ILRHR 6440

ILRHR 6440

Course information provided by the Courses of Study 2017-2018.

What is the future of work?  Is it what we want it to be?   If not, why not and what can be done about it?  This course addresses these questions, motivated by the concern that those just now entering the workforce are inheriting a mess that, unless reversed, promises to deliver a future in which many, if not most, will experience a lower standard of living than their parents.  The course is a local adaptation of a course developed and conducted by Professor Thomas Kochan at MIT's Sloan School titled "Shaping the Future of Work" (#15.662).  Both courses, in turn, are part of a larger initiative aimed first at getting a firm handle on the younger generation's definition of the "American Dream" and then at mobilizing cross-generational efforts to secure the key components of the dream.  The MIT course provides an opportunity to tap into its online portion asynchronously (i.e., week by week at our convenience), and use these resources as well as other related materials and guest speakers from the ILR faculty and elsewhere to guide and enrich in-class discussions.  Key topics covered include: current opportunities and challenges facing the workforce, the nature of the old (post WW II) social contract between employers and employees and the conditions that made it possible, how that social contract has been eroded by subsequent developments (globalization, technology 2.0, etc.), and steps that might be taken to achieve a more desirable future state.

When Offered Spring (seven-week session).

Permission Note Enrollment limited to: 25 graduate level students.
Prerequisites/Corequisites Prerequisite: ILRHR 5600.

View Enrollment Information

Syllabi:
  •   Seven Week - Second.  Combined with: ILRHR 4440

  • 2 Credits Graded

  • 14432 ILRHR 6440   LEC 001

    • TR Ives Hall 215
    • Mar 19 - May 9, 2018
    • Dyer, L