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Flowering tree in spring

New ILR Banner Reflects School’s Breadth

On May 7, the ILR School officially unveiled its new ceremonial banner. The redesign reflects the school’s contemporary, global reach while staying true to ILR’s founding principles.

Dean Alex Colvin unveiling the new ILR School flag
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Alumni Stories

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ILRies Find Success at Niche Firm

In Ives, students are taught to approach compensation from the human side, as well as the quantitative side, which spurs a national firm to recruit at ILR.
student walking by the ILR School Ives Faculty wing
ILRies Find Success at Niche Firm

ILR Giving Day Finds Success Among Students

Students Today Alumni Tomorrow (STAT) is a new initiative from the ILR Alumni Affairs and Development Office that aims to engage current students in learning about the important role philanthropy plays at the school.
Students Today Alumni Tomorrow text next to an image of four students posing with an oversized ILR photo frame
ILR Giving Day Finds Success Among Students

Malcomb Leads ILR WIDE Undergraduate Research Program

Doctoral student Claire Malcomb supports undergraduate research on diversity, equity and inclusion.
Claire Malcomb
Malcomb Leads ILR WIDE Undergraduate Research Program

From ILR to a Nuclear Sub

Carly Powers ’24 reflects on her Naval Reserve Officer Training Corps experience.
Carly Powers '24 NROTC
From ILR to a Nuclear Sub

“Make the Most” Mindset Leads Kwon ’24 to Her Homeland

Grace Kwon ’24 took a non-traditional path to the ILR School and found tremendous success along the way.
Grace Kwon '24
“Make the Most” Mindset Leads Kwon ’24 to Her Homeland

Weingarten ’80 Reflects on Week at ILR

As the 2024 Alice B. Grant Labor Leader in Residence, ILRie Randi Weingarten spent time at ILR teaching, speaking and meeting with students, professors and university staff.
Randi Weingarten '80
Weingarten ’80 Reflects on Week at ILR

ILR Donors Make All the Difference

To Do the Greatest Good

The ILR community everywhere is continuing to do the greatest good. Each year, ILR alumni, parents and friends come together to support the ILR School to ensure all students have the resources they need to be successful. Each year, the school recruits and retains faculty who are outstanding educators and leading researchers.

Your gift helps ILR remain the preeminent school focused on work, employment and labor. ILR is proud to be developing the thought leaders and practitioners shaping the future of work, and your gift advances this mission.

Please read our ILR Case for Support here

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News

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Missing Identity Options on Forms Can Prompt Anger, Reduce Belonging

Cornell Chronicle
Being asked to provide demographic information in official forms such as job applications – but finding one’s own identity group missing from demographic options provided – can signal a low likelihood of belonging in a given setting and trigger anger, according to new Cornell research. 
Identity boxes on a form.
Missing Identity Options on Forms Can Prompt Anger, Reduce Belonging

Union Days Kicks Off with Keynote by Randi Weingarten ’80

Cornell ILR's Union Days begins Tuesday, March 5, with "Unions, Labor, and Freedom of Expression," a presentation given by Randi Weingarten ’80.
Randi Weingarten
Union Days Kicks Off with Keynote by Randi Weingarten ’80

Malcomb Leads ILR WIDE Undergraduate Research Program

Doctoral student Claire Malcomb supports undergraduate research on diversity, equity and inclusion.
Claire Malcomb
Malcomb Leads ILR WIDE Undergraduate Research Program

Events

Freedom at Sea: The Struggle to End Forced Labor in Fishing

eCornell Keynote: Freedom at sea is still a dream for hundreds of thousands of workers in commercial fishing and seafood processing. They are working in forced labor situations around the world — in Asia, in South America, and in the U.S. — and conditions are dire. Jason Judd, Executive Director of the Global Labor Institute at Cornell’s ILR School, aims to end the practice of forced labor and has authored a Handbook for the detection of forced labor in commercial fishing called Towards freedom at sea: Handbook for the detection of forced labour in commercial fishing. “Our shared vision is one of freedom at sea, where forced labor has been relegated to the past and decent work is a reality for all the world’s fishers. It is our hope that this Handbook will serve as a valuable resource for actors throughout the commercial fishing industry who are working to achieve this vision.” — Jason Judd We’ll talk to Mr. Judd as well as reporter and activist Daniel Murphy about the prevalence of forced labor and how to combat it through detection and reporting. WHAT YOU'LL LEARN Why forced labor is still an issue in seafood supply chainsWhat works in policy or technology to combat forced labor in fishingHow new tools like the Handbook help authorities pinpoint forced laborHow new journalism and worker organizing can helpSPEAKER Jason Judd EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, GLOBAL LABOR INSTITUTE Cornell ILR School

Localist event image for Freedom at Sea: The Struggle to End Forced Labor in Fishing
Freedom at Sea: The Struggle to End Forced Labor in Fishing

Labor & Macro Economics Workshop: Antoine Bertheau

Antoine Bertheau The Unequal Impact of Firms on the Relative Pay of Women Across Countries Abstract: We use matched employer-employee datasets from the US and Europe to document the contribution of firm-specific pay premiums to the gender hourly wage gap. Our findings are as follows: (1) The impact of firm-specific wage premiums on the gender wage gap —the firm effects gap— varies considerably across the 11 countries we study. It accounts for two-thirds of the gender wage gap in the US and, at most, one-third in Europe. (2) A decomposition of the firm effects gap into sorting (women working in lower-paying firms) and pay-setting (women earning less in similar firms) reveals stark differences across countries. The pay-setting effect explains less than 10 percent of the gender wage gaps in most countries. In countries with a lower degree of wage-setting centralization (Hungary and US) the importance of the pay-setting effect is much larger.

Localist event image for Labor & Macro Economics Workshop: Antoine Bertheau
Labor & Macro Economics Workshop: Antoine Bertheau

Stories of Belonging: Central American TPS Workers and their Defiant Struggle to Stay Home in the US

The "Stories of Belonging" photo exhibit will be on display at the Thomas P. Golden Courtyard, ILR Ithaca Campus from September 16-20. A walking tour and talk of the exhibit will take place on Tuesday, September 17 (registration is required). Meet and listen to the project organizers and TPS community members speak about their experiences within the movement for migrant worker rights, immigrant worker justice, workplace justice, union organizing, and American rights of citizenship.
Patricia Campos-Medina at TPS photo event
Stories of Belonging: Central American TPS Workers and their Defiant Struggle to Stay Home in the US

Democracy and Polarization: Latin America After the Left Turn

Cosponsor: Department of Global Labor and Work Latin America’s “left turn” at the beginning of the twenty-first century was unprecedented in its scope and duration, producing 32 presidential victories by left-of-center parties or leaders in 11 different countries between 1998 and 2015. Despite notable achievements in reducing poverty and extreme inequalities, leftist parties found it difficult to “deepen” democracy by empowering popular majorities, and they suffered a series of agonizing political defeats between 2015 and 2019 that allowed conservative forces to reclaim their customary hold on state power. This project traces the different origins and trajectories in power of “populist” and “social democratic” currents within the Latin American left. Through a comparative analysis of several leftist cases, it also examines how their alternative conceptions of democracy carried the seeds of their own demise, setting the stage for new forms of political polarization in the region. Santiago Anria is Assistant Professor in the Department of Global Labor and Work at Cornell University’s School of Industrial and Labor Relations. He is the author of When Movements Become Parties: The Bolivian MAS in Comparative Perspective.

Localist event image for Democracy and Polarization: Latin America After the Left Turn
Democracy and Polarization: Latin America After the Left Turn

Labor Economics Workshop: Patricia Cortes

Patricia Cortes Abstract:

Localist event image for Labor Economics Workshop: Patricia Cortes
Labor Economics Workshop: Patricia Cortes

Fighting Uyghur Forced Labor: Government, Researchers, Industry, and Civil Society

Speaker: Laura T. Murphy, Policy Advisor, Department of Homeland Security and Professor of Human Rights, Sheffield Hallam University Laura Murphy will discuss the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act, the landmark forced labor legislation that prohibits goods made in the Uyghur Region of China from import into the United States, including the effects of the law after two years of implementation. She will discuss the methods researchers use to uncover forced labor in China and the critical importance of that work to government efforts to prevent forced labor-made goods from entering the US. She will also discuss the government’s collaborations with industry and civil society to effect meaningful change for workers and protect the rights of people globally. Bio: Laura T. Murphy, Ph.D. is Policy Advisor to Under Secretary Robert Silvers in the Department of Homeland Security’s Office of Policy. Her role in the Office of Policy is to advise on forced labor, in particular on the implementation and enforcement of the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act. She is Professor of Human Rights and Contemporary Slavery at Sheffield Hallam University in the U.K. Her recent academic work focused on researching forced labor in the Uyghur Region of China and identifying risk of forced-labor-made goods in international supply chains. She has worked internationally on forms of forced labor and human trafficking, including in West Africa, India, the United States, and Canada. She is author of numerous academic books and articles on the issue of forced labor globally. Introduced by faculty host, Magnus Fiskesjö (Anthropology). Cosponsored by the Department of Asian Studies, Contemporary Muslim Societies Program, Critical Ottoman and Post-Ottoman Studies Program, the Department of Global Labor and Work (ILR), and the Global Labor Institute, Government, as well as the Reppy Institute for Peace and Conflict Studies.

Localist event image for Fighting Uyghur Forced Labor: Government, Researchers, Industry, and Civil Society
Fighting Uyghur Forced Labor: Government, Researchers, Industry, and Civil Society

Meet our Team