RANDY ALBELDA Professor of Economics University of Massachusetts Boston Boston, MA 02125 617-287-6963 [email protected] October 2014

PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYMENT September 1998-present: Professor, University of Massachusetts Boston January 2011-present: Graduate Program Director, Master’s in Applied Economics, University of Massachusetts Boston September 2006-June 2007: Associate Chair, Department of Public Policy and Public Affairs, University of Massachusetts Boston September 2001-January 2003: Acting Director Public Policy Ph.D. program, University of Massachusetts Boston September 1994-August 1998: Associate Professor, University of Massachusetts Boston September 1989- August 1994: Assistant Professor, University of Massachusetts Boston September 1988-August 1989: Visiting Professor, University of Massachusetts Boston August 1987-July 1988: Research Director, Massachusetts Legislature's Commission on Tax Reform August 1986-July 1987: Research Director, Massachusetts State Senate Taxation Committee September 1983-June 1986: Assistant Professor, Hobart and William Smith Colleges, Geneva, NY

EDUCATION University of Massachusetts Amherst, Ph.D. Economics, 1983. Smith College, B.A. Economics, 1977.

PUBLICATIONS: Books and edited volumes Unlevel Playing Fields: Understanding Wage Inequality and Discrimination, with Robert Drago and Steve Shulman. McGraw-Hill, 1997. Reprinted by Economic Affairs Bureau 2001, Second Edition 2004, Third Edition 2010, Fourth Edition 2013.

The Dilemmas of Lone Motherhood: Essays from , with and , London, Routledge 2005 (A book version of special issue on Lone Mothers published by Feminist Economics).

Special Issue on Lone Mothers, Feminist Economics with Susan Himmelweit and Jane Humphries, 10(2), July 2004.

Lost Ground: Poverty, Welfare Reform and Beyond, edited with Ann Withorn, South End Press, 2002.

“Reforming Welfare, Redefining Poverty” guest editor with Ann Withorn, The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Sciences, Vol. 577, September 2001.

Glass Ceiling and Bottomless Pits: Women's Work, Women's Poverty, with Chris Tilly. South End Press, 1997.

Economics and Feminism: Disturbances in the Field, Twayne Publishers. 1997.

The War on the Poor: A Defense Manual, with and the Center for Popular Economics. The New Press, 1996.

Real World Micro: A Microeconomic Reader (2nd, 3rd, 4th, 5th, 6th, and 7th Editions), editor with various authors, Dollars and Sense, 1990, 1991, 1993, 1995, 1996, and 1997. Also wrote instructor's manual for 1991 and 1993 editions.

1 Real World Macro: A Macroeconomic Reader (8th Edition), editor with Patricia Horn, John Miller, and Chris Tilly. Dollars and Sense, June 1991.

Mink Coats Don't Trickle Down: The Economic Attack on People of Color and Women, with Elaine McCrate, Edwin Melendez, and June Lapidus. South End Press, 1987.

Alternatives to Economic Orthodoxy: A Reader in Political Economy, editor with Christopher Gunn and William Waller, Jr., M.E. Sharpe, 1987.

PUBLICATIONS: Articles

“Double Trouble: US Low-Wage and Low-Income Workers, 1979–2011” with Michael Carr. Feminist Economics, 20(2): 1-28, 2014: (DOI: 10.1080/13545701.2014.886125).

“Counting Care Work: The Empirical and Policy Implications of Care Theory” with Mignon Duffy and Claire Hammonds, Social Problems, 60(2) 2013: 145-167.

“Double Jeopardy: Low-wage and Low-income Workers in Massachusetts, 1980-2009” with Michael Carr, Massachusetts Benchmarks, 2012. 14(2), 10-18. http://www.massbenchmarks.org/publications/issues/vol14i2/4.pdf

“Time Binds: US Anti-poverty Policies, Poverty and Single Mother’s Wellbeing” Feminist Economics, 17(4), November 2011: pp. 189-214.

“To Work More or Not to Work More: Difficult Choices, Complex Decisions for Low-wage Parents” with Jennifer Shea, Journal of Poverty 14(3), July 2010: pp 245-265.

“Placing a Value on Care Work” with Mignon Duffy, Nancy Folbre, Clare Hammonds, and Jooyeoun Suh, Communities and Banking, Winter 2010: pp. 6-9.

“Bridging the Gaps Between Earnings and Basic Needs in Massachusetts” with Jennifer Shea, Massachusetts Benchmarks, 10( 2) 2008: pp. 13-19

“Now That We Do: Same-sex Couples and Marriage in Massachusetts” with Michael Ash and M. V. Lee Badgett, Massachusetts Benchmarks, 7(2) 2005: pp. 16-24.

“Moving Target: The Dilemma of Serving Massachusetts Poor Families” New England Journal of Public Policy, Fall/Winter 2004-2005: pp-81-88

“The Dilemmas of Lone Motherhood: Key Issues for Feminist Economics” with Susan Himmelweit and Jane Humphries, Feminist Economics 10(2), 2004, pp 237-364.

“A Tale of Two Decades: Changes in Massachusetts Work and Earnings, 1979-1999” with Marlene Kim Massachusetts Benchmarks, 5(2): 12-17, Spring 2002.

“Left Behind: The Persistence of Poverty in the 1990s Massachusetts Boom” with Donna Haig Friedman Massachusetts Benchmarks, 4(4): 12-17, Fall 2001.

“Fallacies of Welfare-to-Work Policies,” Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 577: 66- 78, 2001. This also appears as a chapter in Lost Ground: Poverty, Welfare Reform and Beyond edited by Randy Albelda and Ann Withorn, South End Press 2002, pp. 79-94. Reprinted in Women’s Studies in the Academy: Origins and Impact, edited by Robyn Rosen, Prentice Hall, 2004.

“Preface,” with Ann Withorn, Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 577: 8-11, 2001.

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“Welfare-to-Work, Farewell to Families? U.S. Welfare Reform and Work/Family Debates” Feminist Economics 7(1): 119-135, March 2001. Reprinted in Feminist Economics edited by Edited by Lourdes Benería, Ann Mari May and Diana L. Strassmann, Volume III, chapter 17 in Edward Elgar February 2011.

“Women and Poverty: Beyond Earnings and Welfare,” Quarterly Review of Economics and Finance, 39: 723-742, 1999.

“Toward a Strategy for Women’s Economic Equality,” with Chris Tilly New Politics, 4(3): 83-93, 1999. Reprinted in The Socialist Feminist Project: A Contemporary Reader In Theory And Politics edited by Nancy Holmstrom, Monthly Review Press, 2002.

“Glass Ceilings and Bottomless Pits,” with Chris Tilly, Working USA, January/February 1998.

“Improving Women's Employment Status in the United States,” Industrial Relations Journal, December 1997.

“The Impact of Feminism in Economics -- Beyond the Pale? A Discussion and Survey Results,” Journal of Economic Education, 26(3): 253-273, Summer 1995.

“Introduction to “The Welfare Reform Debate You Wish Would Happen,” Feminist Economics. 1(2): 81-83 Summer 1995.

“Family Structure and Family Earnings: The Determinants of Earnings Differences Among Family Types,” with Chris Tilly, Industrial Relations, 33(2): 151-167, April 1994.

“All in the Family: Family Types, Access to Income, and Implications for Family Income Policies,” with Chris Tilly, Policy Studies Journal, 20( 3): 388-404, 1992.

“The State of the States: The Fiscal Crisis in the 1990s,” with Arthur MacEwan. Critical Sociology 18(2): 3- 30, Summer 1991.

“Tax to Grind: Unequal Personal Income Taxation of Single-parent Families in Massachusetts and Options for Reform,” New England Journal of Public Policy 7(1): 111-124, 1991.

“What Price Economic Independence: Women's Declining Access to Income in the US,” with June Lapidus, Conference Proceedings, First Annual Women's Policy Research Conference, Institute for Women's Policy Research, Washington, DC. May 1989.

“Jobs, Fathers and the State: Welfare Policy and the New Federalism,” with Cindy Mann. Review of Radical Political Economics, 20(2-3): pp. 61-67, Summer/Fall 1988.

“Occupational Segregation by Race and Gender, 1958-1981,” Industrial and Labor Relations Review, 39(3): 404- 411, April 1986.

“Nice Work If You Can Get It: Segmentation of Black and White Women Workers in the Post World War II Period,” Review of Radical Political Economics 17(3): 72-85, 1985.

“Determinants of Women's Wages During the Progressive Era,” with Mark Aldrich, Explorations in , 17: 323-341, Fall 1980.

PUBLICATIONS: Book chapters “Gender Impacts of the ‘Great Recession’ in the United States” in Women and Austerity: The economic crisis and the future for gender equality, edited by Jill Rubery and Maria Karamessini, Routledge, pp. 82-101, 2013.

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“Comment on Darity, McCrate, and Wicks-Lim” in Capitalism on Trial: Explorations in the Tradition of Thomas Weisskopf edited by Jennette Wicks-Lim and Robert Pollin, Edward Elgar, pp. 261-265, 2013.

“Low-wage Mothers on the Edge: How single mothers negotiate labor markets and public policies in the United States” in Handbook of Research on Gender and Economic Life, edited by Deborah M. Figart and Tonia Warnecke, Edward Elgar, pp. 257-272, 2013.

“The New Anti-Poverty Regime: Same Single-Mother Poverty Problems. In Amy Kesselman, Lily D McNair, Nancy Schniedewind (Ed.), Women: Images & Realities, A Multicultural Anthology. 5th edition 2011.

“Paid Family and Medical Leave” with Betty Reid Mandell in The Crisis of Caregiving: Social Welfare Policy in the US, edited by Betty Mandell, Palgrave, 2010.

“Glass Ceilings and Bottomless Pits” with Chris Tilly (excerpt from 1997 book of same title) in Feminist Economics: Critical Concepts, Volume 2: Households, Labor, and Paid Work, edited by Drucilla K. Barker and Edith Kuiper , Routledge Major Work Series, 2009.

Love’s Labor’s Lost?: The Costs and Benefits of Paid Family and Medical Leave in Massachusetts, with Alan Clayton-Matthews. The Future of Work in Massachusetts, edited by Tom Juravich, University of Massachusetts Press, 2007: pp 205-224.

“New Welfare Regime, Same Single-Mother Poverty Problems” in Women: Images and Realities: A Multicultural Anthology edited by Amy Kesselman, Lily D. McNair and Nancy Schniedewind, 4th Edition, McGraw Hill, 2007.

“Glass Ceilings and Bottomless Pits: Women, Income and Poverty in Massachusetts,” with Chris Tilly, in Welfare: A Documentary History edited by Gwendolyn Mink and Rickie Solinger, New York University Press, 2003. (Reprinted from report for Women's Statewide Legislative Network, June 1994.)

“What’s Wrong with Welfare-to-Work,” In Work, Welfare and Politics: Confronting Poverty in the Wake of Welfare Reform, edited by Frances Fox Piven, Joan Acker, Margaret Hallock and Sandra Morgen, University of Oregon Press, pp 73-80, 2002.

“Introduction” with Ann Withorn in Lost Ground: Poverty, Welfare Reform and Beyond, edited by Randy Albelda and Ann Withorn, South End Press, 2002 pp. 1-7, 2002.

“Moving beyond ‘Get A Job’: What Real Welfare Reform Might Look Like,” with Chris Tilly in Squaring Up: Policy Strategies to Raise Women’s Income in the United States edited by Mary King, University of Michigan Press, pp. 15-45, 2001.

“Single, with Children: The Economic Plight of Single Mothers,” with Chris Tilly in Political Economy and Contemporary Capitalism: Radical Perspectives on Economic Theory and Policy edited by Ron Baiman, Heather Boushey and Dawn Saunders, ME Sharpe, 2000. Updated and reprinted in Women and the Economy: A Reader edited by Ellen Mutari and Deborah Figart, ME Sharpe, 2003.

“It's A Family Affair: Women, Work and Poverty,” with Chris Tilly in For Crying Out Loud: Women's Poverty in the United States, edited by Ann Withorn and Diane Dujan, South End Press, pp. 79-85, 1996. Reprinted in Race, Class, and Gender, 3rd Edition, edited by Margaret Andersen and Patricia Hill Collins, Wadsworth Publishing Company, 1998; Reconstructing Gender: A Multicultural Anthology, 2nd and 3rd Editions, edited by Estelle Disch, Mayfield Publishing Company, 1999 and 2002; Making Sense of Women’s Lives: An Introduction to Women’s Studies, edited by Lauri Umansky and Michele Plott, Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 2000.

4 The Social Construction of Difference and Inequality : Race, Class, Gender, and Sexuality edited by Tracy E. Ore, Mayfield Publishing Company, 2000 and 2003 (1st and 2nd Editions); Shifting the Center: Understanding Contemporary Families, 2nd Edition, edited by Susan J. Ferguson, pp. 605-610, Mayfield Publishing Company, 2001.

“Not Markets Alone: Enriching the Discussion of Income Distribution,” with Chris Tilly in Political Economy for the 21st Century, edited by Charles Whalen. M.E. Sharpe, 1996, pp. 195-212. An abridged version reprinted in The Political Economy of Inequality, edited by Frank Ackerman, Neva R. Goodwin, Laurie Dougherty, and Kevin Gallagher, Island Press 2000.

“The Misogyny of Welfare Reform,” in Frontline Feminism, 1975-1995: Essays from Sojourner's first 20 Years, edited by Karen Kahn. Aunt Lute Books. pp 121-125, 1995.

“Toward a Broader Vision: Race, Gender and Labor Market Segmentation in the Social Structure of Accumulation Framework,” with Chris Tilly in Social Structures of Accumulation: The political economy of growth and crisis, edited by Terry McDonough, Michael Reich and David Kotz. Cambridge University Press, pp. 212-230, 1994.

“Women and Children Last,” with June Lapidus in Economic Report of the People, by the Center for Popular Economics, pp. 59-73. South End Press 1986

PUBLICATIONS: Encyclopedic Entries Randy Albelda “Equal Pay for Equal Work? New Evidence on the Persistence of the Gender Pay Gap: Testimony April 28, 2009” in US Congress, Joint Economic Committee, Invest in Women, Invest in America: A Comprehensive Review of Women in the U.S. Economy, pp. 78-86., 2010. Available at http://jec.senate.gov/public/?a=Files.Serve&File_id=57cfaf04-f297-4c61-964b-6321af47db03

“Welfare Reform” with Jennifer Shea, in Encyclopedia of Gender and Society, edited by Jodi O’Brien, Sage Publications, 2009.

“Income Inequality” entry for Encyclopedia of U.S. Political History Volume 6, MTM Publishing, 2009.

“Economic Theories” with Udaya Wagle, in Poverty in the United States : An Encyclopedia of History, Politics, and Policy, edited by Gwendolyn Mink and Alice O’Connor, ABC-CLIO 2004.

“Welfare Reform and Work-Family Studies” Online Work-Family Encyclopedia edited by Marcie Pitts- Catsouphes and Ellen Kossek at http://www.bc.edu/bc_org/avp/wfnetwork/rft/wfpedia/index.html, originally posted September 2003.

“U.S. Welfare Reform” in Elgar Companion on Feminist Economics edited by Meg Lewis and Janice Peterson, Elgar Publishers, 2000. Reprinted in Law and Public Policy: A Socio-Economic Approach to Law and Public Policy, edited by Lynne Dallas, Carolina Academic Press of Durham, NC, 2004.

“Marxist Political Economics” in Elgar Companion on Feminist Economics edited by Meg Lewis and Janice Peterson, Elgar Publishers, 2000.

“Income Distribution” with Chris Tilly in Elgar Companion on Feminist Economics edited by Meg Lewis and Janice Peterson, Elgar Publishers, 2000.

PUBLICATIONS: Reports How Youth Are Put At Risk by Parents' Low-wage Jobs, with Lisa Dodson, Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston, 2012. http://cdn.umb.edu/images/centers_institutes/center_social_policy/Youth_at_RiskParents_Low_Wage_Job s_Fall_121.pdf

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Women in the Down Economy: Impacts of the Recession and the Stimulus in Massachusetts, with Christa Kelleher, Jordan Parekh and Diana Salas, University of Massachusetts Boston’s Center for Women in Politics and Public Policy and Center for Social Policy and the Massachusetts Commission on the Status of Women, March 2010. (http://www.mccormack.umb.edu/centers/cwppp/womendowneconomy.php).

The Institute for Women’s Policy Research and Labor Resource Center Paid Family and Medical Leave Simulation Model with Alan Clayton-Matthews, Institute for Women’s Policy Research, Washington DC, 2010 (http://www.iwpr.org/publications/pubs/the-institute-for-women2019s-policy-research-and-labor- resource-center-paid-family-and-medical-leave-simulation-model/at_download/file)

Counting on Care Work: Human Infrastructure in Massachusetts, with Mignon Duffy and Nancy Folbre. University of Massachusetts, September 2009. (http://countingcare.org/documents/counting_on_care_web_0909.pdf)

Poverty in Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Community with Lee Badgett, Alyssa Schneebaum and Gary Gates, The Williams Institute, UCLA, March 2009. (http://www.law.ucla.edu/williamsinstitute/pdf/LGBPovertyReport.pdf)

Fits and Starts: The Difficult Path for Single Working Parents with Rebecca Loya, Beth Babcock, and Ruthie Lieberman, and Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston and Crittenton Women’s Union, Boston, MA, 2008. (www.liveworkthrive.org/docs/Fits_and_Starts_BRIEF_Nov2008.pdf)

Bridging the Gaps: A Picture of How Work Supports Work in Ten States with Heather Boushey, Center for Economic and Policy Research, Washington DC and Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston, 2007. (http://www.bridgingthegaps.org/publications/nationalreport.pdf)

Bridging the Gaps Between Earnings and Basic Needs in Massachusetts with Jennifer Shea University of Massachusetts Boston’s Center for Social Policy: Boston, MA, 2007. (http://www.umb.edu/bridgingthegaps/btg_mesfr.pdf)

Sharing the Costs, Reaping the Benefits: Paid Family and Medical Leave in Massachusetts, Labor Resource Center and University of Massachusetts Boston’s Labor Resource Center, 2006. (http://www.cpcs.umb.edu/lrc/paidleave/)

Same-Sex Couples and Their Children in Massachusetts: A View from Census 2000, with Michael Ash, M. V. Lee Badgett, Nancy Folbre, and Lisa Saunders, Institute for Gay and Lesbian Strategic Studies, February 2004.

A Tale of Two Decades: Work and Family in Massachusetts 1979-1999, with Marlene Kim, Donahue Institute, Center for Social Policy, Center for Women in Politics and Public Policy, and Labor Resource Center University of Massachusetts Boston June 2002.

After Welfare: Poverty and Emergency Services Use in Massachusetts, with Donna Haig Friedman, Elaine Werby, and Michelle Kahan, Center for Social Policy, McCormack Institute, University of Massachusetts Boston, June 2001.

Filling the Work and Family Gap: Paid Parental Leave in Massachusetts, with Tiffany Manuel, Labor Resource Center, University of Massachusetts Boston, June 2000.

Choices and Tradeoffs: The Parent Survey on Child Care in Massachusetts, with Carol Cosenza, Parents United for Child Care, Boston, MA March 2000.

The Massachusetts Minimum Wage: Making Work Pay in Massachusetts, with Chris Tilly, Massachusetts AFL-CIO, May 1999.

6 Welfare to What? A Look at the Department of Transitional Assistance’s Report on Families Leaving Welfare, Working Massachusetts, April 1999.

Preliminary Research on the Impact of Misclassification of Employees in the Construction Industry, with Barbara O’Toole, Labor Resource Center, University of Massachusetts Boston, November 1998.

Poor Timing: An Analysis of Massachusetts’ Welfare Time Limits, with Ann Withorn and Chris Navin, Boston Area Academics’ Working Group on Poverty, May 1998.

In Harm's Way? : Domestic Violence, AFDC Receipt, and Welfare Reform in Massachusetts, with Mary Allard, Mary Ellen Colten, and Carol Consenza. McCormack Institute, University of Massachusetts Boston. February 1997.

An Economic Profile of Women in Massachusetts, University of Massachusetts President's Office, November 1995.

Cooperatives as an Income-Generating Alternative for Low-Income Women: Possibilities and Prospects, with Lynn Burbridge, Francoise Carre, Catherine Lynde, Julie Matthaei, and Mary Stevenson. A study by the Economic Literacy Project and Women's Economic Development Project of Women for Economic Justice Boston, Massachusetts Prepared for Institute for Women's Policy Research Washington, D.C., October 1994.

Glass Ceilings and Bottomless Pits: Women, Income and Poverty in Massachusetts, with Chris Tilly, Women's Statewide Legislative Network, June 1994.

It Will Take More Than A Miracle: Income in Single-mother Families in Massachusetts 1979-1987, with Chris Tilly, McCormack Institute Paper, University of Massachusetts-Boston. March 1992.

Lessons and Limitations: A Look at Single-mother families, Welfare-employment Program Evaluations, and the Implications for Massachusetts Welfare Policies, with Lynn Burbridge, Elaine Donovan and Julie Matthaei, Women for Economic Justice. December 1991.

Taxes in Massachusetts: Myth and Reality, with Barry Bluestone, McCormack Institute Paper, April 1989 (reprinted by the Boston Globe, April 4, 1989).

Local Revenue Adequacy and Fiscal Disparity, Policy option paper written for and approved by the Massachusetts Legislature's Special Commission on Tax Reform, June 1989.

Family Policy and the Taxation of Incomes, Policy option paper written for and approved by the Massachusetts Legislature's Special Commission on Tax Reform, January 1989.

Property Tax Relief for Low Income Residents, Policy option paper written for and approved by the Massachusetts Legislature's Special Commission on Tax Reform, February 1988.

Sales Tax Expenditures, with Cindy Mann, Policy option paper written for and approved by members of the Massachusetts Legislature's Special Commission on Tax Reform, February 1988.

A Review of Tax Expenditures, with Cindy Mann and Lois Yachetta, Report written for and approved by the Massachusetts Legislature's Special Commission on Tax Reform, October 1987.

PUBLICATIONS: Book reviews

Gender-Class Equality in Political Economies by Lynn Prince Cooke for International Feminist Journal of Politics, 16(1), 2014: pp 177-178.

7 They Say Cut Back, We Say Fight Back! Welfare activism in an era of Retrenchment by Ellen Reese, Russell Sage Foundation for Industrial Labor Relations Review 65(4) October 2012: pp. 1002-03.

Stretched Thin: Poor Families, Welfare Work, and Welfare Reform by Sandra Morgen, Joan Acker, and Jill Weigt for Social Service Review 85(1) March 2011: pp. 159-162

Public Policy for Women: The state, income security and labour market issues, edited by Marjorie Griffin Cohen and Jane Pulkingham, University of Toronto Press, Feminist Economics 16(4) October 2010: pp 218-222.

The Gloves-off Economy: Workplace Standards at the Bottom of America’s Labor Market, edited by Annette Bernhardt, Heather Boushey, Laura Dresser, and Chris Tilly for British Journal of Industrial Relations, 48(1) March 2010: pp. 222-224.

Unequal Chances: Family Background and Economic Success edited by Samuel Bowles, Herbert Gintis, and Melissa Osborne Groves for Feminist Economics, 13(1), 2007: pp 137-141.

“Following the Money” book review of Women and the U.,S. Budget: Where the Money Goes and What You Can do About It by Jane Midgley, Women Review of Books, 25(3), May/June 2006: pp. 18-19.

Shut Out: Low Income Mothers and Higher Education in Post-Welfare America, Valerie Polakow, Sandra S. Butler, Luisa Stormer Deprez, and Peggy Kahn, editors, Feminist Economic, 11(4):2005: pp. 215-219.

Low-Wage America: How Employers Are Reshaping Opportunity in the Workplace, by Eileen Appelbaum, Annette Bernhardt, and Richard J. Murnane for Contemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 33(6) November, 2004.

Living Wages, Equal Wages: Gender and Labor Market Policies in the United States, by Deborah Figart, Ellen Mutari, and Marilyn Power, Feminist Economics 10(1), 2004: pp 160-64.

Race, Markets, and Social Outcomes, edited by Patrick Mason and Rhonda Williams, Feminist Economics, 8(2) 2002: pp. 209-212.

Welfare Reform: A Race to the Bottom? edited by Sanford Schram and Samuel Beers, Woodrow Wilson Center, for the Journal of the American Planners Association, 67(1) 2001:pp. 117-118.

Don’t Call Us Out of Name: The Untold Lives of Women and Girls in Poor America by Lisa Dodson and Welfare’s End by Gwendolyn Mink, Feminist Economics 6(1), 2000.

The New Fiscal Federalism and the Social Safety Net: A View from California edited by James Hosek and Robert Levine, Feminist Economics, 3(3): 1998.

Words of Welfare: The Poverty of Social Science and the Social Science of Poverty by Sanford Schram in Political Science Quarterly, 3(3), Fall 1996: 541-542.

Out of the Margins: Feminist Perspectives on Economics, edited by Edith Kuiper and Jolande Sap in The Women’s Review of Books, 13(9), June 1996: p. 23.

PUBLICATIONS/PAPERS: Miscellaneous “Expanding Healthcare Access in the United States: The Patchwork “Universalism” of the Affordable Care Act,” with Diana Salas Coronado, background paper prepared for UNWomen, 2013.

“Bail Out the Safety Net” in The Wealth Inequality Reader, 3rd Edition, Dollars and Sense, 2009 and in The Economic Crisis Reader, 1rd Edition, Dollars and Sense, 2009. [Reprinted from Dollars and Sense Magazine 2008].

8 “Why it’s harder (and different) for single mothers: Gender, motherhood, labor markets and public work supports.” A paper prepared for the Ford Foundation Economic Development Program, June 2008. Available in UMass Boston, Center for Social Policy’s working paper series: (http://www.mccormack.umb.edu/centers/csp/documents/working_papers/2009_1_Harder_for_Mothers.p df).

“False Promises: The gaps between employment and public work supports for single mothers” with Heather Boushey. A paper prepared for the Civil Rights Project, May 2008.

Assessing the Benefits of Provision of Legal Services through the Disability Benefits Project with Phillip Granberry, a report produced for the Massachusetts Legal Assistance Program, 2006.

Assessing the Benefits and Costs of the Provision of Legal Services to Survivors of Domestic Violence Through the Battered Women’s Legal Assistance Project with Kimberly Puhala, a report produced for the Massachusetts Legal Assistance Program, 2006.

Over 20 articles in Dollars and Sense between 1986 and 2006; several articles for Sojourner; and op-ed pieces for the Boston Globe.

AWARDS Abigail Adams Award, Massachusetts Women=s Political Caucus, 2000. Chancellor’s Distinguished Scholar Award, University of Massachusetts Boston, 2004.

GRANTS Faculty Professional Development Grant, University of Massachusetts Boston, $1,000 (1992 to develop and distribute feminism and economics survey). Public Service Endowment Grant, University of Massachusetts Boston, $3,000 (1993 for work with Massachusetts Statewide Legislative Network on women’s economic education campaign). Donohue Institute, University of Massachusetts $28,000 (2001 to produce report on work and family in Massachusetts). Ford Foundation awarded to Institute for Women’s Policy Research to subcontract with the Labor Research Center at University of Massachusetts Boston, $60,000 (2001-2004 to produce model and report estimating the costs and benefits of paid family leave). Ford Foundation and Annie Casey Foundation grants awarded to Center for Economic and Policy Research (Washington DC) to subcontract to the Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston, $15,000 (2004-2005 to conduct pilot project on how workers combine earnings and public work supports in Massachusetts) and $84,000 in 2005-2006 to work on national report for project and to analyze qualitative data from project. Stoneman Family Foundation grant awarded to Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston, $200,000 (for 2006-2007 to conduct project on workers combining earnings and public work supports in Massachusetts and other states). Fireman Foundation grant awarded to Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston, $7,000 (for 2007-2008 work with a One Family Scholar to collect and analyze data on low-income parents in school and training). Crittenton’s Women’s Union subcontract awarded to Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston, $12,000 (for 2007-2008 to document earnings and public support trajectories for families in eight communities in Massachusetts). Fireman Foundation grant award to the Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston $75,000 (to plan research and outreach stemming from the Bridging the Gaps project, 2008). Creative Economy Grant from the University of Massachusetts, co-Principle Investigator (with Nancy Folbre and Mignon Duffy), $35,000 (for 2008-2009 to measure the care sector in Massachusetts). Ford Foundation And Annie E. Casey Foundation grants awarded to Center for Social Policy, University of Massachusetts Boston, $60,000 (for 2011-2012 to summarize research and frame policy discussion of ways in which parents’ low wage work affects adolescents). U54 Minority Institution/Cancer Center Partnership Grant, University of Massachusetts Boston and Dana Farber Harvard Cancer Center, funded by the National Cancer Institute. Co-principle Investigator

9 with Greg Abel, M.D., $197,000 (2 year pilot grant Assessing the Familial Financial Burden of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation)

SAMPLE OF RECENT PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS “The New Vulnerable: Low-income workers in low-wage industries,” with Michael Carr, LERA/ASSA meetings, Philadelphia, PA (January 2014).

“How Youth are Put At Risk by parents' Low-wage Jobs,” with Lisa Dodson, Annie E. Casey Foundation, Baltimore, MD, (February 2013).

“Double Jeopardy: Low-wage and low-income workers in the US, 1979-2009)” as Sheridan Visiting Scholar, Economics Department, University of Massachusetts Amherst (September 2012)

“Weaving Alliances: Doing (Economic) Justice Research/Doing Research Justice,” Plenary Address, IAFFE (International Association for Feminist Economics), Barcelona, Spain, (June 2012).

“Gender impacts of the ‘Great Recession’ in the United States” Symposium: Women, gender equality and economic crisis, Athens, Greece December 2011 and Reykjavik ,Iceland April 2012.

“Time Binds: US anti-poverty policies, poverty and single mother’s wellbeing,“ Hampshire College, Hampshire College, (April 2012)

“Difficult crossroads: Intersections of race, gender, low-wage work and low-income families,” Allied Social Science Association Meetings, January 2011.

Rethinking Capitalism, Work, and Gender: A Feminist Economics Roundtable, Berkshire Conference on the History of Women, June 2011.

Invited participant, Equal Pay Research Summit hosted by the Women’s Bureau at the U.S. Department of Labor December 2010.

Invited Panelist, National Council for Research on Women, Reinvesting in Women and Families: Developing an Economy for the Future, NYC, October 2010.

“Time binds” International Association for Feminist Economics Annual Conference, Buenos Aires, Argentina July 2010.

“Why it’s harder (and different) for single mothers: Gender, motherhood, labor markets and public work supports in the US” International Labor Process Conference, New Brunswick, NJ March 2010.

“Who Cares? Women, Poverty and U.S. Anti-Poverty Policies for the 21st Century” Grinnell College, Poverty Symposium co-sponsored by the Rosenfield Program and the Center for International Studies, April 2010.

Legislative Expert Testimony: Massachusetts Legislative Joint Committee on Revenue’s Subcommittee on Tax Expenditures, November 2009.

Congressional Expert Witness: US Congress Joint Economic Committee's hearing "Equal Pay for Equal Work? New Evidence on the Persistence of the Gender Pay Gap” April 2009.

"Poverty in Lesbian , Gay and Bisexual Community in the United States” hosted by the Lesbian, Gay and Bisexual Equity Congressional Caucus, March 2009.

“Gender, Poverty and the Recession” University of Michigan Dearborn, January 2009.

“Is College the Ticket to Women’s Equity?” Keynote address at Association for Gender Equity Leadership in Education 2008 National Conference, July , 2008.

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“Bridging the Gaps: Reframing Poverty Policy and Research” inaugural lecture of the lecture series, Reframing Critical Public Policy Debates, Pennsylvania State University. March 2008.

“’My Ends Ain’t Meeting’: Single Mothers’ Earnings and Public Work Supports in ‘Post-welfare’ United States” Allied Social Science Association annual meetings, January 2008.

“Bridging the Gaps between Earnings and Basic Needs in Massachusetts” The Center for Public Policy and Administration at University of Massachusetts Amherst, November 2007.

“Gender Inequalities in the Labor Market” Levitt Public Affairs Center, Hamilton College, March 2007.

“Bridging the Gaps: Can Single Mothers Package Earnings and Government Benefits to Make Ends Meet?” Allied Social Sciences Association, January 2007.

“New Welfare Regime, Same Poverty Problems” Women’s Studies Program, Slippery Rock University, March 2006.

“Feminist Economics” Economics and Gender and Women’s Studies Department Lecture, Connecticut College, November 2005.

“Time Off?: Paid Family and Medical Leave and Low-Income Women Workers” APPAM (Association for Policy Management and Analysis) Annual Meetings, Washington DC, November 2005

“Challenging the Income Security and Labor Nexus for Women” at Imagining Public Policy to Meet Women’s Economic Security Needs conference, Vancouver, British Columbia, October 2005.

“Mind the Gap: Earnings, Work Supports, and 'Self-Sufficiency' for Single Mother Families in the United States” International Association for Feminist Economics, Washington DC, June 2005.

Keynote speaker: “Poverty in 2005: Realities and Public Perceptions” Greater Boston Legal Services Program-Wide Meeting, June 2005.

“Leveling the Playing Field: Paid Family and Medical Leave and Low-Income Women Workers” Industrial Relations Research Association, January 2005.

MANUSCRIPT AND PROPOSAL REVIEWS Associate Editor, Feminist Economics (2004-present)

Journal article manuscripts: American Journal of Economics and Sociology; Cambridge Journal of Economics; Community, Work & Family; Critical Sociology; Eastern Economic Journal; Feminist Economics; Gender, Work and Organizations; Industrial and Labor Relations Review; Industrial Relations; Journal of Business and Economic Studies; Journal of the Community Development Society; Journal of Economic Education; Journal of Women’s Health; National Women’s Studies Association Journal; Review of Radical Political Economics; Review of Social Economics; Social Forces; Social Problems; Social Science Quarterly; Social Service Review; Structural Change and Economic Dynamics; Women and Politics; Women’s Studies International Forum

Books and book proposals: Press, International Labour Organization, , Princeton University Press, Routledge, Stanford University Press, Temple University Press, University of Chicago Press, and University of Michigan Press.

Grant proposals:

11 National Science Foundation; United States Department of Agriculture’s Economic Research Service Grants; Woodrow Wilson Dissertation Fellowship in Women’s Studies; Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada.

SUPERVISION AND MEMBERSHIP ON GRADUATE DEGREE COMMITTEES: University of Massachusetts Boston (unless otherwise noted) Ph.D (Public Policy) chair: Mary Spooner, “Women Under Subjection of the Law: A Study of the Legal Response to Women’s Abuse in the English-peaking Caribbean,” 2001.

Lisa Brabo, “Wyoming Women’s Experiences in Separating from Violent Intimate Partners,” 2002.

Tiffany Manuel, “Giving Mercenaries a Chance to be Missionaries: Making the Case for Universal Paid Family Leave in the United States,” 2004.

Udaya Wagle, “A Multidimensional Approach to Poverty: Economic Well-being, Capability, and Social Inclusion in the City of Kathmandu,” 2004.

Jennifer Shea, “Inside the Black Box of Devolution: A Model of Devolved Governance through the Community-Integrated Intermediary: The Case of the Compassion Capital Fund and the Field of High-risk Youth Services in Boston,” 2008.

Steve Quimby, “Metropolitan Growth and Inequality: The Impact of Regional Governance Structures,” 2008.

Randy Wilson, “Finding the Will and the Way: Applying the Framework of Commitment and Capacity to the Implementation of Career Ladders in the Long-term Care Sector,” 2009.

Kim Puhala, “Legal Services for Women Survivors of Domestic Violence: Do Public Problems Require Public Solutions?,” 2011.

Carolyn Arcand (co-chair), “Weighing the Benefits and Risks Associates with Proprietary School Attendance for Low-income Single Mother Students,” 2014.

Amy Helburn, “A Longitudinal Look at Social Risk and Protection: Does Inequality in Receipt of Employment-based Benefits Lead to Disparities in Health Status, Which then Limit Intragenerational Earnings Mobility?,” 2014.

Colleen Manning, “Stayers and Leavers: Using Care Work Theory and the Functional Taxonomy to Understand Turnover Among Family Child Care Providers.” in progress.

Ann Robbart, ““Just Desert? The WWII GI Bill as a Welfare Model and Economic Strategy,” in progress.

Ph.D. (Public Policy) member Julie Munro 2013 (Brandeis, Heller School) Mandira Kala 2009 Nicole Lavan 2009 Paula Georges 2003 Amy Heller 2003

M.S. (Public Affairs) capstone director Amy Sunderland 2013 Danielle Fox 2012 Kristy Abrahim 2012 Jacklyn Varela 2011

12 Bree Herne 2010 Jamie Hellen 2008 Rebecca Fuentes 2007 Maryann McHugh 2007 Christine Goodrich 2004 Linda McDonald 2002 Micah Evans 2001 Elizabeth Roy 2001 Matthew Duval 2000 David Whalen 2000 Ellen Stewart 1998 Kirsa Jackson Gamble 1998 Erin Webb 1996

COURSES TAUGHT Graduate level: Political Economy, Social Welfare Policy, New England Economic Environment, Dissertation Seminar; Gender and Poverty in the United States. Undergraduate level: Introduction to Microeconomics, Introduction to Macroeconomics, Introduction to Economic Issues, Intermediate Macroeconomics, Women’s Economic Roles, Labor Economics, Economics of State and Local Governments, Marxian Political Economy, Collective Bargaining, Women and the Economy.

ORGANIZATIONAL AFFILIATIONS Research Affiliate, Institute for Research on Labor and Employment, University of California, Los Angeles (since 2008). Research Scholar, Political Economic Research Institute, University of Massachusetts Amherst (since 2007). Senior Research Associate, Center for Economic and Policy Research, Washington DC. (since 2006). Research Affiliate, National Poverty Center, University of Michigan (since 2005). Senior Research Fellow, Center for Social Policy, McCormack Graduate School, University of Massachusetts Boston (since 2004). University of Massachusetts Boston Organizational Representative to Association for Public Policy Analysis and Management (2001-2007). Editorial Associate, Dollars and Sense magazine. Somerville, Massachusetts, 1986-present. Associate Editor (2004- present) and Editorial Board (1994-2003), Feminist Economics International Association for Feminist Economics: Vice President (2006-2008; and 2000-2003), Board member (1994-1996), Chair of Nominating Committee (1999), Strategic Planning Committee (2003-2004), Rhonda Williams Scholarship Committee,(2004-2006). Co-founder and member, Academics Working Group on Poverty, Boston, Massachusetts (1995-1999).

COMMUNITY SERVICE Currently I am a board member of Center for Women and Work, University of Massachusetts Lowell and on the advisory council of the Caring Economy Campaign. In the past I have been an invited member of the Massachusetts Teachers Association Revenue Enhancement Committee, an advisory member for the Data and Research Team of Boston’s Thrive in 5 initiatives and the Equity Report Card of the Metropolitan Area Planning Council, a board member of the Child Care Resource Center, Cambridge, and an appointed member of the City of Cambridge Welfare Task Force.

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