Is labor law internal or external to private law? The view from Cedar point
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Cynthia Estlund
Abstract
This Article contrasts two views of the relationship between the fields of work law and private law. The “internal” view, propounded by Hanoch Dagan, would bring work law into the domain of private law by recentering the latter, including property law, around liberal values of reciprocal respect for autonomy. The “external” view locates the law of work in an overlapping but distinct domain that we might call “social law,” where it operates as a set of externally imposed conditions on the activity of employing others. When workers’ rights and interests come into conflict with those of owner-employers, the two views face off on the constitutional terrain of takings. In principle, the internal view might afford a better defense against takings challenges to laws that constrain property owners’ entitlements in the interest of those who work there, for it would redefine the former to reflect the latter. The external view relies more on takings law than property law to accommodate others’ interests when they conflict with traditional property rights. Unfortunately, the U.S. Supreme Court’s recent decision in Cedar Point Nurseries v. Hassid deals a heavy blow to both views. Its neo-Blackstonian conception of property rights rejects the notion that property law itself recognizes workers’ interests and entrenches that conception of property rights within the constitutional law of takings, sharpening the takings sword against social law’s regulation of property rights in the interest of others, including workers. Cedar Point thus underscores and magnifies the challenges that modern U.S. takings law, with its constitutional definition of property rights, poses to the advancement of workers’ rights, whether those are understood as internal or external to property law.
© 2023 by Theoretical Inquiries in Law
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Private Law Theory Meets the Law of Work
- Introduction
- Nondomination and the ambitions of employment law
- Relational and associational justice in work
- Can contract emancipate? contract theory and the law of work
- The work of tort law: Why nonconsensual access to the workplace matters?
- The classical liberal version of labor law: Beware of coercion dressed up as liberty
- Is labor law internal or external to private law? The view from Cedar point
- The history of job (in)security: Why private law theory may not save work law
- Managerial prerogative, property rights, and labor control in employment status disputes
- Good faith in employment
Articles in the same Issue
- Frontmatter
- Private Law Theory Meets the Law of Work
- Introduction
- Nondomination and the ambitions of employment law
- Relational and associational justice in work
- Can contract emancipate? contract theory and the law of work
- The work of tort law: Why nonconsensual access to the workplace matters?
- The classical liberal version of labor law: Beware of coercion dressed up as liberty
- Is labor law internal or external to private law? The view from Cedar point
- The history of job (in)security: Why private law theory may not save work law
- Managerial prerogative, property rights, and labor control in employment status disputes
- Good faith in employment