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American Sociological Review 75(2):273-302. Burgard, Sarah A., Jennie E. Brand, and James S. House. 2009. “Perceived Job Insecurity and Worker Health in the United States.” Social Science & Medicine 69(5):777-785. Brand, Jennie E. 2015. “The Far-Reaching Impact of Job Loss and Unemployment.” Annual Review of Sociology 41:359-375.
Pissarides is Regius Professor of Economics at the London School of Economics, where he has taught since 1976. [9] He is chairman of the Centre for Macroeconomics , which deploys economists from the University of Cambridge , the London School of Economics, the University College London , the Bank of England , and the National Institute of ...
Pierre Cahuc's research focuses mainly on labour economics. [10] He has written books on the economics of salary negotiations, the reduction of working time, unemployment in France, social security, job flows, minimum wages, unemployment insurance, vocational education, economic debate, and social trust; his book on this last topic, The Society of Defiance ("La Société de Défiance") written ...
The case for a humanities degree gets little support from jobs data. The Federal Reserve Bank of New York last week released a report looking at employment for college graduates ages 22 to 27 ...
The U.S. unemployment rate for the August 2024 was 4.2% with around 7 million Americans unemployed. Trump says Wharton School professors support his economic plan
That led to his development of the natural rate of unemployment: its existence and the mechanism governing its size. In the early 2000s, he turned to the study of business innovation. He is the founding director, since 2001, of Columbia's Center on Capitalism and Society. He was McVickar Professor of Political Economy at Columbia from 1982 to 2021.
Alan Manning (born 1960) is a British economist and professor of economics at the London School of Economics. [2]Manning is one of the leading labour economists globally, [3] having made major contributions to the analysis of the imperfections of labour markets, the minimum wage literature, migration, and job polarization.
David Rolfe Graeber (/ ˈ ɡ r eɪ b ər /; February 12, 1961 – September 2, 2020) was an American anthropologist and anarchist activist. His influential work in economic anthropology, particularly his books Debt: The First 5,000 Years (2011), Bullshit Jobs (2018), and The Dawn of Everything (2021), and his leading role in the Occupy movement, earned him recognition as one of the foremost ...