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U.S. SUPREME COURT DECISIONS FAVORABLE TO OLDER WORKERS
by
Rosenblatt, Robert A
in
Age discrimination
/ Civil rights
/ Federal courts
/ Labor force
/ Labor market
/ Layoffs
/ Litigation
/ Older people
/ Older workers
/ Statistics
/ Supreme Court decisions
/ Supreme courts
/ Workers
2008
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U.S. SUPREME COURT DECISIONS FAVORABLE TO OLDER WORKERS
by
Rosenblatt, Robert A
in
Age discrimination
/ Civil rights
/ Federal courts
/ Labor force
/ Labor market
/ Layoffs
/ Litigation
/ Older people
/ Older workers
/ Statistics
/ Supreme Court decisions
/ Supreme courts
/ Workers
2008
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Trade Publication Article
U.S. SUPREME COURT DECISIONS FAVORABLE TO OLDER WORKERS
2008
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Overview
RAPID GROWTH OF WORKERS SS-PLUS These and other Supreme Court decisions this year \"covered a very important class of cases,\" said Harper Jean Tobin, staff attorney at the National Senior Citizens Law Center. There were 25.5 million workers ages 55-plus in 2006, according to the federal Bureau of Labor Statistics, a number that will jump to 37.4 million, or 47%, by 2016, accounting for virtually all the growth in the U.S. labor market.
Publisher
American Society on Aging
Subject
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