Tonights speakers. Jamie mccallum is associate professor of sociology, Middlebury College and has work has been featured in the new york times, new yorker, washington post, jacobin, dissent and, numerous scholarly journals. Jamie is also an elected School Board Representative in vermont and a volunteer. He is joined in conversation tonight by Daniel Schneider the Malcolm Weiner professor of social policy at the Harvard Kennedy and professor of sociology at harvard university. His focuses on precarious work, demography and inequality air tonight. Jamie presenting his new book, a central how the pandemic transformed the long fight for worker justice through firsthand Research Conducted as the pandemic unfolded. Jamie traces the evolution of militancy, showing how their struggles for safer workplaces, pay and health care and the right to unionize benefited all americans and spurred a radical new phase of the Labor Movement. Throughout the coronavirus pandemic essential workers lashed out
Tonights speakers. Jamie mccallum is associate professor of sociology, Middlebury College and has work has been featured in the new york times, new yorker, washington post, jacobin, dissent and, numerous scholarly journals. Jamie is also an elected School Board Representative in vermont and a volunteer. He is joined in conversation tonight by Daniel Schneider the Malcolm Weiner professor of social policy at the Harvard Kennedy and professor of sociology at harvard university. His focuses on precarious work, demography and inequality air tonight. Jamie presenting his new book, a central how the pandemic transformed the long fight for worker justice through firsthand Research Conducted as the pandemic unfolded. Jamie traces the evolution of militancy, showing how their struggles for safer workplaces, pay and health care and the right to unionize benefited all americans and spurred a radical new phase of the Labor Movement. Throughout the coronavirus pandemic essential workers lashed out
Journals. Jamie is also an elected School Board Representative in vermont and a volunteer. He is joined in conversation tonight by Daniel Schneider the Malcolm Weiner professor of social policy at the Harvard Kennedy and professor of sociology at harvard university. His focuses on precarious work, demography and inequality air tonight. Jamie presenting his new book, a central how the pandemic transformed the long fight for worker justice through firsthand Research Conducted as the pandemic unfolded. Jamie traces the evolution of militancy, showing how their struggles for safer workplaces, pay and health care and the right to unionize benefited all americans and spurred a radical new phase of the Labor Movement. Throughout the coronavirus pandemic essential workers lashed out against low, long hours and safety risks, attracting a level of support unseen in decades. This explosion of labor unrest seemed sudden to many, but essential reveals American Workers had simmered discontent long b
Middlebury college and has work has been featured in the new york times, new yorker, washington post, jacobin, dissent and, numerous scholarly journals. Jamie is also an elected School Board Representative in vermont and a volunteer. He is joined in conversation tonight by Daniel Schneider the Malcolm Weiner professor of social policy at the Harvard Kennedy and professor of sociology at harvard university. His focuses on precarious work, demography and inequality air tonight. Jamie presenting his new book, a central how the pandemic transformed the long fight for worker justice through firsthand Research Conducted as the pandemic unfolded. Jamie traces the evolution of militancy, showing how their struggles for safer workplaces, pay and health care and the right to unionize benefited all americans and spurred a radical new phase of the Labor Movement. Throughout the coronavirus pandemic essential workers lashed out against low, long hours and safety risks, attracting a level of support
its that limit, house speaker kevin mccarthy and republican congress, they are risking your economic statement that stability, all before spending cuts even though this has nothing to do with news spending. president, biden he is not negotiating on this. so, what happens now? and the president says he has no regrets when it comes to the handling of documents found in a delaware home because he is cooperating fully with the justice department. critics say he is giving too many questions unanswered. we will get into why it is consistent with president biden s approach to the department of justice. meanwhile, one of my least favorite topics, donald trump. okay a judge, a former president to pay nearly 1 million dollars in fines for filing a frivolous lawsuit against his political foes. why one payout will be particularly painful for for mr. trump and at this time it could be targeted from using the course for future political gains. i am simone sanders thompson, and i have somet