UMass Sesquicentennial
University of Massachusetts Amherst

Department of Sociology

 

 

 

Eve Weinbaum

Associate Professor
Director, Labor Relations and Research Center
Graduate Program Director, Labor Studies

 

Education and Interests

Ph.D. in Political Science, Yale University, May 1997
MPA, Princeton University Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs, May 1988

Curriculum Vitae

Research interests: labor movements, union and community organizing, social movements, labor and globalization, women and work, work and family policy..


Selected Publications



  • Eve S. Weinbaum.  To Move a Mountain:  Fighting the Global Economy in Appalachia.  New York: The New Press, 2004.
  • Eve S. Weinbaum and Stephanie Luce, “Low-Wage Women Workers,” New Labor Forum 17:2 (Summer 2008), pp. 20-34.
  • Eve S. Weinbaum, “Split to Win?: Assessing the State of the Labor Movement,” Dissent, Winter 2006, pp. 54-6.
  • Eve S. Weinbaum and Gordon Lafer.  AOutside Agitators and Other Red Herrings: Getting Past the >Top-Down/Bottom-Up= Debate.@  New Labor Forum Spring/Summer 2002.
  • Eve S. Weinbaum.  AFrom Plant Closing to Political Movement: Challenging the Logic of Economic Destruction in Tennessee,@ in New Poverty Studies: The Ethnography of Politics, Policy and Impoverished People in the U.S., ed. Judith Goode and Jeff Maskovsky.  New York: New York University Press, 2001.
  • Max Page and Eve S. Weinbaum. AThe City that Workers Built,@ Reviews in American History 29 (2001).



 

 

 

Department of Sociology • Thompson Hall • University of Massachusetts Amherst, MA 01003
http://www.umass.edu/sociol/