Exam 7: Overview of Discrimination in Employment Law
Exam 1: The Employment Relationship20 Questions
Exam 2: Establishing the Employment Relationships20 Questions
Exam 3: Compensation Regulations for Employers20 Questions
Exam 4: Employee Benefits20 Questions
Exam 5: Evaluating the Employees Job Performance20 Questions
Exam 6: Terminating the Employment Relationship20 Questions
Exam 7: Overview of Discrimination in Employment Law20 Questions
Exam 8: The Americans With Disabilities Act20 Questions
Exam 9: Age Discrimination20 Questions
Exam 10: Race and Color Discrimination20 Questions
Exam 11: National Origin Discrimination20 Questions
Exam 12: Religious Discrimination20 Questions
Exam 13: Sex Discrimination20 Questions
Exam 14: The Family and Medical Leave Act20 Questions
Exam 15: The Employers Rights Versus the Employees Right to Privacy20 Questions
Exam 16: Immigration20 Questions
Exam 17: Safety Regulations in Employment20 Questions
Select questions type
Matching
-An employer adopts an otherwise discriminatory employment practice if it is reasonably neces-
sary to the normal operations of that particular business.
Free
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(39)
Correct Answer:
G
Matching
-An order requiring violators of antidiscrimination laws to cease their discriminatory conduct and refrain from committing future violations.
Free
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(38)
Correct Answer:
E
An employer can adopt an otherwise discriminatory employment practice if it is reasonably nec-
essary to the normal operations of that particular business.
Free
(True/False)
4.9/5
(41)
Correct Answer:
True
The defendant in a Title VII case must carry the initial burden in establishing a prima facie case.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(40)
The plaintiff who loses his or her job because of employment discrimination has a duty to miti-
gate damages by using reasonable diligence to seek other employment substantially equivalent
to his or her previous position.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(35)
Matching
-A situation in which an employer offers both a legitimate and an illegitimate reason for its
adverse employment action.
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(40)
Matching
-An amount of damages equal to lost wages and benefits.
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(25)
Matching
-Ill will, intentionally harming someone, or having no moral or legal justification for harming someone.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(30)
Systemic disparate impact is also known as the adverse impact theory.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(36)
Matching
-The figure derived from multiplying the number of hours that an attorney reasonably expended by a reasonable hourly rate.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(34)
Matching
-Employment practices that are neutral on their face in the treatment of different groups, but which
fall more heavily on one group than another and cannot be justified by business necessity.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(29)
Matching
-An employee deliberately treated the employee bringing a claim of intentional discrimination
differently from other employees because of his or her membership in a protected class.
(Multiple Choice)
4.9/5
(41)
The two methods that may be utilized to prove a Title VII case are disparate treatment or dis- parate impact.
(True/False)
4.8/5
(41)
An employee's inability to "fit in" with other employees is not a legitimate nondiscriminatory
reason that an employer may assert to rebut a prima facie case.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(36)
One obvious rebuttal of a plaintiff's prima facie case claim that he or she was qualified for the
position is the introduction of evidence that the plaintiff was in fact not qualified.
(True/False)
4.7/5
(41)
Evidence that the person hired or promoted is of the same minority or sex as that of the com-
plainant is an absolute defense in the defendant's rebuttal in supporting a nondiscriminatory jus-
tification for its employment action.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(32)
Matching
-Intentional discrimination based on a person's race, color, religion, sex, national origin, age, or
disability.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(42)
An employer must act with malice or with reckless indifference to the federally protected right
of an aggrieved individual, and egregious intentional discrimination must be found before puni-
tive damages are available.
(True/False)
4.9/5
(39)
Matching
-Losses for the intangible injuries of emotional harm, such as emotional pain, suffering, inconve- nience, mental anguish, loss of enjoyment of life, injury to professional standing, and injury to character and reputation.
(Multiple Choice)
4.8/5
(31)
The theory of individual disparate treatment seeks to determine whether the employer deliber- ately treated the employee bringing a claim of intentional discrimination differently from other employees because of his or her membership in a protected class.
(True/False)
5.0/5
(41)
Filters
- Essay(0)
- Multiple Choice(0)
- Short Answer(0)
- True False(0)
- Matching(0)