Arabian American Oil Company (Aramco) was a U.S.-incorporated company that operated primarily in Saudi Arabia. A U.S. citizen employed by Aramco in Saudi Arabia alleged that he was subjected to unlawful employment discrimination in that foreign workplace in violation of Title VII. The employee filed a charge with the Equal Employment Opportunity Commission (EEOC), which then brought suit in federal district court in Texas against Aramco. Aramco moved to dismiss, arguing that Title VII did not apply extraterritorially to regulate conduct occurring in a foreign country. The district court agreed and entered judgment for Aramco, and the court of appeals affirmed. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve whether Title VII's protections extended to a U.S. citizen working for an American employer abroad.
Does Title VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964 apply extraterritorially to prohibit employment discrimination against a U.S. citizen working for an American employer in a foreign country?
Under the presumption against extraterritoriality, federal statutes are presumed to apply only within the territorial jurisdiction of the United States unless Congress clearly expresses an affirmative intent for the statute to apply abroad. Absent such a clear statement, courts will not infer extraterritorial application from ambiguous text, general definitions, or legislative history.
No. Title VII, as it existed at the time of the case, did not apply extraterritorially to employment discrimination occurring in a foreign country, even where the plaintiff was a U.S. citizen employed by an American company.
The Court began with the presumption against extraterritoriality, derived from cases like Foley Bros. v. Filardo, which requires a clear expression of congressional intent before a statute will be applied to conduct outside the United States. Examining Title VII's text and structure, the Court found no such clear statement. General definitions of commerce and employer did not indicate extraterritorial scope, nor did Title VII's enforcement and venue provisions suggest Congress contemplated routine overseas application. The Court also examined Section 702's exemption stating that Title VII does not apply to the employment of aliens outside any State. While that clause referenced foreign employment, the Court concluded it did not supply the requisite clear statement that Congress intended the statute to otherwise apply to U.S. citizens working abroad; at most, it resolved a narrow question about aliens and could not overcome the presumption. The Court accorded little deference to the EEOC's contrary guidance suggesting overseas coverage for U.S. citizens. Deference was inappropriate because the extraterritorial reach of a statute is a question for Congress to answer clearly, and the agency's interpretation lacked the force of a formal, congressionally authorized rulemaking addressing the statute's territorial scope. The Court further noted comity concerns and the potential for conflict with foreign laws and workplace norms if Title VII were applied abroad without an explicit congressional directive. Concluding that Title VII contained no clear statement of extraterritorial application at the time, the Court affirmed the judgment for Aramco and held that the statute did not cover the alleged discrimination occurring in Saudi Arabia.
Aramco is a cornerstone case for both employment law and statutory interpretation. First, it established that Title VII, as originally enacted, did not extend to U.S. citizens working for American employers abroad. Congress promptly responded by passing the Civil Rights Act of 1991, expressly extending Title VII's protections extraterritorially to U.S. citizens employed overseas by American employers and controlled foreign corporations, and creating a foreign law defense when compliance would violate the law of the host country. Second, Aramco powerfully reaffirmed the presumption against extraterritoriality, later relied on in decisions like Morrison and RJR Nabisco. For law students, the case illustrates how courts read statutory text narrowly with respect to geography absent a clear statement, the limited role of agency interpretations on questions of territorial scope, and the dynamic interplay between judicial interpretation and legislative amendment.
EEOC v. Arabian American Oil Co. crystallizes an important interpretive constraint: without a clear statutory directive, U.S. laws do not govern conduct abroad. Applying that principle, the Court held that Title VII, as then written, did not regulate discrimination against U.S. citizens working overseas for American employers. The result prioritized congressional clarity, comity, and textual fidelity over broad remedial aims.