Political Science 145 - Work

Fall
2020
01
4.00
Kristin Bumiller
MW 12:30PM-01:50PM
Amherst College
POSC-145-01-2021F
ONLI ONLI
kbumiller@amherst.edu

This course will explore the role of work in the context of American politics and society. We will study how work has been understood in political and social theory. We will also consider ethnographic studies that explore how workers experience their lives inside organizations and how workplaces transform in response to changing legal regulations. These theoretical and empirical explorations will provide a foundation for reflections about how work structures opportunities in democratic societies and how re-imagining work might unleash human potential. The course will ground these questions about the role of work in the context of American politics and society. At the broadest level we will ask: Do citizens in a liberal society have a right to engage in meaningful work and earn a living wage? What is the changing nature of work in a neoliberal society? What are the goals of the state in regards to the production of a future workforce? What are the impacts of employment discrimination, occupational segregation, and wage disparity based on race or gender?

The course sessions will offer synchronous online lecture/discussion components and in-person small group break-out sections.

Limited to 18 students. Fall semester. Professor Bumiller.

Permission is required for interchange registration during the add/drop period only.