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20 votes
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The deportation campaigns of the Great Depression
24 votes -
Kentucky clerk who denied marriage licenses to same-sex couples loses another round in court
37 votes -
The US government stopped enforcing Robinson-Patman and destroyed independent grocery stores
33 votes -
She didn’t get an apartment because of an AI-generated score – and sued to help others avoid the same fate
43 votes -
US jury finds discrimination in H-1B visa tech worker case
16 votes -
United States Supreme Court blocks Joe Biden administration rules against sex discrimination in schools
26 votes -
Vegetarians only: Dietary surveillance prevents Muslim citizens in India from finding secure homes
30 votes -
'I was misidentified as shoplifter by facial recognition tech'
59 votes -
US FDIC chair says he’ll leave job after toxic workplace report
11 votes -
The hidden, magnificent history of chop suey
9 votes -
The International Olympic Committee published a study comparing trans- and cisgender athletes
15 votes -
Denmark's tough laws on begging hit Roma women with few other options – the Roma minority are heavily discriminated against across Europe
21 votes -
Detroit’s LGBTQ+ Chamber of Commerce is helping create a business renaissance
10 votes -
Notes on the Ivory Coast
6 votes -
Rock Hudson: How a gay truck driver became the biggest star in Hollywood
8 votes -
Apple reaches $25M settlement with the DOJ for discriminating against US residents during hiring
27 votes -
NFL lawsuit bombshell: 'If the Black players don’t like it here, they should go back to Africa and see how bad it is'
22 votes -
The misogyny myth
30 votes -
As employers expand artificial intelligence in hiring, few states in the USA have rules
12 votes -
New Jersey court sides with Catholic school that fired unmarried pregnant teacher
24 votes -
Scouts sue MLB for age discrimination, claiming the league had a ‘blacklist’
9 votes -
A fact-checked debate about euthanasia
21 votes -
Is there a glass ceiling for ethnic minorities to enter leadership positions? Evidence from an Australian field experiment with over 12,000 job applications.
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1048984322000583 Abstract We submitted over 12,000 job applications, to over 4,000 job advertisements, to investigate hiring discrimination...
https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S1048984322000583
Abstract
We submitted over 12,000 job applications, to over 4,000 job advertisements, to investigate hiring discrimination against six ethnic groups for leadership positions.
For leadership positions, applicants with English names received 26.8% of positive responses for their job applications, while applicants with non-English names received 11.3% of positive responses. This means ethnic minorities received 57.4% fewer positive responses than applicants with English names for leadership positions despite identical resumes.
For non-leadership positions, applicants with English names received 21.2% of positive responses for their job applications, while applicants with non-English names received 11.6% of positive responses. This means ethnic minorities received 45.3% fewer positive responses for non-leadership positions despite identical resumes.
Ethnic discrimination for leadership positions was even more pronounced when the advertised job required customer contact.
25 votes -
Sweden Muslim woman who refused handshake at job interview wins case
14 votes -
A new ACLU lawsuit alleges that Washington DC is discriminating against people with mental health disabilities by continuing to send armed officers to mental health calls
https://theappeal.org/dc-police-mental-health-crisis-response-aclu-lawsuit/ The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, D.C., filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday alleging that the...
https://theappeal.org/dc-police-mental-health-crisis-response-aclu-lawsuit/
The American Civil Liberties Union of Washington, D.C., filed a lawsuit in federal court Thursday alleging that the district’s practice of sending police officers—instead of mental health specialists—to mental health emergencies violates the Americans with Disabilities Act.
“Someone who calls 911 for a physical health emergency gets trained medical providers who can treat and stabilize them,” said Susan Mizner, director of the ACLU’s Disability Rights Program, in a press release. “But someone who calls 911 for a mental health emergency gets a police officer with handcuffs and a gun.”
According to the lawsuit, these differing responses constitute a breach of the Americans with Disabilities Act, which prohibits government entities from denying people with disabilities equal access to government services and programs. The ACLU is suing on behalf of Bread for the City, a local nonprofit that provides healthcare and social services to lower-income and unhoused communities.
31 votes -
How scientific conferences are responding to US abortion bans and anti-LGBTQ+ laws
32 votes -
When flight attendants fought the airline industry and won
10 votes -
Hidden pain, controlled bodies: Does ballet have to be like this? A recent explosion of revelations from ballet dancers confronts an art form afraid to look itself in the mirror
27 votes -
Three generations of trans Americans reflect on what has (and hasn't) changed
9 votes -
The ‘open secret’ in most US workplaces: Discrimination against moms is still rampant
10 votes -
The Witch Trials of JK Rowling
15 votes -
George Takei: Love and justice beyond the stars
3 votes -
Alaska says it’s now legal “in some instances” to discriminate against LGBTQ individuals
12 votes -
Charles Silverstein, who helped declassify homosexuality as mental illness, dies at 87
8 votes -
Gaytopia: Fed up with the horrific discrimination and violence against his community, Don Jackson had a plan to turn a remote spot in Northern California into the world's first gay-majority county
7 votes -
How bullying manifests at work — and how to stop it
4 votes -
US immigration: Why Indians are fleeing halfway around the world
5 votes -
Switzerland has 'systemic' racism issues, UN experts say
8 votes -
The trans swimmer who won too much
6 votes -
Valerie Complex on being Black at Cannes: How microaggressions marred my festival experience
7 votes -
He spurred a revolution in psychiatry. Then he ‘disappeared.’
7 votes -
When trans and non-binary people age out of homeless services, there’s nowhere to turn
7 votes -
Crime prediction software promised to be free of biases. New data shows it perpetuates them.
15 votes -
The hidden, magnificent history of chop suey - Discrimination and mistranslation have long obscured the dish’s true origins
5 votes -
California lawsuit against PlayStation alleges gender discrimination
5 votes -
US Supreme Court rules in favor of Catholic foster care agency that refused to work with same-sex couples
9 votes -
Why Black cops quit - “The ‘Blue Wall of Silence’ is so real and so pervasive that people outside of it don’t have a clue of what it’s like,” one former officer told VICE News
16 votes -
The Jewish roots of Old Bay Seasoning
7 votes -
How Big Tech helps India target climate activists: Companies such as Google and Facebook appear to be aiding and abetting a vicious government campaign against Indian environmental campaigners
6 votes