Working USA
From KeyWiki
Working USA: The Journal of Labor and Society is a peer-review cross-disciplinary social science quarterly journal intended for a broad exploration of the economic, political, and social dimensions of work and labor throughout the world. The journal publishes articles directed to an open and critical analysis of the global and U.S. labor movements, organizations, and the working class. The journal editors see a strong and robust labor movement as a force that is central to the immediate and long term social, economic, and political interests of the working class. The journal endeavors to promote thoughtful and penetrating analysis of the historical, contemporary, and future prospects of workers that advanced beyond the narrow goals of individuals.[1]
Personnel
As of 2010;[2]
- Editor Immanuel Ness, Brooklyn College, City University of New York
- Journal Staff Stacy Warner - Editorial , Anjanie Jagoo - Administrative
Editorial Board
As of 2010;[3]
- Bill Adams, Trade Union Congress, Leeds, UK
- Adebusuyi Isaac Adeniran, Obafemi Awolowo University, Nigeria
- John Amman, International Cinematographers Guild
- Stanley Aronowitz, CUNY Graduate Center
- Maurizio Atzeni, Loughborough University, UK
- Au Loong-yu, Globalization Monitor, Hong Kong
- Dario Azzellini, Johann-Wolgang-Goethe-Universität, Frankfurt a.M.
- Debdas Banerjee, University of Calcutta
- Walden Bello, Department of Sociology, University of the Philippines, Southeast Asia
- John Berg, Suffolk University
- Elaine Bernard, Harvard University
- John W. Budd, University of Minnesota
- Paul Buhle, Brown University, Retired
- Dimitrios Dalakoglou, University of Sussex, UK
- Ellen Dannin, Penn State School of Law
- Carole Boyce Davies, Cornell University
- Benjamin Day, Cornell University
- Steve Early, Independent Scholar, Boston
- Jill Esbenshade, San Diego State University
- Bill Fletcher, Jr., Center for Labor Renewal
- Harris Freeman, W. New England College/U. Mass Amherst
- Robert Ginsburg, CWCD, Chicago
- George Gona, University of Nairobi, Kenya
- George Gonos, SUNY, Potsdam
- Richard A. Greenwald, Drew University
- Mark Harcourt, University of Waikato, New Zealand
- Camila Piñeiro Harnecker, University of Havana (Cuba)
- Masao Inoue, Rikkyo University, Tokyo
- Michelle Kaminski, Michigan State University
- Robin D. G. Kelley, University of Southern California
- Paul Le Blanc, La Roche College
- Michael Löwy, University of Paris
- José Brendan Macdonald, Universidade Federal da Paraíba, Brazil
- Robert Mackenzie, University of Leeds (UK)
- Manning Marable, Columbia University
- Raymond Markey, AUT University, New Zealand
- Soma Marik, RSMVV, Calcutta
- Lorraine C. Minnite, Barnard College
- Daniel J. B. Mitchell, UCLA
- Vernon Mogensen, Kingsborough College
- Ayokunle O. Omobowale, University of Ibadan
- Arun Patnaik, University of Hyderabad, India
- Frances Fox Piven, CUNY Graduate Center
- James Pope, Rutgers University Law School
- Peter Ranis, CUNY Graduate Center
- David Reynolds, Wayne State University
- Gigi Roggero, University of Bologna
- Pierre Rousset, Europe Solidaire Sans Frontières
- Saskia Sassen, London School of Economics/Columbia University
- Sean Scalmer, University of Melbourne, Australia
- Jeff Shantz, Kwantlen Polytechnic University, Vancouver, Canada
- Karin Astrid Siegmann, Institute of Social Studies, The Netherlands
- Louise Simmons, University of Connecticut
- Matthew J. Smith, University of West Indies, Mona
- Russell Smith, University of Wales Institute, Cardiff
- Paul Taillon, University of Auckland, New Zealand
- Nik Theodore, University of Illinois
- Ben Trott, Free University of Berlin
- Alan Tuckman, Nottingham-Trent University (UK)
- Edson I. Urano, Sophia University, Tokyo, Japan
- Lucien van der Walt, University of Witwatersrand
- Antonios Vradis, London School of Economics
- David Weil, Boston University
- Cornel West, Princeton University
- Joseph Wilson, Brooklyn College
- Young-su Won, Korean Institute for Labour Studies and Policy
- Roland Zullo, University of Michigan


