'Rational Discrimination,' Accommodation, and the Politics of (Disability) Civil Rights

IF 2.4 2区 社会学 Q1 LAW Virginia Law Review Pub Date : 2003-07-24 DOI:10.2307/3202421
Samuel Bagenstos
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引用次数: 29

Abstract

In the thirteen years since Congress enacted the Americans with Disabilities Act ("ADA"), many commentators have sought to draw a strong normative distinction between the statute's mandate to provide "reasonable accommodation" to people with disabilities and the antidiscrimination requirements of the civil rights laws that emerged in the 1960s and 1970s. This move has been most obvious among those who are skeptical of the ADA, but even most supporters of the ADA have taken the same view. The conventional wisdom, as evidenced by a near-consensus in the literature, seems to be that - whatever the descriptive similarities between them - there is a fundamental normative difference between antidiscrimination requirements and accommodation mandates: Antidiscrimination requirements call on employers to forego acting on illegitimate preferences (like aversive prejudice) that they ought not to have in the first place, while accommodation mandates prohibit employers from acting on the normally legitimate desire to save money. One goal of this Article is to challenge that widely held point of view. The Article's basic aim is to demonstrate that the ADA's accommodation requirement is fundamentally of a piece with the core antidiscrimination requirements of Title VII, but the Article also makes a more general argument about the fundamental normative similarity between antidiscrimination and accommodation. It seeks to show that the arguments that have been proffered for a strong normative distinction between antidiscrimination and accommodation are unpersuasive, and that the two modes of civil rights law have a great deal in common both practically and morally. Along the way, the Article contends that the notion of "rational discrimination" - of which the failure to accommodate is often cited as an example - is a conceptually unstable basis on which to build any normative theory of antidiscrimination law. The Article then engages the question of why so many people from so many perspectives place so much weight on what is ultimately a shaky normative distinction between antidiscrimination and accommodation. The Article contends that the antidiscrimination/accommodation distinction seems to serve an important political function for two somewhat different groups: mainstream liberal supporters of the 1960s civil rights revolution, who hope to protect traditional civil rights laws against the backlash that the ADA has provoked; and more radical leftist critics of identity politics, who hope to preempt liberal challengers by claiming that their critique is not directed at the statutes that emerged from that civil rights revolution. This move ultimately cannot do the work that mainstream liberal civil rights supporters or anti-identitarian leftists hope, but the political uses of the antidiscrimination/accommodation distinction are telling nonetheless.
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“理性歧视”、“迁就”和(残疾)公民权利的政治
自国会颁布《美国残疾人法案》(ADA)以来的十三年里,许多评论家试图在为残疾人提供“合理便利”的法规授权与20世纪60年代和70年代出现的民权法的反歧视要求之间划清明确的规范区别。这一举动在那些对《美国残疾人法》持怀疑态度的人中表现得最为明显,但即使是《美国残疾人法》的大多数支持者也持同样的观点。正如文献中几乎达成一致意见所证明的那样,传统智慧似乎是,无论它们之间在描述上有什么相似之处,反歧视要求和住宿规定之间在规范上有根本的区别:反歧视要求要求雇主放弃他们本来就不应该拥有的不正当偏好(如厌恶偏见),而住宿要求则禁止雇主出于通常合理的省钱愿望而采取行动。本文的目标之一就是挑战这种广泛持有的观点。该条的基本目的是证明《美国残疾人法》的住宿要求在根本上与第七章的核心反歧视要求是一致的,但该条也对反歧视和住宿之间的基本规范相似性进行了更一般的论证。它试图表明,那些为在反歧视和包容之间建立强有力的规范区别而提出的论点是没有说服力的,这两种民权法模式在实践和道德上都有很多共同点。在此过程中,文章认为,“理性歧视”的概念——未能适应经常被引用为一个例子——是一个概念上不稳定的基础,在此基础上建立任何反歧视法的规范理论。这篇文章接着探讨了这样一个问题:为什么这么多人从这么多的角度如此重视反歧视和包容之间最终是不可靠的规范区别。文章认为,反歧视/迁就的区别似乎为两个不同的群体提供了重要的政治功能:20世纪60年代民权革命的主流自由派支持者,他们希望保护传统的民权法免受《美国残疾人法》引发的反弹;还有更激进的左翼身份政治批评者,他们希望先发制人,声称他们的批评不是针对民权革命产生的法规。这一举措最终无法达到主流自由主义民权支持者或反身份主义左翼人士所希望的效果,但反歧视/住宿区分的政治用途仍然很有说服力。
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CiteScore
2.70
自引率
3.80%
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0
期刊介绍: The Virginia Law Review is a journal of general legal scholarship published by the students of the University of Virginia School of Law. The continuing objective of the Virginia Law Review is to publish a professional periodical devoted to legal and law-related issues that can be of use to judges, practitioners, teachers, legislators, students, and others interested in the law. First formally organized on April 23, 1913, the Virginia Law Review today remains one of the most respected and influential student legal periodicals in the country.
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