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Commentary: Understanding other Problems

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 January 2021

Abstract

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Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © American Society of Law, Medicine and Ethics 1994

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References

Bertin, Joan, “Reproductive Hazards in the Workplace: Lessons from UAW v. Johnson Controls,” in Needleman, Herbert L. Bellinger, David, eds., Prenatal Exposure to Toxicants: Developmental Consequences (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994), pp. 297316.Google Scholar
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Clauss, Carin Berzon, Marsha Bertin, Joan, “Litigating Reproductive and Developmental Health in the Aftermath of UAW versus Johnson Controls,” Environmental Health Perspectives, 101, supp. 2 (1993): 205–20.Google Scholar
For example, eligibility for benefits under Norwegian provisions affording some women special entitlements and temporary leaves from hazardous work assignments during pregnancy is determined by factors used in predicting birth outcome only. Strand, Kitty, “Gender, Work and Reproduction: The Example of the Health Care Area,” presentation at the ProHealth Care Conference, Stockholm, June 27, 1994.Google Scholar