Difference between revisions of "Amy Offner"

From KeyWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 1: Line 1:
'''Amy Offner'''
+
'''Amy Offner''' is an Assistant Professor of History at [[Penn]].
 +
 
 +
==Affiliations==
 +
Amy Offner has been a postdoctoral fellow at the [[Center for the United States and the Cold War]] within NYU’s [[Tamiment Library]], and has received fellowships and grants from institutions including the [[American Council of Learned Societies]], the [[Social Science Research Council]], the [[Inter-American Foundation]], the [[Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations]], and the Duke University Center for the History of Political Economy.  Before beginning graduate studies, she worked as a union organizer and an editor at [[Dollars & Sense]], a magazine and book publisher analyzing economic affairs.  In 2008, she worked for the [[Landmine Survivor Network]] in [[Bogota]], [[Colombia]].
  
 
==PSLM==
 
==PSLM==

Revision as of 18:43, 26 June 2016

Amy Offner is an Assistant Professor of History at Penn.

Affiliations

Amy Offner has been a postdoctoral fellow at the Center for the United States and the Cold War within NYU’s Tamiment Library, and has received fellowships and grants from institutions including the American Council of Learned Societies, the Social Science Research Council, the Inter-American Foundation, the Society for Historians of American Foreign Relations, and the Duke University Center for the History of Political Economy. Before beginning graduate studies, she worked as a union organizer and an editor at Dollars & Sense, a magazine and book publisher analyzing economic affairs. In 2008, she worked for the Landmine Survivor Network in Bogota, Colombia.

PSLM

Amy Offner was active in 2001, in the Harvard Progressive Students Labor Movement.[1]

"Real World Labor"

Real world labor.jpg

In August 2009 Dollars & Sense, produced an anthology entitled "Real World Labor", edited by Immanuel Ness, Amy Offner and Chris Sturr and the Dollars & Sense Collective.

Contributors included David Bacon, Kim Bobo, Aviva Chomsky, Steve Early, Bill Fletcher, Jr., Staughton Lynd, Arthur MacEwan, John Miller, Frances Fox Piven, Robert Pollin, Jane Slaughter.[2]

References

Template:Reflist

  1. [Harvard Crimson Three Honored by Women's Leadership Award By JULIET J. CHUNG, CRIMSON STAFF WRITER April 4, 2001]
  2. TYR, Sep. 2009