Grants and Supported Research
Southern California UC Labor and Employment Research Network 2016-17
The UCLA IRLE has organized a network of labor and employment researchers at the five Southern California UC campuses (in addition to UCLA, this includes the campuses at Irvine, Riverside, San Diego, and Santa Barbara). The purpose is to facilitate communication and some coordinated planning of Southern California events. The network is grouped in three affinity groups on Low-Wage Work, Migration, and the Carceral State.
The research network is open to faculty and graduate students. If you are interested in joining the network, please drop a note to uclairle@irle.ucla.edu.
Affinity Groups:
- Carceral State
- Immigration
- Low-Wage Work
Past IRLE Student Small Grants
2014-15
Student Name
|
Department
|
Project Title
|
---|---|---|
Fernando Chirino | Sociology | Race, Gender, and the Fight for 15 |
Daniel Schneider | Sociology | Gendering Profession: Experiences of Nursing in the U.S |
Skye Allmang | Social Welfare | (Re)entering employment: How youth with juvenile or criminal justice histories overcome barriers to work |
Michael Ishimoto | Education | Japanese American Farmers and Organized Labor |
Hugo Sarmiento | Urban Planning | Street Vending: Understanding the Political Geography of Enforcement |
Stephanie Tsai | Urban Planning | Diversity and Inclusion in the Public Utility Workforce |
Renata Turrent | Public Policy | Center for Immigrant students at New Mexico State University |
Andrea Silva | Political Science | Out of Bounds: Court rulings and State intentions in Sub-National Immigration Policy |
Amrah Salomon | Ethnic Studies | Low Wage Worker Collaborative Community Research Proposal |
Cassandra Engeman | Sociology | Unions and Family Values: Conditions for Workplace Leave Policy Adoption in US States, 1977-2012 |
Jesse Halvorsen | History | Driven to Poverty: Misclassification, and Wage Theft in Southern California’s Short Haul Trucking Industry |
2012
Student Name
|
Department
|
Project Title
|
---|---|---|
Luis Alvarez-Leon | Geography | The Information Grid: The Digital Foundations of the Cognitive-Cultural Economy |
Molly Ball | History | Inequality in the city of São Paulo, Brazil (1889-1930) |
Hsin-Chieh Chang | Community Health Sciences | Social Integration among Southeast Asian Women Migrants in Taiwan: Exploring the Linkages between Marriage, Work, Migration and Health |
Bradley Cleveland | Urban Planning | Workers in the Informal Economy and Disaster Risk Reduction: Engaging waste pickers and street vendors in the project of urban resilience |
Mindy Chen | Social Welfare | Toward an Effective Community-Labor Coalition: a Case Study of the CLEAN Carwash Campaign |
Laura Enriquez | Sociology | Undocumented Employment: Theorizing Patterns of Incorporation for Current and Formerly Undocumented Mexican-Origin Young Adults |
Nathan Low/Curt Brown | Law | Teacher Tenure |
Tom Narins | Geography | The domestic employment impacts of Chinese trade and investment in Bolivia and Chile |
Peter Norlander | Anderson | Human Resource policies and practices of the Information Technology services industry in India |
Greg Pierce | Urban Planning | Potential Impact of Social Businesses on Local Employment in Bangladesh |
Stephanie Santos | Women’s Studies | “Don’t monopolize the good”: Development Aggression and Subaltern Filipina Women |
2010
Principal Investigator(s) |
Department |
Project Title |
Anthony Alvarez |
Sociology
|
Under- and Unemployed Financial Strategies |
Kyle Arnone |
Sociology
|
Union strategic research |
Cheye-Ann Corona |
Urban Planning/ |
Community Cultural Wealth, Mexican Laborers and the Barrio: A Look into El Monte, California, Since 1910
|
Andrea Dinneen | Sociology |
Creating Green Cities: The politics and work of implementing “sustainable development” at the regional, national and international level
|
Laura Enriquez |
Sociology
|
The Intersection of Employment and Education: Incorporation Patterns of Undocumented Immigrant Young Adults in Los Angeles |
Adam Fish |
Anthropology
|
New Media Firms in Los Angeles: Labor, Management, and Blended Accounting |
Alfred Flores |
History |
Colonial Subjects and Agents of Empire: U.S. Military Laborers in Guam, 1945-1980
|
Clare Fox |
Urban Planning
|
Green Jobs in the Food System
|
Caroline Luce |
History
|
History of the Jewish Bakers Union of Los Angeles |
Lee Mackey |
Urban Planning
|
Responses to Changing Work in Transnational Development and Conservation Regions in Bolivia
|
Parissa Majdi Clark |
Political Science
|
Drivers of Puerto Rican migration |
Sarah Morando |
Sociology
|
Law in Action: How Immigration Attorneys Manage Legal Uncertainty |
Lisa Mueller |
Politcal Science
|
Variation in developing world labor unrest
|
Anthony Ocampo |
Sociology
|
Postcolonial Legacies and the Employment Trajectory of Second-generation Filipino Americans |
Caitlin Patler |
Sociology
|
A Comparative Study of the Impacts of Immigration Status on Mobility and Claims-Making among Immigrants in Low-Wage Jobs in Los Angeles and Madrid
|
Ellen Sharp |
Anthropology
|
The Impact of Migration on Gendered Divisions of Labor at Work and at Home
|
Elena Shih |
Sociology
|
Globalizing Morality and Justice: Local Orientations Towards Women’s Work in Faith-Based and Rights-Based Organizations in the Transnational Anti-Trafficking Movement
|
Juli Thomas |
Sociology
|
The Effects of Parental Job Displacement on Children’s Academic Achievement
|
Julia Tomassetti |
Sociology
|
Research and Strategic Decision-Making in Labor Organizations |
Anita Yuan |
Sociology
|
Improving Access to Skilled Jobs: An Assessment of the Los Angeles Community and Faith-Based Construction Initiative |
2009
Principal Investigator(s) |
Department |
Project Title |
Kyle Arnone |
Sociology
|
Bridging the Blue/Green Divide: The Campaign to Organize Port Truck Drivers on California’s Waterfront |
Kevin Barry, Chloe Osmer, Marcy Koukhab |
Public Policy
|
Analysis of AB 1688: The Car Wash Worker Law |
Abigail Cooke |
Geography
|
Impacts of trade wage inequality across US States: Analysis using matched employer-employee data
|
Kjerstin Elmen-Gruys | Sociology |
Too Fat for Management? Gendered Size Discrimination on the Shop Floor
|
Jennifer Goldstein |
Geography
|
Direct Trade” practices in the international coffee industry — a way out of North-South inequality? |
Shanna Gong |
Sociology
|
Movement, Market or State: Urban Agricultural Movements in the US and China |
Zevi Gutfreund |
History |
The Language Politics of Americanization: The Rise and Resistance of Educational Inequality in Los Angeles
|
Anna Kim |
Urban Planning
|
Investigating the Informal/Formal Divide: Blended Labor Market Participation in an Ethnic Enclave
|
PuongThao Le |
Applied Mathematics
|
Effectiveness and Implications of Family Leave Policies on Parents of Newborns and Parents of Children with Special Health Care Needs |
Rennie Lee |
Sociology
|
Worker Relations in a Chinese Restaurant
|
Caroline Luce |
History
|
Food and Labor Union Iconography: Bagels and American Jewish identity in the 20th century |
Hasan Mahmud |
Sociology
|
Economic Participation and Mobility Among Bangladeshi Immigrants in Los Angeles |
Sarah Morando |
Sociology
|
The Second Generation at Work: the Early Employment Careers of Children of Immigrants
|
Lisa Mueller |
Political Science
|
Hidden Class Struggles: The Politics of Labor and Ethnicity in Contemporary Africa
|
Selena Ortiz |
Health Sciences
|
The Economic Consequences of Lost Wages among Mexican American Families with An Autistic Child
|
Caitlin Patler |
Sociology
|
Young and Undocumented: The Effects of Illegal Immigration Status On Mobility and Claims-Making in Los Angeles’ Low-Wage Labor Markets
|
Adam Richards |
Health Sciences
|
Defining the occupational health and chronic disease priorities of day laborers in Los Angeles: a mixed methods study conducted in partnership with the Institute of Popular Education of Southern California
|
Elena Shih |
Sociology
|
Humanitarian Work: The Moral Economy of Women’s Work in the Global Anti-Trafficking Movement”
|
Julia Tomassetti |
Sociology
|
The Union Avoidance Industry in Los Angeles |
Ming-Hong Tsai |
Anderson School of Management
|
Group Composition, Decision Rules, and Employees’ Cooperation |
Yuki Yanai |
Political Science
|
Redistributive Consequences of Economic Inequality: An Examination of Individuals’ Attitudes |
Past IRLE Faculty Small Grants
2014-15
Principal Investigator(s) |
Department |
Project Title |
Sameer Ashar |
Law
|
Assessing the Impact of Wage Theft in Orange County |
Caitlin Patler |
Criminology, Law and Society
|
Released but not Free: The Impacts of Immigration Detention and Reentry on Employment, Housing, and Family Relationships |
Jacqueline Leavitt |
Urban Planning
|
Organizing a Greener LA: Leveraging SB 535 for LA’s Environmental Justice Communities |
John Rogers | Education | Representations of Unions in American and Canadian Social Studies Standards |
Janna Shadduck-Hernandez |
UCLA Center for Labor Research and Education
|
Trabajadoras y Proveedoras: Bridging Low-‐Wage Workers and Family Child Care Providers for Affordable, Quality Child Care |
Abel Valenzuela |
Chicana/o Studies & Urban Planning
|
Outcomes and Retention Issues among Undocumented Students at UCLA |
Noah Zatz |
Law |
The Invisible Fist: State Coercion in Los Angeles’ Low-Wage Labor Market |
Karthick Ramakrishnan |
Political Science
|
Immigration Federalism in the Context of Presidential Action |
Ellen Reese |
Sociology
|
Warehouses & Our Future: Working Class Struggles in the Inland Valley |
Ellen Reese |
Sociology
|
Labor Studies |
Dennis Childs |
Literature
|
Mass Deportation and Mass Incarceration Research Project |
Isaac Martin |
Sociology
|
How the Public Pays for Property Tax Limitation |
Eileen Boris |
Feminist Studies
|
Enforcement Strategies for Empowerment: Models for the California Domestic Worker Bill of Rights |
Nelson Lichtenstein |
Center for the Study of Work, Labor, and Democracy
|
Low Wage Worker Survey in Santa Barbara and Isla Valley |
2010
Principal Investigator(s) |
Department |
Project Title |
Gilda Haas |
Urban Planning
|
Blocks & Lots: a Land Use Planning Training Tool for Labor and Community |
Ruben Hernandez-Leon |
Sociology
|
Keep Moving: The Mobility Responses of Mexican Immigrant Workers to the US Economic Crisis |
Toby Higbie |
History
|
Southern California History of Organizing Project (SoCalHOP): Course Development Grant in Support of Student Research on Los Angeles Labor and Working Class History |
Ching Kwan Lee | Sociology | The Labor Question of Chinese Capitalism in Africa |
Ivan Light |
Sociology
|
Effect of State Minimum Wage Laws on Mexican Immigrant Settlement, 1980-2000 |
Susanne Lohmann |
Political Science
|
The Work of the University (Course Development) |
Vinit Mukhija / Anastasia Loukaitou-Sideris |
Urban Planning |
The Informal City: The Rise of Unregulated Work and Living in America |
William Roy |
Sociology
|
The Use of Research by Unions in Strategic Decision Making: the Case of SEIU’s LA Security Unionization Campaign |
Margaret Shih |
Anderson
|
Stigma of Unemployment |
Katherine Stone |
Law
|
Conference on Employment Regulation After the Standard Employment Contract: Innovations in Regulatory Design |
Carlos Alberto Torres |
Education
|
Teachers as (Displaced) Laborers in California |
Abel Valenzuela |
Center for the Study of Urban Poverty
|
Street Vending Convening and Conference |
Roger Waldinger |
Sociology
|
Socio-economic Mobility Among the New Second Generation |
Lisa Mueller |
Political Science
|
Hidden Class Struggles: The Politics of Labor and Ethnicity in Contemporary Africa |
Goetz Wolff |
Urban Planning
|
A New Urban Planning Course: “Labor and Economic Development” |
Noah Zatz |
Law
|
Re-entry and Racial Justice: Challenges and Opportunities for Disparate Impact Theory |
2009
Principal Investigator |
Department |
Project Title |
Cesar Ayala
|
Sociology
|
Organizing public sector workers in Puerto Rico |
Gary Blasi
|
Law School
|
California employment discrimination law at age 50 |
Evelyn Blumenberg
|
Urban Planning |
Immigrant carpooling and employment clustering |
Karen Brodkin, Horacio Roque Ramirez
|
Anthropology
|
Gay LA labor activism |
Scott Cummings
|
Law School
|
The law and the challenge to LA low-wage work |
Chris Erickson, Kent Wong
|
Anderson
|
Conference: “California state budget” |
Miriam Golden
|
Political Science
|
Update of dataset |
Ruben Hernandez-Leon
|
Sociology |
Conference: “Mexican immigrants as workers” |
Raùl Hinojosa-Ojeda
|
César E. Chávez Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies
|
Immigration-related retaliation and Employee Free Choice: Immigrant worker survey
|
John Laslett |
History
|
Two chapters of history of LA workers |
Jacqueline Leavitt
|
Urban Planning
|
Conference: “Green jobs” |
Kelly Lytle-Hernandez
|
History
|
Los Angeles jail |
Ruth Milkman
|
Sociology
|
Convening on the California Paid Family Leave program |
Daniel J.B.Mitchell
|
Anderson |
SEIU Building Security Campaign |
John Rogers
|
Educ/IDEA/PLI
|
Survey of unionized parents in Ed & Labor Collaborative |
Abel Valenzuela
|
César E. Chávez Department of Chicana and Chicano Studies
|
Car-Wash Industry Worker Study |
Roger Waldinger
|
Sociology
|
Labor market performance of 1st-3rd generation Mexican-origin workers |
Summary of Research Projects
Prof. Cesar Ayala – Organizing public sector workers in Puerto Rico
Law # 45 of the 1998 in the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico allowed for publicly recognized labor unions to be certified as exclusive representatives of public sector employees and to engage in collective bargaining. The central question of this research is whether the changes forced upon labor organizations by this law has produced any benefits for Puerto Rican workers. This stage of the grant is meant to explore the issues outlined in the last year’s research with a specific focus on the teachers’ union in Puerto Rico and the battle for representation between local unions and US internationals (SEIU, in this case).
Prof. Gary Blasi – California employment discrimination law at age 50: Enforcing the Fair Employment and Housing act in 21st Century Labor Markets
This research project evaluates the enforcement of California employment discrimination law by the Dept. of Fair Employment and Housing through administrative action and by private litigants through the courts. Using a comprehensive administrative dataset of 230,000 complaints, structured interviews and surveys of participants in the enforcement process, we also identify current strengths and weaknesses and propose possible reforms during the 50th anniversary year of the state’s first antidiscrimination law.
Prof. Evelyn Blumenberg – Immigrant carpooling and employment clustering
Immigrants commute to work by carpool at rates almost twice that of native-born workers. This research examines one reason for this finding – the relationship between ethnic residential neighborhoods and the geographic clustering of employment destinations. The findings of this research will enhance understanding of both the employment and travel patterns of immigrants.
Prof. Karen Brodkin & Horacio Roque Ramirez – Gay LA labor activism
This qualitative interview-based study of LGBTIQ unionists and activist workers analyzes the development of specifically LGBTIQ working-class perspectives and issues for social justice and their organizational contribution to the labor movement in Los Angeles. The results of this research offer labor unions analysis of LGTIQ activists contributions to the labor movement, unintended barriers to their participation, and new issues and workplace changes that contribute to social justice and direct organizing agendas.
Prof. Scott Cummings – The law and the challenge to LA low-wage work
Although labor law has been implicated in the decline of American unionism, there is growing evidence that labor activists are deploying innovative legal strategies outside of federal labor law to promote workers’ rights. This two-part study charts the evolution of law and organizing in the Los Angeles low-wage worker movement and to evaluate the efficacy of law as a tool of labor reform.
Prof. Chris Erickson & Kent Wong – CA state budget conference
This grant will provide support for research on the California state budget and specifically the current requirement that the budget be passed by a two-thirds majority. The grant will also be used to organize a major conference in early 2009 on the California state budget. The research will be used to advise members of the California state legislature, policy makers, labor and management representatives, and faculty and students about the legislative origins of the two-thirds majority requirement possible alternatives.
Prof. Miriam Golden – Update of dataset
This project provides supplementary funding for an update and expansion of the Golden-Wallerstein-Lange dataset project on unions, employers, collective bargaining on industrial relations in 20 Organization for Economic Co-operative Development (OECD) nations over fifty years. The measures in the process of update include trade union and employer association authority, measures of bargaining coverage and density.
Prof. Ruben Hernandez-Leon – Conference: “Mexican immigrants as workers”
This grant will provide support for funding a workshop/conference entitled “Mexican Immigrants as Workers: A Binational Conference on Mexico-U.S. Migration” – a two-day event which combines a series of panels following the classic workshop or seminar format and a set of panels bringing together scholars and community organizers, labor leaders and immigrant rights advocates to discuss the immigration and labor agenda.
Prof. Raùl Hinojosa-Ojeda – Immigration-related retaliation and Employee Free Choice: Immigrant worker survey and research report
Previous national research has yielded evidence that pro-legalization and pro-unionization policy approaches can generate a win-win impact on both immigrant wages and overall economic growth. The grant will produce a detailed report using the UCLA North American Integration and Development (NAID) Center IMPLAN Data Model to analyze the impact on Los Angeles and California of depressing wage and output impacts of anti-immigrant and anti-union organizing policy approaches. The result of the research will help establish the potential benefits of both Employee Free Choice Act (EFCA) and comprehensive immigration reform.
Prof. John Laslett – Paradise Neither Lost Nor Gained: A History of Los Angeles Workers 1894-2004
Based on both primary and secondary sources, this manuscript will be the first comprehensive history of its kind since the 1960s. It will provide a narrative history of the Los Angeles working class covering ecology, labor force, cultural and political developments, ethnic and racial groups and unions and relations with employers. These funds will support the completion of the two final chapters on comparing the fortunes of workers across cities to “Los Angeles exceptionalism” and examining whether this history of Los Angeles serves to tell a tale of “paradise lost” or “paradise gained.”
Prof. Jacqueline Leavitt – Conference: “Green jobs”
Green jobs, green buildings and green economy are increasingly pervasive in the media, in public dialogue and in academic discourse as solutions to the impending environmental and economic crises that affect millions of working people. What are the implications for workers, labor and community? How can social, economic and environmental justice principles apply to local policies? The grant funding will support a conference to disseminate research findings at the culmination of the research project that examine the above mentioned issues. Conference participants will include labor and community leaders, public officials, workforce development experts, and UCLA faculty and students.
Prof. Kelly Lytle-Hernandez – Los Angeles jail
The grant will provide support for research on the role of vagrancy laws and convict labor in managing the poor, the underemployed, and the unemployed as the city embraced industrialization and urbanism at the turn of the twentieth century. The grant funds will be used to transfer data from digitized jail registers into a database and to search for the names listed on the jail registers on additional data sets, including census records, voter registration rolls, and city directories.
Prof. Ruth Milkman – Convening on California Paid Family Leave program
The grant will support a convening of national and state experts on work-family issues to discuss a research agenda for evaluating California’s Paid Family Leave program, the nation’s first. The convening will take place in anticipation of the program’s fifth anniversary (July 1, 2009) – a time when national interest in the issue is growing.
Prof. Dan Mitchell – SEIU Building Security Campaign
The recent organizing campaign for building guards, or security officers, faced an uphill battle in the same way that the odds were stacked against the SEIU successfully organizing the ‘Justice for Janitors’ in the mid ’80s. However, although faced with a more complicated legal status than janitors due to the Taft-Hartley Act, the SEIU was again successful. These funds will support the interviewing and gathering of data to develop an understanding of how this success was accomplished.
Prof. John Rogers – Survey of unionized parents in Ed & Labor Collaborative
The grant will support a membership survey of union locals in the Education and Labor Collaborative which includes not only unions representing teachers and classified staff, but also several service sector unions that represent large numbers of parents or grandparents of children attending poorly resourced schools. This study builds upon a four-year collaboration of UCLA’s Institute for Democracy, Education, and Access (IDEA), the UCLA Labor Center, and several union locals, most prominently SEIU Local 1877.
Prof. Abel Valenzuela – Car-Wash Industry Worker Study
The grant will support an original data collection project to better understand the labor market processes and characteristics of the car wash industry and workforce in the greater Los Angeles area. The project will result in a technical report that will be released under the auspices of IRLE, a short policy, fact brief and Op-Ed, and an article that will be submitted to a peer-reviewed journal.
Prof. Roger Waldinger – Labor market performance of 1st-3rd generation Mexican-origin workers
This project will evaluate recent revisions of assimilation theory by comparing the labor market performance of Mexican immigrants and their descendents to those of native white and African Americans. Using unique data from 1995, 1997, 2001, and newly released 2005 CPS Contingent Worker Series, evidence of assimilation across employment sector distribution, fringe benefits, and earnings of four Mexican foreign born cohorts, second generation, and third generation Mexican Americans, will be assessed.