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Juan De Lara

De Lara

Juan De Lara is Associate Professor of American Studies and Ethnicity at The University of Southern California.  His research focuses on the intersections of race, the economy, and social movements. His book, Inland Shift: Race, Space, and Capital in Inland Southern California, uses global logistics and commodity chains to show how technological innovations and just-in-time business strategies produced new labor regimes that facilitated a more complex and extended system of global production, distribution, and consumption. He has authored several academic articles and policy papers on the warehouse and logistics sectors, including the co-authored Organizing Temporary, Subcontracted, and Immigrant Workers, a case study that focuses on outsourced labor in Southern California.

De Lara holds a Ph.D. in Geography from, UC Berkeley and an M.A. in Urban Planning from UCLA.  His undergraduate degree is in Sociology and Labor Studies from Pitzer College.

University of Southern California
Juan
De Lara
Associate Professor, American Studies and Ethnicity

Pieter De Vlieger

De Vlieger

Pieter De Vlieger is an economist at Uber and previously obtained his PhD in Economics from the University of Michigan. His research agenda centers on topics in labor and health economics, with a particular interest in how domestic outsourcing decisions affect labor market outcomes, and how physician incentives affect provision and quality of healthcare services. He studied Business Engineering at the Katholieke Universiteit Leuven and obtained an MSc in Economics from University College London. 

Uber
Pieter
De Vlieger
Economist

Todd Dickey

Dickey

Todd Dickey is an assistant professor of public administration and international affairs at Syracuse University's Maxwell School of Citizenship and Public Affairs.  His research interests are in the fields of public sector human resource management, labor and employment relations, and workplace conflict management.  See his Washington Post editorial, How can the government expect people to work without pay indefinitely?

Todd's current projects explore organizational systems for addressing workplace conflict as well as innovation and change in federal sector civil service institutions and labor relations. 

He holds a Ph.D. in industrial and labor relations from Cornell University, an M.A. in political science from Syracuse University, and a B.A. from Vassar College.

Syracuse University
Todd
Dickey
Assistant Professor, Public Administration and International Affairs

John S. Earle

Earle

John S. Earle is a Professor of Public Policy in the Schar School of Policy and Government at George Mason University. His main research interests are in labor, development, transition, and institutions, including topics such as employment policies, financial constraints, reallocation, productivity, and entrepreneurship.

Although trained as an economist, Earle’s work is multi-disciplinary. It ranges across the fields of economics, political science, finance, management, and labor studies. His research has been supported by several grants from the National Science Foundation and the European Union as well as by private foundations.  In 2019, he received a grant co-sponsored by the W.K. Kellogg Foundation and Russell Sage Foundation to research non-standard employment.

Before coming to Mason, he taught at Stanford University, Stockholm School of Economics, University of Vienna, and Central European University, and held research positions at the Upjohn Institute for Employment Research and the Stockholm Institute of Transition Economics.

George Mason University
John
Earle
Professor of Public Policy

NHQI February 2023

Upjohn Institute New Hires Quality Index edges up 0.1 percent in February 2023, led by South while Northeast lags behind

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Release Date

Branch County January 2022

Calhoun County January 2022

Kalamazoo County January 2022

St. Joseph County January 2022

NHQI August 2021

Upjohn Institute New Hires Quality Index edges up 0.1 percent over the month with slower hiring volume, and women’s recovery loses ground to men’s

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Release Date

St. Joseph County February 2022

Kalamazoo County February 2022

Calhoun County February 2022

Branch County February 2022

NHQI November 2018

Upjohn Institute New Hires Quality Index for November 2018 shows overall 0.7 percent rise, stagnation for goods-producing workers

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Release Date

St. Joseph County March 2022

Kalamazoo County March 2022

Calhoun County March 2022

Branch County March 2022

Branch County November 2021

Displaying 101 - 120 of 4809 results.