Accommodating the Female Body:   A Disability Paradigm of Sex Discrimination

Jessica L. Roberts

This Article presents a novel approach for understanding sex discrimination in the workplace by integrating three distinct areas of scholarship: disability studies, employment law, and architectural design.  Borrowing from disabilities studies, I argue that the built environment serves as a situs of sex discrimination.  In the first Part, I explain how the concept of disability has progressed from a problem located within the body of an individual with a disability to the failings of the built environment in which that person functions.  Using this paradigm, in the next Part, I reframe workplaces constructed for male workers as instruments of sex discrimination.  I then explain how built environments intended for the male body constitute disparate impact under Title VII.  In the final Part, I present the architectural school of universal design, which has been a source of crucial innovation in the area of disability rights, as a means for both de-abling and de-sexing the workplace.