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Curriculum Vitae RUTH MICHELE MILKMAN Sociology Program Voice
Curriculum Vitae RUTH MICHELE MILKMAN Sociology Program voice: (212) 817-8771 CUNY Graduate Center fax: (212) 817-1536 365 Fifth Avenue mobile: (310) 871-3055 New York, NY 10016-4309 email: [email protected] EDUCATION 1975 B.A., with Honors, Brown University. Independent Major: "Women in Society" (second major: Comparative Literature) 1977 M.A., Sociology, University of California, Berkeley 1981 Ph.D., Sociology, University of California, Berkeley. ACADEMIC POSITIONS 1981-88 Assistant to Associate Professor of Sociology, Queens College and the Graduate Center, City University of New York 1986 Visiting Lecturer in American Labor History, Centre for the Study of Social History, University of Warwick (England) 1990 Visiting Professor, Department of Sociology, University of Sao Paulo (Brazil) 1991 Visiting Research Scholar, Department of Sociology, Macquarie University (Australia) 1988-94 Associate Professor of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles 1993 Visiting Research Associate, Groupe d'Études sur La Division Sociale et Sexuelle du Travail, Institut de Recherche sur les Sociétés Contemporaines, CNRS, Paris 2006; 2010 Visiting Professor, Labor Studies Program, University of Massachusetts, Amherst 1994-2009 Professor of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles 2009-2015 Professor of Sociology, City University of New York Graduate Center 2014 Visiting Scholar, University of Amsterdam and University of Latvia 2015- Distinguished Professor of Sociology, City University of New York Graduate Center ADMINISTRATIVE EXPERIENCE -
Beyond the New Deal Order
Beyond the New Deal Order A Conference at the University of California, Santa Barbara September 24-26, 2015 Sponsored by: Center for the Study of Work, Labor, and Democracy College of Letters and Sciences Division of Humanities and Fine Arts Hull Chair in Women’s Studies The Great Society at Fifty: Democracy in America Laboratoire de Recherche sur les Cultures Anglophones, University of Paris-Diderot Centre d’Etudes Nord-Americaines, L’Ecole des Hautes Etudes en Sciences Sociales The Mellon Fund for American History at the University of Cambridge Registration: Employed: $60 Unemployed/Student: $20 For information on accommodations and to register for the conference, email Samir Sonti: sonti [at] umail.ucsb.edu Conference Schedule Thursday, September 24 3:00 PM Registration, McCune Conference Room, Humanities and Social Science Building, Sixth Floor 4:00 PM Welcome Nelson Lichtenstein and Alice O’Connor, UCSB 4:15 Introduction to Conference: “The New Deal and the Labor Question” Chair: Gary Gerstle, University of Cambridge Romain Huret, EHESS, and Jean-Christian Vinel, University of Paris- Diderot, “From the Labor Question to the Piketty Moment: A Journey Through the New Deal Order.” Linda Gordon, New York University, “The Unemployed and the ‘Unemployables’: Unions and Workers Centers: the Workers Alliance as a Social Movement” 5:30 PM Plenary: A Global New Deal? Chair: Jennifer Mittelstadt, Rutgers University Kiran Patel, University of Maastricht, “The New Deal’s Global Order” Paul Kramer, Vanderbilt University, “War is the Health of the State” 7:00 Reception, McCune Room Friday, September 25 8:15 AM Registration and Coffee 8:45 AM Plenary: State Building: Democratic and Managerial Chair: Alice O’Connor, UCSB Meg Jacobs, Princeton University, “Reconsidering Regulation in the New Deal and Beyond” K. -
Jennifer Klein
JENNIFER KLEIN Yale University Department of History P.O. Box 208324 New Haven, CT 06520-8324 203-432-1391 [email protected] EMPLOYMENT Yale University, Professor, Department of History, July 2008-Present Associate Professor, Department of History, 2007-2008 Assistant Professor, Department of History, 2003 – 2007 Smith College, Assistant Professor, Department of History, 1999-2002 Senior Editor, International Labor and Working-Class History (international journal, published by Cambridge University Press) EDUCATION Ph.D. in History, University of Virginia (May 1999) Dissertation: “Managing Security: The Business of American Social Policy, 1910s-1960” Director: Nelson Lichtenstein M.A. in History, University of Virginia, Jan. 1993 B.A., Barnard College, Columbia University, magna cum laude, Phi Beta Kappa PUBLICATIONS Books Jennifer Klein and Eileen Boris, Caring for America: Home Health Workers In the Shadow of the Welfare State (Oxford University Press, 2012) Awarded: *Sarah Whaley Prize, National Women’s Studies Association Jennifer Klein, editor, “The Class Politics of Privatization: Global Perspectives on the Privatization of Public Workers, Land, and Services,” a special volume of International Labor and Working- Class History (Fall 2007) For All These Rights: Business, Labor, and the Shaping of America’s Public-Private Welfare State (Princeton University Press, 2003) Awarded: * Ellis W. Hawley Prize, Organization of American Historians * 2004 Hagley Prize in Business History, Business History Conference Articles/Essays “New Haven Rising: the Left and Local Activism,” Dissent (Winter 2015) “Social Policy and Welfare in the U.S., 1948-1972,” Oxford Handbook of Social Policy in the United States, Daniel Beland, Christopher Howard, and Kimberly Morgan, eds. (2014) _____, Daniel Beland, and Klaus Petersen, “The Language of Social Policy in the United States,” in Analyzing Social Policy Language and Concepts: Comparative and Transnational Perspectives, eds. -
Conference Program Digital Version
LAWCHA Conference 2017 SCALES OF STRUGGLE Communities, Movements, and Global Connections LABOR AND WORKING CLASS HISTORY ASSOCIATION Seattle— University of Washington — June 22-25, 2017 Welcome We gather at a critical time, in an instructive place, with a theme —Scales of Struggle —that captures the urgency of this moment. Six months into the regime of Donald J. Trump, the world waits, breathing shallowly, as the craziness unfolds. One thing is clear — resistance matters. The rightwing agenda has been slowed because of the determined resistance of the millions who have taken to the streets, because of brave journalists who are determined to expose the truth, because some judges and state and city officials have said no, and all of that is because Labor and social movements devoted to immigrant rights, women’s rights, and Black Lives Matter have stood strong, fighting back even as the risks escalate. Seattle is the right place for this gathering. It offers recent and historic examples of smart and effective struggles that have won victories for working people. This is a city where unions remain strong and where movements for social justice exert influence both in policy and public imagination. And it is a city that embraces its labor history. The Scales of Struggle conference features nearly 100 panels, workshops, films, and performances, along with five plenary sessions. We scale geography, from local to global. We scale time, across three centuries. And we scale struggles, ranging from work-based organization to social movements, from -
LAWCHA 2021: Program
5/5/2021 LAWCHA 2021: Program LAWCHA 2021: Program Thursday, May 20 6 - 8 ET Opening Night Plenary: College for All and a National Agenda for Labor in Higher Education Friday, May 21 12 - 1:15 ET Session A The Personal is Historical: Incorporating Family Legacies and Personal Experience into Labor History Toni Gilpin1, Sergio González2, Jack Metzgar3, David Ranney4, Beryl Satter5, Christine Walley6 1Independent Scholar, 2Assistant Professor of Latinx Studies, Marquette University, 3Emeritus Professor of Humanities, Roosevelt University Chicago, 4Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois Chicago, 5Professor of History, Rutgers University-Newark, 6Professor of Anthropology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Toni Gilpin, Independent Scholar Sergio M. González, Assistant Professor of Latinx Studies, Marquette University Jack Metzgar, Emeritus Professor of Humanities, Roosevelt University Chicago David Ranney, Professor Emeritus, University of Illinois Chicago Beryl Satter, Professor of History, Rutgers University-Newark Christine Walley, Professor of Anthropology, Massachusetts Institute of Technology Working People and (Human) Capital: Class, Race, and Education in Twentieth Century America Mahasan Chaney1, Cristina Groeger2, Jon Shelton3, Jeffrey Helgeson4 1Brown University, 2Lake Forest College, 3University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, 4Texas State University Human Capital, Summer Riots, and Disciplining Black Resistance: 1965-68,, Mahasan Chaney, Brown University Historicizing Workplace Power and the Limits of Human Capital, Cristina Groeger,