Allowing members-only unions would protect the rights of those who wish to bargain collectively even if they fail to surmount all the legal hurdles necessary to establish the union as the representative of all employees in the workplace.
Law and Justice
Remedy for an Ailing Civil Justice System: Preventive Legal Care
The proper and efficient administration of justice is in jeopardy when we leave so many people to their own devices in our courts.
Labor at a Crossroads: Can Broadened Civil Rights Law Offer Workers a True Right to Organize?
It’s one way to allow victims of anti-union discrimination to sue in federal court for compensatory and punitive damages.
Sex, Lies and Justice
Can we reconcile the belated attention to rape on campus with due process?
Movements for Racial Justice and Economic Justice Could Converge to Form a Powerhouse for Change
 What sort of policies—what sort of majority support in the country—can we imagine that will fix what is broken?
We Can’t Forget: Black Women Are Targeted, Too
“It’s not just the brothers dying; I’m at risk too,” Joanne says. “I could be the next person.”
‘All I Want For Christmas Is Justice!’ A Protester’s Dispatch
This is what the new civil rights movement looks like.
#Blacklivesmatter Till They Don’t: Slavery’s Lasting Legacy
The historical value of black life and the casual killing of Eric Garner.
10 Ways the System Is Rigged Against Justice for People Wrongly Killed by Cops
Why is the legal system so biased against holding abusive officers accountable?
How Walmart and Home Depot Are Buying Huge Political Influence
Walmart and Home Depot are ranked among the top 100 political donors overall for the period since 1989, putting their fingerprints on tax and labor law.

