumors about her performance and
character.
In any of its myriad forms, bullying hurts employees and organizations alike, causing psychological and physical harm to
workers and sapping productivity from the workplace. Severely
bullied workers may experience clinical depression, symptoms
consistent with post-traumatic stress disorder, increased risk of
heart disease, and other negative health effects.189 Organizations
with abusive work environments may experience reduced productivity and morale and increased absenteeism and attrition. 190
Ample evidence of the dignitary harm caused by bullying comes
from the targets themselves. A study by communications scholars
Sarah Tracy, Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik, and Jess Alberts of how
bullying targets perceived their experiences found that targets'
"narratives.. "were saturated with metaphors of beating, physical
abuse, and death."191 One target reported feeling 'maimed"' and
"'character assassinated,"' while others used terms such as 'beat-
189. See NAMIE & NAMIE, supra note 43, at 55-56 (describing effects of workplace bullying on targets); Loraleigh Keashly & Karen Jagatic, By Any Other Name: American
Perspectives on Workplace Bullying, in BULLYING AND EMOTIONAL ABUSE IN THE
WORKPLACE: INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVES IN RESEARCH AND PRACTICE 31, 53-54 (Stale
Einarsen et al. eds., 2003); See generally Heinz Leymann & Annelie Gustafsson, Mobbing
at Work and the Development of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorders, 5 EUR. J. OF WORK &
ORGANIZATIONAL PSYCHOL., 251 (1996) (describing how mobbing at work can lead to posttraumatic stress disorder).
190.
See EMILY S. BASSMAN, ABUSE IN THE WORKPLACE: MANAGEMENT REMEDIES AND
BOTTOM LINE IMPACT 137-49 (1992) (analyzing the costs of employee abuse); Christine M.
Pearson, Lynne M. Andersson, & Christine L. Porath, Workplace Incivility, in COUNTERPRODUCTIVE WORK BEHAVIOR: INVESTIGATIONS OF ACTORS AND TARGETS
177, 183-86
(Suzy Fox & Paul E. Spector eds., 2005) (examining potential consequences of workplace
incivility).
191. Sarah J.Tracy, Pamela Lutgen-Sandvik & Jess K. Alberts, Nightmares, Demons,
and Slaves: Exploring the Painful Metaphors of Workplace Bullying, 20 MGMT. COM. Q.
148, 160 (2006).
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HUMAN DIGNITY
en,' 'abused,' 'ripped,' 'broken,' 'scarred,' and 'eviscerated."'1 92 The
bullying process was described alternatively as "a game or battle,
93
nightmare, water torture, and managing a noxious substance."1
In describing themselves, targets used terms such as "slave or animal," "prisoner," child with "an abusive father," and "heartbroken lover."1 94
Workplace bullying and related behaviors also reinforce entrenched social hierarchies and exclusionary practices. Management professors Robert Baron and Joel Neuman found that "increased diversity" is one of several factors that correlates
positively to higher levels of verbal aggression, obstructionism,
and workplace violence, the three major forms of aggression at
work.19 5 Industrial relations professors Suzy Fox and Lamont
Stallworth reported that the "most striking finding" in their study
of racial and ethnic bullying "was the ubiquity of bullying among
the survey participants." 19 6 Regina Austin's analysis of labor
market hierarchies concluded that supervisory abuse is most easily exercised over less-skilled, unorganized workers, a group in
which people of color, women, young people, and undocumented
97
immigrants are disproportionately represented.1
Although workplace bullying is common, hurtful, and costly, it
often falls between the cracks of existing employment law.19 8 For
example, tort claims for intentional infliction of emotional distress grounded in allegations of bullying behavior are very difficult to win.19 9 Employment discrimination law may offer an option, but only for those who can tie bullying behaviors to a
192. Id.
193. Id. at 159.
194. Id. at 159 tbl. 1.
195. Robert A. Baron & Joel H. Neuman, Workplace Aggression-The Iceberg Beneath
the Tip of Workplace Violence: Evidence on Its Forms, Frequency, and Targets, 21 PUB.
ADMIN. Q. 446, 459 (1998).
196. Suzy Fox & Lamont E. Stallworth, Racial/Ethnic Bullying: Exploring Links Between Bullying and Racism in the US Workplace, 66 J. VOCATIONAL BEHAV. 438, 452
(2005).
197. See Regina Austin, EmployerAbuse, Worker Resistance, and the Tort of Intentional
Infliction of EmotionalDistress, 41 STAN. L. REV. 1, 37-42 (1988).
198. See generally David C. Yamada, The Phenomenon of "Workplace Bullying" and the
Need for Status-Blind Hostile Work Environment Protection, 88 GEO. L. J. 475 (2000) (examining the employment law implications of workplace bullying).
199. See generally id. at 493-509 (discussing claims of intentional infliction of emotional distress for workplace bullying).
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protected class status. 20 0 Current occupational safety and health
law is inapplicable to workplace bullying; in America, workplace
safety standards and enforcement remain tethered largely to
physical hazards. 201 In brief, there are many potential legal
claims that may be brought for workplace bullying, but prospects
for success are very dim.
Fortunately, there is growing public awareness of workplace
bullying, 2 02 and with it greater interest in and receptivity to potential legal responses. 2 03 The leading option for legal reform is
the Healthy Workplace Bill, model anti-bullying legislation which
has been the main template for bills introduced in twelve state
legislatures since 2003.204 The bill is designed to provide relief
and compensation to targets of severe workplace bullying who can
demonstrate tangible harm and to encourage employers to act
preventively and responsively with regard to these behaviors. 2 05
Another sound response would be to address the bewildering array of private and public employee benefit programs, including
health insurance, workers' compensation, unemployment insurance, and disability benefits that individually and collectively fail
to serve as an adequate safety net for people who are suffering
200. See generally id. at 509-15 (discussing application of discrimination law to
workplace bullying).
201. See id. at 521-22 (discussing application of occupational safety and health law to
workplace bullying).
202. For recent news coverage, see Alison Van Dusen, Ten Signs You're Being Bullied
at Work, FORBES.COM, Mar. 24, 2008, http://www.forbes.com/health/2008/03/22fhealth.
bullying-office-forbeslife-ex avd 0324health.html (last visited Dec. 8, 2008); Etelka Lehoczky, Agreeable, Pleasant? It May Hurt Your Career:Nice Workers More Likely To Get
Pushed Around, Less Likely To Get Promoted, BOSTON GLOBE, Nov. 21, 2004, at G6; Tara
Parker-Pope, When the Bully Sits in the Next Cubicle, N.Y. TIMES, Mar. 25, 2008, at D5.
203. See generally Brady Coleman, Shame, Rage and Freedom of Speech: Should the
United States Adopt European "Mobbing"Laws?, 35 GA. J. INT'L & COMP. L. 53 (2006); Susan Harthill, Bullying in the Workplace: Lessons from the United Kingdom, 17 MINN. J.
INT'L L. 247 (2008). For recent news coverage, see Wendy N. Davis, No Putting up with
Putdowns, ABA J., Feb. 2008, at 16, available at http://abajournal.comlmagazine/no_
puttingup.with.putdowns/ (last visited Dec. 8, 2008); Beth Duncan, Workplace AntiBullying Legislation: The Next Frontier?,BNA'S SAFETY NET, Mar. 28, 2006, at 47.
204. I am the author of the Healthy Workplace Bill. For the bill text and an explanation of its provisions, see David C. Yamada, Craftinga Legislative Response to Workplace
Bullying, 8 EMP. RTS. & EMP. POL'Y J. 475 (2004). Information about the status of advocacy
efforts to enact the Healthy Workplace Bill can be accessed at: http://www.healthywork
placebill.org (last visited Dec. 8, 2008).
205. See Yamada, supra note 204, at 517-21 (containing bill text).
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HUMAN DIGNITY
from psychiatric illness induced or exacerbated by mistreatment
at work. 2 06
D. Employment Discrimination
America's continuing struggles with issues of difference and inclusion reinforce the importance of discrimination law in developing a dignitarian legal agenda. Many thoughtful voices in the legal academy have written extensively on numerous aspects of
employment discrimination law, and it is impossible to do justice
to that body of work within the limitations of this essay. It is
worth reiterating, however, that employment discrimination continues to raise some of the most challenging and disturbing questions in the workplace today.
At the same time, we also must avoid the temptation to equate
protected class status with the whole of a dignitarian legal agenda, to the neglect of other pressing concerns. 2 0 7 For someone who
deeply believes in the ongoing need for strong, enforceable protections against employment discrimination, I make this statement
carefully. After all, discrimination at work persists, and so much
of our understanding about mistreatment and exclusion has been
informed by that experience. However, just as relational psychological theory, whose founders were inspired by feminism and the
women's movement, enhances our overall understanding of human dignity, so can the lessons learned from employment discrimination law inform our broader comprehension of abusive behavior at work.
206. See generally David C. Yamada, Presentation at the Annual Meeting of the American Psychiatric Association, Workplace Bullying, Mental Illness, and Employee Benefits:
The Frayed Safety Net (May 2006) (transcript on file with author) (discussing inadequate
benefit coverage for targets of workplace bullying).
207. Although protected class status remains the dominant focus of legal scholarship
on worker harassment and mistreatment, there appears to be a modest shift towards a
broader perspective, especially in drawing connections between sexual harassment and
workplace bullying. See Rosa Ehrenreich, Dignity and Discrimination:Toward a Pluralistic Understandingof Workplace Harassment, 88 GEO. L.J. 1, 3-4 (1999); Catherine L. Fisk,
Humiliation at Work, 8 WM. & MARY J. WOMEN & L. 73, 73-75 (2001); Ann C. McGinley,
CreatingMasculine Identities: Harassmentand Bullying "Because of Sex", 79 U. COLO. L.
REV. (forthcoming Dec. 2008).
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E. Dispute Resolution
We must implement more humane, efficient, and procedurally
fair ways of resolving employment-related conflicts. The current
dispute resolution systems are expensive, time consuming, and
emotionally battering for plaintiffs and sometimes for employers
as well. As Ann Hodges has noted, "[T]he multitude of forums
available for litigation results in multiple claims arising out of
the same action, as well as tribunals deciding issues outside their
expertise." 208 From the standpoint of therapeutic jurisprudence,
this is a profoundly unhealthy way of resolving disputes.
There are promising proposals for reform. For example, for
years scholars have been recommending the creation of labor
courts that would serve as a single forum for resolving employment disputes, along the lines of systems used in other industrialized nations. 2 09 One specific possibility is the adoption of the
type of employment tribunal system used in the United Kingdom,
which starts with a conciliation process, followed by (if necessary)
a hearing in which claims are initially heard by a three-person
panel. 2 10 These procedural reforms would bring numerous advantages over the present system, including lower costs to litigants,
potentially faster resolution, and consolidation of claims in a single forum. 2 11
F. Globalization
The labor policy implications of globalization, even more so
than employment discrimination, escape easy encapsulation. In
fashioning a dignitarian agenda, however, we can begin with two
overriding principles. First, American trade policy should adopt
fair trade practices that respect workers and their communities
and ensure provision of a living wage for producers of goods. 2 12
Second, instead of exporting our union-busting, anti-labor prac-
208. Hodges, supra note 154, at 604.
209. See, e.g., id. at 622-25.
210. See Harthill, supra note 203, at 271 nn.118-19.
211. See Hodges, supra note 154, at 624.
212. This is the general intent behind the Trade Reform, Accountability, Development,
and Employment Act, which is proposed legislation that would require a comprehensive
review of American trade agreements and set labor standards, environmental protections,
and safeguards for safety of the food supply. S. 3083, 110th Cong. (2008).
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tices to other nations, America should import the spirit of human
dignity that other members of the world community have embraced in shaping their systems of employment law. The examples are many: The International Labor Organization is playing a
lead role towards establishing global labor standards. 2 13 The European Union couples together economic, social, and labor provisions in its supranational policies for member nations, in sharp
2
contrast to America's emphasis on unregulated free trade. 14
Other nations have adopted or enacted specific protections
against workplace bullying and related behaviors, motivated by
dignitarian principles. 2 15
V. PURSUING DIGNITY AT WORK
This essay has examined the markets and management
framework, set out a theoretical foundation for a new framework
grounded in human dignity, and discussed the application of dignitarian theory to some core employment law issues. By doing so,
I hope it has contributed to the case for significant change. "Paradigm shift" may be the most overworked phrase in academic
prose, but it is exactly what we need to reform the substance and
procedure of American employment law. As a closing consideration, then, it is appropriate to examine how we can achieve that
change.
First, we must remain steadfast and unapologetic in calling for
dignity in the workplace, even at the risk of being labeled foolish
or naive. The mindset of what James Arnt Aune has labeled "economic correctness" often belittles those who dare question the sacredness of unregulated markets and management control. 2 16 In
the face of likely criticism and even ridicule, we must make the
case, without embarrassment, that workers should not have to
check their dignity at the office or factory door.
Second, it is important to understand how we got to this place.
The markets and management framework did not achieve dominance overnight or by accident. Its current, enduring incarnation
has been the result of careful, patient, and intelligent intellectual
spadework and political organizing. In 1964, following the
213.
214.
215.
216.
See Yamada, supranote 198, at 514-15.
See id. at 515.
See generally id. at 509-15.
See supranotes 9-10 and accompanying text.
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landslide victory of Lyndon Johnson over Barry Goldwater in the
presidential election, the conservative movement was flat on its
back. However, conservative leaders from all sectors joined together to carefully and painstakingly plan a comeback that was
cemented in 1980 with the election of Ronald Reagan, and to this
day shapes legal, economic, and social policy debates.217 Those of
us who want to put American employment law and policy on a
different path are well-advised to learn from their smart, concentrated efforts.
Third, just as the emergence of the markets and management
framework was part of a broader political, social, and economic
movement, the call for dignity at work cannot be made in a vacuum. One of the most articulate voices on this point has been
Robert Fuller, a physicist and former president of Oberlin College, whose examinations of dignity in the context of hierarchy
and rank have attracted national attention. 2 1s According to Fuller, the primary obstacle to building a dignitarian society is the
persistent recurrence of "rankism," which may manifest itself as
discrimination on the basis of constructs such as race, sex, or age,
but also may be grounded in unnecessarily hierarchical relationships in our private, public, and civic institutions. 2 19 One of the
genuine triumphs of Fuller's work is in teaching us that denials
of dignity occur throughout society, and therefore call for connected rather than atomized responses.
Finally, we must work on crafting messages that persuade the
general public and stakeholders in employment relations. George
Lakoff wrote that "moral worldviews, visions, values, principles,
frames, and language all come together in political arguments."2 2 0 Terms such as therapeutic jurisprudence, relational
217. See generally SIDNEY BLUMENTHAL, THE RISE OF THE COUNTER-ESTABLISHMENT:
FROM CONSERVATIVE IDEOLOGY TO POLITICAL POWER (1986) (chronicling the rise of the
conservative movement); Lewis H. Lapham, Tentacles of Rage: The Republican Propaganda Mill, A Brief History, HARPER'S MAG., Sept. 2004, at 31 (detailing conservative communications and public education strategies); Jeffrey Rosen, Supreme Court Inc., N.Y. TIMES,
Mar. 16, 2008, § MM, at 38, available at http://www.nytimes.com2008/03/16/magazine/
16supreme-t.html (examining pro-business direction of the U.S. Supreme Court); Lewis F.
Powell, The Powell Memo, Aug. 23, 1971, available at http://www.reclaimdemocracy.org/
(influential memorandum by thencorporate-accountabilitypowell-memolewis.html
corporate attorney Powell, outlining a broad-ranging strategy for a conservative resurgence).
218. See, e.g., Robert W. Fuller, A New Look at Hierarchy, LEADER TO LEADER, Summer
2001, at 6, available at http://www.breakingranks.net/scanlLeader.pdf.
219. FULLER, SOMEBODIES AND NOBODIES, supra note 5, at 6-7.
220. LAKOFF, supra note 1, at 119.
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569
theory, and occupational health psychology understandably do
not resonate with the general public, so we need to translate
these ideas into messages that reach people in legislatures,
courts, administrative agencies, union halls, board rooms, and the
media. This will not be easy, but at stake is nothing less than the
well-being of millions of people who work for a living and those
who depend on them.