Jobs and the Labor Force of Tomorrow
ebook ∣ Migration, Training, Education · The Urban Agenda
By Michael A. Pagano

Sign up to save your library
With an OverDrive account, you can save your favorite libraries for at-a-glance information about availability. Find out more about OverDrive accounts.
Find this title in Libby, the library reading app by OverDrive.

Search for a digital library with this title
Title found at these libraries:
Library Name | Distance |
---|---|
Loading... |
The new volume in the Urban Agenda series addresses the challenges shaping the development of human capital in metropolitan regions. The articles, products of the 2016 Urban Forum at the University of Illinois at Chicago, engage with the overarching idea that a dynamic metropolitan economy needs a diverse, trained, and available workforce that can adapt to the needs of commerce, industry, government, and the service sector. Authors explore provocative issues like the jobless recovery, migration and immigration, K-12 education preparedness, the urban-oriented gig economy, postsecondary workforce training, and the recruitment and professional development of millennials.
Contributors: Xochitl Bada, John Bragelman, Laura Dresser, Rudy Faust, Beth Gutelius, Brad Harrington, Gregory V. Larnell, Twyla T. Blackmond Larnell, and Nik Theodore.| Cover Title Page Contents Preface and Acknowledgments Part One: Overview "The Future of Work: Urban Economies in Transition" - Nik Theodore and Beth Gutelius Part Two: White Papers "Human Capital in Context: Policies that Shape Urban U.S. Labor Markets" - Laura Dresser "Immigration to the United States in the Post–Civil Rights Years" - Xóchitl Bada "Toward Reframing the Open Door: Policy, Pedagogy, and Developmental Education in the Urban Community College - Gregory V. Larnell, Twyla T. Blackmond Larnell and John Bragelman "The Millennials" - Brad Harrington Part Three: Synthesis "9 to 5 to 0 and 1: The Future of Work" - Rudy Faust Contributors |Michael A. Pagano is Dean of the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs and professor of public administration at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). He is a fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, faculty fellow of UIC's Great Cities Institute, and editor of Remaking the Urban Social Contract, The Return of the Neighborhood as an Urban Strategy, and Metropolitan Resistance in a Time of Economic Turmoil.
Contributors: Xochitl Bada, John Bragelman, Laura Dresser, Rudy Faust, Beth Gutelius, Brad Harrington, Gregory V. Larnell, Twyla T. Blackmond Larnell, and Nik Theodore.| Cover Title Page Contents Preface and Acknowledgments Part One: Overview "The Future of Work: Urban Economies in Transition" - Nik Theodore and Beth Gutelius Part Two: White Papers "Human Capital in Context: Policies that Shape Urban U.S. Labor Markets" - Laura Dresser "Immigration to the United States in the Post–Civil Rights Years" - Xóchitl Bada "Toward Reframing the Open Door: Policy, Pedagogy, and Developmental Education in the Urban Community College - Gregory V. Larnell, Twyla T. Blackmond Larnell and John Bragelman "The Millennials" - Brad Harrington Part Three: Synthesis "9 to 5 to 0 and 1: The Future of Work" - Rudy Faust Contributors |Michael A. Pagano is Dean of the College of Urban Planning and Public Affairs and professor of public administration at the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC). He is a fellow of the National Academy of Public Administration, faculty fellow of UIC's Great Cities Institute, and editor of Remaking the Urban Social Contract, The Return of the Neighborhood as an Urban Strategy, and Metropolitan Resistance in a Time of Economic Turmoil.