Featured Content
Job search and matching
Last updated on September 24, 2024
Research Summary
The Prison Credential Dilemma: Insights into Applying for Jobs with Qualifications Earned during Incarceration
Credentials typically help job seekers demonstrate their abilities to obtain better-paying jobs. One study, however, suggests that credentials earned in prison present job seekers with a dilemma: reveal their incarceration and showcase their qualifications or obscure both. Interviews with formerly incarcerated individuals in the United States reveal strategies and tactics deployed to improve labor market outcomes and implications.
Last updated on September 24, 2024
Skills and training
Last updated on June 18, 2024
Article
How to Expand Access to Good Clean Energy Jobs among Women and People of Color
New research shows women and people of color are underrepresented in the potential workforce for high-quality clean energy jobs. Universities, employers, and unions can play a role in creating a more diverse workforce.
Last updated on June 18, 2024
Economic context
Last updated on June 11, 2024
Research Summary
Better Local Labor Market Conditions Can Help Reduce the Risk of Reincarceration in the United States
Formerly incarcerated people who face better local labor market conditions when they are released from prison are estimated to face lower likelihoods of being reincarcerated.
Last updated on June 11, 2024
WorkRise Shorts
Skills and training
Last updated on June 04, 2024
Video
WorkRise Shorts: Applying AI to Rebuild Middle Class Jobs with David Autor
Massachusetts Institute of Technology professor David Autor asks what artificial intelligence could enable people to do and who could be enabled by this tool.
Last updated on June 04, 2024
Employer practices
Last updated on May 28, 2024
Video
WorkRise Shorts: Racial and Gender Discrimination in the Temporary Staffing Sector
The temporary staffing industry is a $186-billion industry, widely used across sectors from food processing to product creation. Temp staffing can be used to skirt liability, and staffing agencies and the companies that use them create a second-tiered workforce, says Lorraine Sands, legal organizer at GLOW: Grassroots Law and Organizing for Workers. To advance the process of bettering temp workers’ rights, this research highlighted how racial and gender discrimination is often pervasive in the temporary staffing sector. The report explores the national context but focuses particularly on Harris County, Texas, and Nashville, Tennessee.
Last updated on May 28, 2024
Economic context
Last updated on April 30, 2024
Video
WorkRise Shorts: Workers’ Assessments of AI’s Impact on Jobs
Rutgers University distinguished professor Carl Van Horn, founding director of the John J. Heldrich Center for Workforce Development, shares insights from his research, which looks at US workers’ attitudes toward government oversight of AI technologies and its impact on jobs.
Last updated on April 30, 2024
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About Working Knowledge
Through careful curation of data, research, and evidence-based insights, Working Knowledge equips policymakers, business leaders, advocates, and allies with the information they need to build a more equitable, resilient labor market.
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