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Do the United States and France, both post-industrial democracies,
differ in their views and laws concerning discrimination? Marie
Mercat-Bruns, a Franco-American scholar, examines the differences
in how the two countries approach discrimination. Bringing together
prominent legal scholars—including Robert Post, Linda
Krieger, Martha Minow, Reva Siegel, Susan Sturm, Richard Ford, and
others—Mercat-Bruns demonstrates how the two nations have
adopted divergent strategies. The United States continues, with
mixed success at “colorblind” policies, to deal with
issues of diversity in university enrollment, class action
sex-discrimination lawsuits, and rampant police violence against
African American men and women. In France, the country has banned
the full-face veil while making efforts to present itself as a
secular republic. Young men and women whose parents and
grandparents came from sub-Sahara and North Africa are stuck coping
with a society that fails to take into account the barriers to
employment and education they face.
Discrimination at Work provides an incisive comparative
analysis of how the nature of discrimination in both countries has
changed, now often hidden, or steeped in deep unconscious bias.
While it is rare for employers in both countries to openly
discriminate, deep systemic discrimination exists, rooted in
structural and environmental causes and the ways each state has
dealt with difference in general. Invigorating and incisive,
the book examines hot-button issues such as sexual harassment;
race, religious and gender discrimination; and equality for LGBT
individuals, thereby delivering comparisons meant to further social
equality and fundamental human rights across borders.