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The rights of illegal workers injured at work: a study of the judicial dilemma in the United States

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Article

Guthrie, Robert ; Taseff, Rebecca

The International Journal of Comparative Labour Law and Industrial Relations

2007

23

1

Spring

61-82

case law ; discrimination ; irregular migration ; occupational accidents ; workers rights

USA

Human rights

http://www.kluwerlawonline.com/productinfo.php?pubcode=IJCL

English

Bibliogr.

"The engagement of ‘non-citizens', ‘aliens', and ‘undocumented workers' for work raises a number of delicate employment law and policy issues. This paper considers the attitude of the courts in the United States (US) to the question of the rights of workers who work contrary to immigration laws (illegal workers)1 and will focus on the recent case law in relation to workers' compensation entitlements. In the US the case law on the rights of illegal workers to workers' compensation is unclear and heavily dependent upon local State legislation and judicial attitudes. It has also been heavily influenced by the Supreme Court decision of Hoffman Plastic Compounds v National Labor Relations Board, which dealt with the rights of undocumented workers to make claims for wages consequent upon unfair termination of the employment contract. This paper explores the different judicial and legislative approaches to the rights of illegal workers to workers' compensation, and proposes a possible humanitarian response to the difficult problem of the injured illegal worker."

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