Building a human rights framework for workers' compensation in the United States: opening the debate on first principles

American Journal of Industrial Medicine
Jeffrey A Hilgert

Abstract

This article introduces the idea of human rights to the topic of workers' compensation in the United States. It discusses what constitutes a human rights approach and explains how this approach conflicts with those policy ideas that have provided the foundation historically for workers' compensation in the United States. Using legal and historical research, key international labor and human rights standards on employment injury benefits and influential writings in the development of the U.S. workers' compensation system are cited. Workers' injury and illness compensation in the United States does not conform to basic international human rights norms. A comprehensive review of the U.S. workers' compensation system under international human rights standards is needed. Examples of policy changes are highlighted that would begin the process of moving workers' compensation into conformity with human rights standards.

References

Apr 22, 2003·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Kyle SteenlandJoseph Hurrell
Apr 12, 2006·Journal of Occupational and Environmental Medicine·Kenneth D RosenmanZhewui Luo

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Citations

Apr 30, 2015·Archives of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation·Mary Stergiou-KitaAngela Colantonio
May 10, 2012·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Leslie I Boden
May 10, 2012·American Journal of Industrial Medicine·Martha T McCluskey

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