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536 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 8 (1994)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0536 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

The measure of a civilized society is that justice not only color its public
facade but permeate its private institutions. Hopes and democratic ideals
suggest that the private should self-consciously mirror the public via a kind
of sociological osmosis. This faith in the symbiotic nature of the relationship
between law and society can be misleading and can conceal a different
underlying reality. What value is law that constructs the appearance of a
neutral, unbiased order when the underlying reality contains a vibrant
animosity reflecting the weak's domination by the powerful? When it is clear
that the realities of daily practice are insulated from the values expressed in
public policy, it is the responsibility of law and lawmakers to make a differ-
ence. That is good government. Without it, not only does a society experience
moral ambivalence, but through its hypocrisy, people lose respect for the
moral order. They confuse right and wrong, reality and myth, harm and
justice. Such is the present crisis facing American employees who are sub-
jected to an outdated and outmoded law that allows employers to cast them
off like so many used clothes.
In the United States, the predominant employment relationship is based
on the centuries-old English common law doctrine of employment at will.
Unless employees are civil servants, contract employees, or members of a
union covered by a collective bargaining agreement, they have no job security.
In most states, nonunionized employees, of which there are approximately
70 million, are largely unprotected from arbitrary employer discipline and
discharge.' This means that the employer may terminate the employment
relationship, whether for good cause, for no cause or even for cause morally
wrong, without thereby being guilty of legal wrong.2
Since the 1980s, however, the at-will assumption has become subject to
increasing questioning, both in the courts and in the legislatures. First, a
growing number of judicial decisions have recognized various public policy
exceptions to the at-will rule. As a result of changes in federal laws stemming
from the civil rights and women's movements of the 1960s, certain categories
of employee were protected from dismissal on grounds such as discrimination,
union membership, and whistle-blowing. Consistent with the federal lead,
state courts have begun to erode the at-will doctrine, giving numerous
judgments in favor of those discharged.
Second, courts have, to a lesser extent, recognized that an employer might
be harmed as a result of defamation or invasion of privacy issues.
1. Unionized employees account for 15.8 percent of all employees, and public employees
account for 19.0 percent, leaving 65.0 percent of employees employed at will.
2. Payne v. Western & A.R.R., 81 1bnn. 507 (1884).

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