Sociology Professor’s Research Sheds New Light on Pregnancy-related Firings

The Pregnancy Discrimination Act of 1978 makes it illegal for woman to be fired just because they are pregnant.

Written bySouthwestern University
| 3 min read
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But that doesn’t stop it from happening, according to new research by Reginald Byron, assistant professor of sociology at Southwestern University and Vincent Roscigno, a Distinguished Professor of Arts and Science at The Ohio State University.

What employers do to get around the law, Byron says, is vilify pregnant women as poor performers and tardy employees while also pointing to seemingly fair attendance policies and financial costs. Although such concerns may, at face value, seem legitimate in a business sense, Byron and Roscigno note that the same policies and rationales are not invoked in the case of non-pregnant employees, including those with worse records of performance and attendance.

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