Employment Law

Explore a comprehensive range of content that delves into the complexities of workplace regulations and rights. Visitors will find in-depth video interviews with employment attorneys, detailed articles on topics such as wrongful termination and workplace discrimination, and definitions of key legal terms related to labor law. This resource is essential for anyone seeking to understand their legal rights and obligations in the employment sector.

Whistleblower shielded by protective legal umbrella

What is whistleblower protection?

Whistleblower protection refers to laws that shield employees from retaliation—such as firing, demotion, or harassment—when they report illegal or unsafe conduct. These protections can apply to internal complaints, reports to government agencies, or participation in investigations, depending on the statute and the facts. This article explains what qualifies as whistleblowing, which laws may protect you, […]

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Fair Labor Standards Act document with gavel

What is the Fair Labor Standards Act?

The Fair Labor Standards Act (FLSA) is a 1938 federal law that sets nationwide wage-and-hour rules, including minimum wage, overtime pay, and child labor protections. It applies to most employers and employees in interstate commerce and helps define exempt vs. nonexempt workers. This article explains the FLSA’s key components, coverage, and compliance basics. The Fair

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Workplace retaliation and hostile work environment

What is retaliation in the workplace?

Workplace retaliation is when an employer takes an adverse action—like firing, demotion, pay cuts, or harassment—because an employee engaged in protected activity under laws such as Title VII. Protected activity can include reporting discrimination, participating in an investigation, or whistleblowing. This article explains common retaliation examples, legal protections, and next steps if you suspect retaliation.

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Workplace harassment: boss pressuring employee

What is quid pro quo harassment?

Quid pro quo harassment occurs when a supervisor or other authority figure conditions 1 or more job benefits (or threats) on sexual favors. It’s illegal workplace discrimination because employment decisions become tied to unwanted sexual conduct. This article explains how it’s proven, common examples, and what legal steps victims can take. Quid pro quo harassment

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Stressed employee facing workplace hostility

What is hostile work environment?

A hostile work environment exists when unwelcome conduct based on a protected characteristic is so severe or pervasive that it alters the conditions of employment. It’s more than rude behavior—it typically involves ongoing harassment or discrimination that interferes with work or creates an intimidating, offensive, or abusive atmosphere. This article explains the legal definition, examples,

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Diverse employees facing workplace discrimination

What is workplace discrimination?

Workplace discrimination is illegal under U.S. federal law when an employee is treated unfairly because of a protected trait, including race, sex, age (40+), or disability. It can affect hiring, pay, promotions, job assignments, harassment, or termination, and workers may file agency complaints or lawsuits. This article explains protected classes, common forms of discrimination, and

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Non-solicitation agreement contract signing

What is a non-solicitation agreement?

A non-solicitation agreement is a contract clause that restricts an employee or business partner from soliciting an employer’s customers, clients, or employees for a set period after the relationship ends—often 6–24 months. It’s used to protect business relationships and workforce stability, but enforceability depends on reasonable scope, duration, and state law. This article explains what

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At-will employment concept illustration

What is an at-will employment?

At-will employment means an employer can terminate an employee at any time for any lawful reason—or no reason—and the employee can quit at any time. The main limits are statutory and contractual protections, such as anti-discrimination laws, retaliation prohibitions, public-policy exceptions, and collective bargaining or written employment agreements. This article explains how at-will employment works,

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Business professionals reviewing non-compete contract

What is a non-compete agreement?

A non-compete agreement is a contract that restricts an employee from working for a competitor or starting a competing business for a set time after leaving (often 6–24 months). Employers use it to protect trade secrets, customer relationships, and competitive advantage, but enforceability depends on state law and reasonableness. This article explains the key components,

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