Contact
National Employment Law Project
90 Broad Street, Suite 1100, New York, NY 10004
Radical shifts for Black women workers mean building new narratives centered on abundance, dignity, and collective liberation.
Workers’ demands and organizing efforts will deliver true flexibility and economic security.
At-will employment and the subminimum wage emerged from the backlash to Emancipation.
Many state legislatures are successfully taking on the challenge of non-compete reform.
Sorting out fact and fiction in Amazon’s “Delivered with Care” report.
NELP’s ED Rebecca Dixon reflects on two years of COVID-19
Milwaukee Public School Teachers and Supporters Picket by Charles Edward Miller 4-24-18 (CC BY-SA 2.0) This year’s State of the(…)
The judge’s decision represents an important advancement in the gig-worker-led movement for universal labor rights for all workers.
A transformed unemployment insurance system must center racial and gender justice.