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85 Wash. U. L. Rev. 1315 (2007-2008)
Procedural Path Dependence: Discrimination and the Civil-Criminal Divide

handle is hein.journals/walq85 and id is 1321 raw text is: PROCEDURAL PATH DEPENDENCE:
DISCRIMINATION AND THE
CIVIL-CRIMINAL DIVIDE
JULIE C. SUK*
ABSTRACT
Procedural path dependence occurs when the particular features of the
procedural system that is charged with enforcing a given legal norm
determine the substantive path of that norm. This Article shows how the
limits of employment discrimination law in two different national contexts
can be explained by procedural dynamics. In France, as in several
European    countries, employment discrimination     law   is  enforced
predominantly in criminal proceedings. French criminal procedure
enables the discovery of information necessary to prove the facts of
discrimination, whereas the limits of French civil procedure make it
impossible for such information to be revealed. As a result, the substantive
legal norm of nondiscrimination is being developed in French criminal
law, in which the element of intent and the defendant's strong presumption
of innocence are essential. In the United States, liberal civil procedure
rules permit the broad discovery of information relevant to proving
discrimination. At the same time, the civil litigation      system  has
undermined the law's adaptability to the evolving social practices that
threaten equal employment opportunity. The civil dimension of this
procedural system, deeply rooted in the paradigm of the private damages
action, tends to favor the employment discrimination claims that most
closely resemble torts, thereby limiting the law's ability to address the
complex causes of unequal employment opportunity. This, too, is an
example of procedural path dependence. These examples reveal that
discrimination is neither criminal nor civil in nature. To overcome its
present limits, antidiscrimination law must transcend the substantive
* © Julie C. Suk. Assistant Professor of Law, Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law, Yeshiva
University. Thanks to George Fletcher, Mitch Lasser, Youngjae Lee, Judith Resnik, Daniel Sabbagh,
Joan Scott, Alex Stein, Stewart Sterk, and Jim Whitman for helpful comments on an earlier draft of
this article. The article also benefited from discussions by participants in the Comparative Law
Colloquium at Columbia Law School, the Advanced Comparative Law Seminar at Yale Law School,
the Annual Meeting of the Law and Society Association, and faculty workshops at the Cardozo School
of Law. I am grateful to Slim Ben Achour, Gwena~le Calves, Sophie Latraverse, and Samuel Thomas
for their insights on the French context. All translations, unless otherwise noted, are my own.

1315

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