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

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RANDY ALBELDA Professor of Economics University of Massachusetts Boston Boston, MA 02125 617-287-6963 Randy.Albelda@Umb.Edu October 2014 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 Feminist Economics, with Susan Himmelweit and Jane Humphries, 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 Nancy Folbre 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. 2 “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 Economic History, 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. 3 “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”
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