
Susan J. Lambert
· Professor Emeritus; Co-Director of the Employment Instability, Family Well-Being, and Social Policy Scholars Network (EINet)VerifiedUniversity of Chicago · Social Policy
Active 1971–2024
Research topics
- Political Science
- Economic growth
- Law
- Economics
- Labour economics
- Business
Selected publications
The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science · 2021 · 18 citations
- Political Science
- Labour economics
- Business
Over the last 40 years, changing employer practices have introduced instability and insecurity into working-class jobs, limiting the voice that employees have in their own employment and deteriorating overall job quality. In the decade after the Great Recession, slow but sustained economic growth benefitted workers in terms of generally higher employment and wages and reductions in involuntary part-time work. But we show that in that same period, other aspects of working-class jobs changed in ways that were less advantageous to workers. We examine recent, troubling trends in nonstandard employment, precarious scheduling practices, and employer labor violations, arguing that without the introduction of policies that rebalance terms of employment toward worker interests, an economic recovery alone is unlikely to reverse the overall trend toward reductions in job quality. We argue for federal-level policies that expand public insurance programs, establish minimum standards of job quality, and include avenues for collective employee voice in employment and public policy debates. Such strategies have potential to improve job quality.
Frequent coauthors
- 17 shared
Julia R. Henly
University of Chicago
- 9 shared
Lonnie Golden
- 4 shared
Joan C. Williams
- 3 shared
Ellen Ernst Kossek
Purdue University System
- 3 shared
Saravanan Kesavan
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
- 3 shared
Elaine McCrate
- 3 shared
Peter J. Fugiel
Rutgers Sexual and Reproductive Health and Rights
- 2 shared
Ameeta Jaga
University of Cape Town
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