Why was the eeoc necessary in the 1960s given the many


"President Nixon and Watergate" Please respond to the following: (Note: Please respond to one [1] of the following two [2] bulleted items in a primary posting of at least 125 words.

In addition, please make a substantive comment to one [1] of your classmates.)

Our discussion examines a concern common in today's workplace, discrimination and legal protection from it. What protects employees from on-the-job discrimination?

The Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC).

Established as part of the broader war on poverty and inequality in the 1960s, legislators founded the EEOC within Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.

The EEOC legally protects employees and job applicants from discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, and national origin.

Recently added policies include: protecting former military personnel from unfair hiring practices (1973); shielding workers with disabilities from inequitable hiring, firing and job tasks (1990); and defending employees over forty years old from age-related prejudice (1967).

The EEOC, finally, investigates employer retaliation against employees who had filed claims of discrimination.

Why was the EEOC necessary in the 1960s? Given the many advancements made against discrimination today, do we still need the EEOC? Explain your responses.

MORE INFORMATION: Do you want to read a brief history of the EEOC? see League Information Institute, Cornell University. (2015). Equal Employment Opportunity Commission.

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