The Legal Landscape of Wage Theft in America’s Largest Cities
A systematic mapping study of wage theft laws in the 40 largest US cities reveals the patchwork of legal protections available to low-wage workers. The research, published in the American Journal of Public Health, assesses the scope and enforcement mechanisms of these ordinances, highlighting significant variation in how cities address the exploitation of vulnerable labor forces.
Why it might matter to you:
This research provides a concrete framework for understanding a key social determinant of health—economic security—at the municipal policy level. For professionals focused on prevention and health behavior, it connects upstream legal and economic factors directly to the chronic stress and material hardship that influence disease risk. It offers a tangible point of intervention for public health advocacy, moving beyond individual-level strategies to address systemic drivers of poor health outcomes.
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