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JOEL ROGERS UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON Professor of Sociology, Law, Political Science, Public Affairs; Director of COWS (Center on Wisconsin Strategy), MIP (Mayors Innovation Project), CSI (Center for State Innovation), SSTI (State Smart Transportation Initiative), ALICE (American Legislative and Issue Exchange) 7122 Sewell Building, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison WI 53706 TEL 608-262-4266 FAX 608-262-9046 EMAIL [email protected] EDUCATION Princeton University Department of Politics Ph.D. (1984), M.A. (1978); Universität Heidelberg Department of Philosophy (1976-77); Yale Law School J.D. (1976); Yale College B.A. (1972) (Summa Cum Laude, Divisional IV Major in Economics, Philosophy, and Political Science) ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS University of Wisconsin-Madison: Professor of Law, Political Science, Public Affairs, and Sociology June 2008-present/Professor of Law, Political Science, and Sociology October 1991-present/Professor of Law and Sociology July 1990-present/Associate Professor of Law and Sociology July 1988-June 1990/Assistant Professor of Law and Sociology September 1987-June 1988; University of Miami School of Law: Associate Professor September 1986-June 1987; Rutgers University-Newark: Assistant Professor of Political Science, Law, and Management July 1984-June 1986/Adjunct Assistant Professor of Political Science, Law, and Management July 1980-June 1984; Princeton University Department of Politics: Lecturer 1978-79/Assistant in Instruction 1977-78, 1979; Yale University Department of Political Science: Lecturer 1975 AWARDS & COMPETITIVE FELLOWSHIPS UW-Madison Hilldale Award in Social Science (2004), UW-Madison John D. MacArthur Professorship (1998), German Marshall Fund Development Fellow (1997), John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellow (1995), UW-Madison H.I. Romnes Faculty Fellowship (1990), UW-Madison Vilas Associate (1989), UW-Madison Smongeski Fellowship (1988), American Council of Learned Societies Grant Recent Recipients of the PhD (1986), Rutgers University-Newark Henry J. Browne Outstanding Teacher of the Year Award (1985), National Endowment of Humanities Legal History Program Fellow (1983), Princeton University Charlotte Elizabeth Procter Fellowship (1979), Committee for European Studies Graduate Student Research and Travel Grant for Western Europe (1978), Princeton University Fellowship (1975-78), Fulbright Hays/DAAD Fellowship (1976-77), Yale College Frank M. Patterson Prize (Political Science) (1972), Yale College Harold Ames Hatch Prize (International Relations) (1972), Yale College Charles Herbert Dickerman Prize (Economics) (1972), Yale College Silliman Cup (Highest Academic Average in College) (1972), Yale National Scholar (1970), National Merit Scholar (1970) PUBLICATIONS Books 1. American Society: How it Really Works (New York: WW Norton, 2010). With E.O. Wright. 2. What Workers Want (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006). Revised edition. With R.B. Freeman. 3. Who Defended the Country? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2003). Ed. with J. Cohen. 4. A Way Out: America’s Ghettos and the Legacy of Racism (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 2003). Ed. with J. Decker and J. Cohen. 5. Can Working Families Ever Win? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2002). Ed. with J. Cohen.
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JOEL ROGERS UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON … · With R.Teixeira. 17. A Community of Equals: The Constitutional Protection of New Americans (Boston: Beacon Press, 1999). [Spanish

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Page 1: JOEL ROGERS UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON … · With R.Teixeira. 17. A Community of Equals: The Constitutional Protection of New Americans (Boston: Beacon Press, 1999). [Spanish

JOEL ROGERS UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON

Professor of Sociology, Law, Political Science, Public Affairs; Director of COWS (Center on Wisconsin

Strategy), MIP (Mayors Innovation Project), CSI (Center for State Innovation), SSTI (State Smart Transportation Initiative), ALICE (American Legislative and Issue Exchange)

7122 Sewell Building, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison WI 53706

TEL 608-262-4266 FAX 608-262-9046 EMAIL [email protected]

EDUCATION

Princeton University Department of Politics Ph.D. (1984), M.A. (1978); Universität Heidelberg Department of Philosophy (1976-77); Yale Law School J.D. (1976); Yale College B.A. (1972) (Summa Cum Laude, Divisional IV Major in Economics, Philosophy, and Political Science) ACADEMIC APPOINTMENTS

University of Wisconsin-Madison: Professor of Law, Political Science, Public Affairs, and Sociology June 2008-present/Professor of Law, Political Science, and Sociology October 1991-present/Professor of Law and Sociology July 1990-present/Associate Professor of Law and Sociology July 1988-June 1990/Assistant Professor of Law and Sociology September 1987-June 1988; University of Miami School of Law: Associate Professor September 1986-June 1987; Rutgers University-Newark: Assistant Professor of Political Science, Law, and Management July 1984-June 1986/Adjunct Assistant Professor of Political Science, Law, and Management July 1980-June 1984; Princeton University Department of Politics: Lecturer 1978-79/Assistant in Instruction 1977-78, 1979; Yale University Department of Political Science: Lecturer 1975 AWARDS & COMPETITIVE FELLOWSHIPS

UW-Madison Hilldale Award in Social Science (2004), UW-Madison John D. MacArthur Professorship (1998), German Marshall Fund Development Fellow (1997), John D. and Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation Fellow (1995), UW-Madison H.I. Romnes Faculty Fellowship (1990), UW-Madison Vilas Associate (1989), UW-Madison Smongeski Fellowship (1988), American Council of Learned Societies Grant Recent Recipients of the PhD (1986), Rutgers University-Newark Henry J. Browne Outstanding Teacher of the Year Award (1985), National Endowment of Humanities Legal History Program Fellow (1983), Princeton University Charlotte Elizabeth Procter Fellowship (1979), Committee for European Studies Graduate Student Research and Travel Grant for Western Europe (1978), Princeton University Fellowship (1975-78), Fulbright Hays/DAAD Fellowship (1976-77), Yale College Frank M. Patterson Prize (Political Science) (1972), Yale College Harold Ames Hatch Prize (International Relations) (1972), Yale College Charles Herbert Dickerman Prize (Economics) (1972), Yale College Silliman Cup (Highest Academic Average in College) (1972), Yale National Scholar (1970), National Merit Scholar (1970) PUBLICATIONS

Books

1. American Society: How it Really Works (New York: WW Norton, 2010). With E.O. Wright. 2. What Workers Want (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2006). Revised edition. With R.B. Freeman. 3. Who Defended the Country? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2003). Ed. with J. Cohen. 4. A Way Out: America’s Ghettos and the Legacy of Racism (Princeton: Princeton University Press,

2003). Ed. with J. Decker and J. Cohen. 5. Can Working Families Ever Win? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2002). Ed. with J. Cohen.

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6. Who’s Qualified? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001). Ed. with J. Cohen. 7. Can We Put an End to Sweatshops? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001). Ed. with J. Cohen. 8. What's Wrong with a Free Lunch? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001). Ed. with J. Cohen. 9. Are Elections for Sale? Financing Our Elections Democratically (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001). Ed.

with J. Cohen. 10. Whose Vote Counts: The Case for Proportional Representation (Boston: Beacon Press, 2001). Ed.

with J. Cohen. 11. Working Capital: The Power of Labor’s Pensions (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2001). Ed. with

A. Fung and T. Hebb. 12. Is Inequality Bad for Our Health? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000). Ed. with J. Cohen. 13. Beyond Backyard Environmentalism (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000). Ed. with J. Cohen. 14. Do Americans Shop Too Much? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000). Ed. with J. Cohen. 15. Will Standards Save Public Education? (Boston: Beacon Press, 2000). Ed. with J. Cohen. 16. America’s Forgotten Majority: Why the White Working Class Still Matters (New York: Basic Books,

2000). With R.Teixeira. 17. A Community of Equals: The Constitutional Protection of New Americans (Boston: Beacon Press,

1999). [Spanish edition, Una Comunidad de iguales, trans. Raúl Mejía and Verónica Lifrieri. Miño y Dávila, 2002.] Ed. with J. Cohen.

18. Urgent Times: Policing and Rights in Inner City Communities (Boston: Beacon Press, 1999). Ed. with J. Cohen.

19. Metro Futures: Economic Solutions for Cities and their Suburbs (Boston: Beacon Press, 1999). With D.L. Luria.

20. The New Inequality: Creating Solutions for Poor America (Boston: Beacon Press, 1999). Ed. with J. Cohen.

21. What Workers Want (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1999). With R.B. Freeman. 22. Associations and Democracy. (London: Verso, 1995). With J. Cohen. 23. Works Councils: Consultation, Representation, and Cooperation in Industrial Relations (Chicago:

University of Chicago Press, 1995). Ed. with W. Streeck. 24. Rules of the Game: American Politics and the Central America Movement (Boston: South End Press,

1986). With J. Cohen. 25. Inequity and Intervention: The Federal Budget and Central America (Boston: South End Press,

1986). With J. Cohen. 26. Right Turn: The Decline of the Democrats and the Future of American Politics (New York: Hill &

Wang, 1986). With T. Ferguson. 27. The Political Economy: Readings in the Politics and Economics of American Public Policy (Armonk:

M.E. Sharpe, 1984). Ed. with T. Ferguson. 28. On Democracy (New York: Penguin Books, 1983). With J. Cohen. 29. The Hidden Election: Politics and Economics in the 1980 Presidential Campaign (New York:

Pantheon Books, 1981). Ed. with T. Ferguson. Articles, Monographs, Book Chapters

1. Greener Reality (COWS: Madison, 2012). With L. Dresser and S. White. 2. State of Working Wisconsin 2012 (COWS: Madison, 2012). With L. Dresser and E. Navot. 3. “Wisconsin One Year Later: What Happened, What Is Happening, and What It Means for

Progressives,” Social Policy Spring 2012 (Volume 42 Number 1): 4-11. With L. Dresser. 4. “Productive Democracy.” Pp. 71-92 in J. De Munck, C. Didry, I. Ferreras, and A. Jobert (eds.),

Renewing Democratic Deliberation in Europe, The Challenge of Social and Civil Dialogue (Berlin: Peter Lang, 2012).

5. “Productive Democracy.” Pp. 171-188 in K. Macdonald, S. Marshall, and S. Pinto (eds.), New Visions of Market Governance: Crisis and Renewal (London and New York: Routledge, 2012).

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6. “Infrastructure Investment.” Pp. 13-15 in K. Chapple and R. Giloth, eds., Big Ideas for Job Creation: A Policy Briefing Highlighting Job Creating Initiatives (Berkeley and Baltimore: University of California Berkeley and Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2011). With S. Bernstein.

7. “Retrofitting Institutions.” Pp. 18-19 in K. Chapple and R. Giloth (eds.), Big Ideas for Job Creation: A Policy Briefing Highlighting Job Creating Initiatives (Berkeley and Baltimore: University of California Berkeley and Annie E. Casey Foundation, 2011). With J. Irwin, S. Rhodes-Conway, and S. White.

8. “Business Domination, Inc.,” The Nation 293 (August 1/8, 2011): 17-20. With L. Dresser 9. “Foreword.” Pp. xi-xii in M. O’Neill and T. Williamson (eds.), Property-Owning Democracy:

Rawls and Beyond (New York: Wiley-Blackwell, 2011). With J. Cohen. 10. Opportunities for Developing the Building Retrofit Industry and Market (COWS/Nupolis: 2011).

With J. Cleveland. 11. The State of Working Wisconsin 2010 (Madison: COWS, 2010). With L. Dresser. 12. Greener Skills: How Credentials Create Value in the Clean Energy Economy (Madison: COWS,

2010). With L. Dresser and S. White. 13. “Metropolis Now,” New Statesman 138 (September 21, 2009): 28-32. With K. vanden Heuvel. 14. Eyes on the Prize: Program Architecture of Emerald Cities (December, 2008). With G. Hudson and

P. Thompson. 15. “Seizing the Opportunity (for Climate, Jobs, and Equity) in Building Energy Efficiency.” Pp. 91-

107 in Innovation and Equity Transform America (Cambridge: Community Innovators Lab, 2008). 16. “How’re We Doing? Reflecting on Moral Progress in America,” The Good Society 17 (1) 2008: 13-

19. With J. Cohen. 17. The State of Working Wisconsin 2008 (Madison: COWS, 2008). With L. Dresser. 18. “Manufacturing, Regional Prosperity, and Public Policy.” Pp. 249-274 in R. McGahey and J.Vey,

eds., Retooling for Growth: Building a 21st Century Economy in America’s Older Industrial Areas (Washington, DC: Brookings Institution Press, 2008). With D. Luria.

19. Seizing the Opportunity (for Climate, Jobs, and Equity) in Building Energy Efficiency (Madison: COWS, 2007).

20. “The Promise of Progressive Federalism.” Pp. 205-227 in J. Soss, J. Hacker, and S. Mettler, eds., Remaking America: Democracy and Public Policy in an Age of Inequality (New York: Russell Sage Foundation, 2007). With R.B. Freeman.

21. “‘Full-Utilization Learning Lean’ In Component Manufacturing: A New Industrial Model for Mature Regions, and Labor’s Stake in its Success.” Sloan Industry Studies Working Papers, 2006, Number WP-2006-03. With D. Luria, M. Vidal, and H. Wial.

22. The State of Working Wisconsin 2006. (Madison: COWS, 2006). With L. Dresser. 23. “Build the High Road Here,” The Nation 282 (April 17, 2006): 25-26. 24. “Delivering Employability through Cooperation,” U.S response to the Employment Research

Institute National Expert Survey. With L. Dresser. March 2006. 25. “An Industrial Policy That Works,” Challenge: The Magazine of Economic Affairs, 48(6)

(November – December 2005): 6-16. 26. “The Delphi Oracle,” The Nation 281 (November 28, 2005): 4-6. Unsigned. 27. “Cities: The Vital Core,” The Nation 280 (June 20, 2005): 20-22. 28. “A Step for Voting Reform,” The Nation 280 (January 31, 2005): 4-5. Unsigned. 29. The State of Working Wisconsin 2004. (Madison: COWS, 2004). With L. Dresser. 30. “Devolve This!” The Nation 279 (August 31-September 6, 2004): 20-28. 31. “Labor Politics in an Age of Fear.” Pp. 187-198 in Julius G Getman and Ray Marshall eds., The

Future of Labor Unions: Organized Labor in the 21st Century (Austin: Lyndon B. Johnson School of Public Affairs, 2004).

32. New Energy for America: The Apollo Jobs Report (Washington, DC: Apollo Alliance, 2004). With Institute for America’s Future and Perryman Group.

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33. “Taking the High Road in Milwaukee: The Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership.” Pp. 231-248 in D. Reynolds, ed. Partnering for Change: How Unions and Community Groups Build Coalitions for Economic Justice (Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 2004). With A. Bernhardt and L. Dresser.

34. “Devolve This! Toward a Progressive Strategy in the States.” Pp. 173-189 in K. vanden Heuvel and R. L. Borosage, eds., Taking Back America: And Taking Down the Radical Right. New York: Avalon/Nation Books, 2004).

35. “Progressives Should Vote Edwards,” The Nation (web edition, www.thenation.com), February 8, 2004. Reprinted in The Capital Times as “Joel Rogers: Progressives should vote for Edwards as best on issues,” February 12, 2004.

36. “Little to Celebrate on Labor Day,” Wisconsin State Journal, September 1, 2003. 37. DWD Assessment: Report prepared for Wisconsin Governor-Elect Jim Doyle (Madison: December

2002). With L. Barth, L. Dresser, and R. Gassman. 38. “Tax burden analysis sorely needed,” Milwaukee Journal Sentinel, November 23, 2002. With J.

Keckhaver. Reprinted as “Study Sought: Who Pays State Taxes?,” Wisconsin Alliance of Cities E-Newsletter, December 30, 2002.

39. The State of Working Wisconsin 2002 (Madison: COWS, 2002). With L. Dresser. 40. “A Proposal to American Labor” and “Unions on the Net,” The Nation 274 (June 24, 2002): 18-24.

With R.B. Freeman. 41. “Part of the Solution: Emerging Intermediaries in U.S. Labor Markets.” Pp. 266-291 in Jonathan

Zeitlin and David Trubek, eds., Governing Work and Welfare in a New Economy: European and American Experiments (New York: Oxford University Press, 2003). With L. Dresser.

42. “Power and Reason.” Pp. 237-255. In Archon Fung and Erik Olin Wright, eds. Deepening Democracy: Institutional Innovations in Empowered Participatory Governance (New York and London: Verso, 2002). With J. Cohen.

43. “Open Source Unionism,” Working USA 5 (Spring 2002): 8-40. With R.B. Freeman. 44. “What’s Left? A New Life for Progressivism,” Los Angeles Times, November 25, 2001. Reissued

by The Nation December 10, 2001 (web edition, www.thenation.com, November 27, 2001). 45. “La fin de l’innocence,” La Revue Nouvelle, October 2001. 46. “Punishing Inequalities: Race and Criminal Justice in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin Academy Review 47

(Fall 2001): 16-23. With W. Dickey and M. Smith. 47. “Building the High Road in Metro Areas: Sectoral Training and Employment Projects.” Pp. 256-

272 in Lowell Turner, Harry C. Katz, and Richard W. Hurd, eds., Rekindling the Movement: Labor’s Quest for Relevance in the 21st Century (Ithaca: Cornell University/ILR Press, 2001). With E. Parker.

48. “Worker Representation … Again!” University of Pennsylvania Journal of Labor and Employment Law (Symposium on “What Do Workers Want: Implications of the Freeman & Rogers Study”) 3 (Spring 2001): 375-84. With R.B. Freeman.

49. “The Man From Elroy,” The Nation, January 29, 2001. 50. “How About Some Facts, Not Spin, on the State of the State?” Wispolitics (January 31, 2001). 51. “Everything That Moves: Union Leverage and Critical Mass in Metropolitan Space.” Pp. 35-52 in

Stuart Eimer and Immanuel Ness, eds., Central Labor Councils and the Revival of American Unionism: Organizing for Justice in Our Communities (Armonk: M.E. Sharpe, 2001). With W. Rathke.

52. “Metropolitan Power: The Next Urban Agenda.” Pp. 189-210 in Robert Borosage and Roger Hickey, eds., The Next Agenda: Blueprint for the New Progressive Movement (New York: Westview Press, 2001). With B. Katz.

53. Milwaukee Metropatterns: Sprawl and Social Separation in Metro Milwaukee (Madison: COWS, 2000). With M. Orfield and D. Wood.

54. Down the Line: Supplier Upgrading, Evolving OEM-Supplier Relations, and Directions for Future Manufacturing Modernization Policy and Research in Wisconsin (Madison: COWS, 2000). With J. Whitford and J. Zeitlin.

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55. At the Center of it All: The High Road Strategy for Milwaukee’s Menomonee Valley. (Milwaukee/Madison: Menomonee Valley Partners and COWS, June 2000). With D. Wood and J. Whitford.

56. The State of Working Wisconsin 2000 (Madison: COWS, 1999). With L. Dresser. 57. “America’s Forgotten Majority,” The Atlantic Monthly (June 2000): 66-75. With R. Teixeira. 58. Common Problems & Collaborative Solutions: OEM-Supplier Relationships and the Wisconsin

Manufacturing Partnership’s Supplier Training Consortium (Madison: COWS, 2000). With J. Rickert, D. Vassina, J. Whitford, and J. Zeitlin.

59. “Pull the Plug,” Administrative Law Review 52 (2) (Spring 2000): 743-768. 60. “What Academics Can Do to Help Workers,” The Chronicle of Higher Education 46 (21) (January

28, 2000): B11. With R.B. Freeman. 61. “Elections 2000: A Bad Dream?,” The Nation (August 9-16, 1999). 62. “Sectoral Training Initiatives in the U.S.: Building Blocks of a New Workforce Preparation

System?” Pp. 326-362 in Pepper D. Culpepper and David Finegold, eds., The German Skills Machine: Comparative Perspectives on Systems of Education and Training (New York: Berghahn Books, 1999). With E. Parker.

63. “Sectoral Strategies of Labor Market Reform: Emerging Evidence from the U.S.” Pp. 269-287 in Fons van Wieringen, ed., Vocational and Adult Education in Europe (Dordrechtt: Kluwer Academic 1999). With L. Dresser.

64. “What Do Workers Want? Voice, Representation and Power in the American Workplace.” Pp. 3-31 in Samuel Estreicher, ed., Employee Representation in the Emerging Workplace: Alternatives/ Supplements to Collective Bargaining (Boston: Kluwer Law International, 1998). With R.B. Freeman.

65. “Asociaciones secundarias y gobierno democratico,” Zona Abierto 84, 85 (1998): 3-122. With J. Cohen.

66. “A Strategy for Labor.” Pp. 241-244 in Frank Ackerman, Neva Goodwin, Laurie Dougherty, Kevin Gallagher eds., The Changing Nature of Work (Washington: Island, 1998).

67. “Can Egalitarianism Survive Internationalization?” Pp. 175-193 in Wolfgang Streeck, ed., Internationale Wirtschaft, Nationale Demokrati (Frankfurt: Campus Verlag, 1998). With J. Cohen.

68. “Turning to the Cities: A Metropolitan Agenda,” In These Times 22 (October 18, 1998): 14-17. 69. “Making Work Pay,” Madison Magazine 40 (October 1998): 17. 70. The State of Working Wisconsin (Madison: COWS, 1998). With L. Dresser and S. Mangum. 71. “Trg Delovne Sile: nobeno kosilo ni zastonj,” Razgledi (24. 6. 1998): 10-11. With R.B. Freeman. 72. “Mastering the New Political Arithmetic: Volatile Voters, Declining Living Standards, and Non-

College-Educated Whites.” Pp. 228-247 in Amy E. Ansell, ed., Unraveling the Right (Boulder: Westview Press, 1998). With R. Teixeira.

73. “Networks, Sectors, and Workforce Learning.” Pp. 64-82 in Robert P. Giloth ed., Jobs and Economic Development: Strategies and Practices (Thousand Oaks: Sage, 1998). With L. Dresser. Reprinted in Institute for Research on Poverty Reprint Series 783 (Madison: Institute for Research on Poverty, 1998).

74. “Rebuilding Job Access and Career Advancement Systems in the New Economy,” COWS Briefing Paper (December 1997). With L. Dresser.

75. “‘High Road’ Job Creation: The New Party’s Urban Agenda,” Dollars and Sense (November/December 1997): 30-33. With A. Fung.

76. “The Folks Who Brought You the Weekend: Labor and Independent Politics.” Pp. 247-261 in Steve Fraser and Joshua Freeman, eds., Audacious Democracy (New York: Houghton Mifflin, 1997). Reprinted in Working USA 1 (November/December 1997): 11-20.

77. “A New Urban Agenda,” Boston Review 22 (February-March 1997): 3-8. With D. Luria. 78. “What’s Next ... A Winning Strategy for Progressives,” The Nation 263 (November 18, 1996): 11-

18. With B. Colburn.

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79. “My Utopia or Yours?” Pp. 93-109 in John E. Roemer ed., Equal Shares: Making Market Socialism Work (New York: Verso, 1996). With J. Cohen.

80. “The Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership: Lessons For National Policy,” National Center for the Workplace Working Paper #3 (October 1996). With E. Parker.

81. “Is That All There Is?,” RESIST (October 1996): 2-3. 82. “What Do Workers Want? Findings of the Worker Representation and Participation Survey.” Pp.

279-287 in Bruno Stein, ed., Contemporary Issues in Labor and Employment Law, (New York: Little, Brown and Company, 1996).

83. “An Alternative Democratic Platform,” In These Times (September 2-15, 1996): 14-15. 84. “Social Welfare,” In These Times (September 2-15, 1996): 18-19. 85. “Die Quintessenz: Der Inneramerikanischen Debatte,” Mitbestimmung 1996 (July-August): 12-17.

With R.B. Freeman. 86. Using Regional Economic Analysis in Urban Jobs Strategies (Cambridge: Regional Technology

Strategies, August 1996). With B.R. Bosworth. 87. Volatile Voters: Declining Living Standards and Non-College-Educated Whites (Washington, D.C.:

Economic Policy Institute, August 1996). With R. Teixeira. 88. “Comment on Jeff Isaac,” Dissent 43 (Fall 1996): 55-56. 89. “A Strategy for Labor,” Dissent 43 (Fall 1996): 78-84. With W. Rathke. 90. “‘The More Things Change ...’: Business Litigation and Governance in the American Automobile

Industry,” Law & Social Inquiry 21(Summer 1996): 631-678. With L. Kenworthy and S. Macaulay. 91. “Corporations in Court: Big Business Litigation in U.S. Federal Courts, 1971-91,” Law & Social

Inquiry 21 (Summer 1996): 497-592. With T. Dunworth. 92. “Necessary Complements,” Boston Review 21 (Summer 1996): 11-12. 93. “Why We Need an Independent Politics,” Dissent 43 (Spring 1996): 91-94. 94. “What To Do Now,” Boston Review 21 (February/March 1996): 16. 95. “After Liberalism,” The Good Society 6 (Winter 1996): 18-24. With J. Cohen. 96. Metro Futures: A High-Wage Democratic Development Strategy for America's Cities and Inner

Suburbs (New York: COWS/Sustainable America, 1996). With D. Luria and Midwest Consortium for Economic Development Alternatives.

97. State of Working Wisconsin (Madison: COWS, 1996). With L. Dresser and J. Whittaker. 98. “How We Might Unite.” Pp. 289-310 in Greg Ruggiero and Stuart Sahulka, eds., The New

American Crisis (New York: The New Press, 1995). 99. “Who Deserted the Democrats in 1994?,” American Prospect 23 (Fall 1995): 73-76. With R.

Teixeira. 100. “After Liberalism,” Boston Review 20 (April/May 1995): 20-23. With J. Cohen. 101. “Worker Representation and Participation Survey: First Report of Findings,” Pp. 336-345 in

Proceedings of the 47th Annual Industrial Relations Research Association Meetings (Madison: IRRA, 1995). With R.B. Freeman.

102. “Worker Representation and Participation Survey: First Report,” Dialogues 3 (February 1995): 1-2. 103. “A Strategy for Labor,” Industrial Relations 34 (July 1995): 367-381. 104. “Shut Up and Listen,” Solidarity (January/February 1995): 28. 105. “How Divided Progressives Might Unite,” New Left Review, No.210 (March/April 1995) 3-32.

Reprinted as New Party Paper #3. (New York: New Party, 1995). 106. “Talking Union,” The Nation 259 (December 26, 1994): 784-85. 107. “Solidarity, Democracy, Association.” Pp. 136-159 in W. Streeck, ed., Staat und Verbände,

Sonderheft der Politischen Vierteljahresschrift (Wiesbaden: Westdeutscher Verlag, 1994). Also in revised form in Joshua Cohen and Joel Rogers, Associations and Democracy (London: Verso, 1995). With J. Cohen.

108. “My Utopia Or Yours?,” Politics & Society 22 (December 1994): 507-521. 109. Sustainable Milwaukee: Rebuilding Milwaukee from the Ground Up (Madison: COWS, 1994). 110. “State of the Unions (and Why You Should Care),” Inc. 16 (January 1994): 23-24.

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111. “The Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership: A National Model for Regional Modernization Efforts?.” Pp. 403-411 in Proceedings of the 46th Annual Meeting of the Industrial Relations Research Association (Madison: IRRA, 1994).

112. “Reforming U.S. Labor Relations,” Chicago Kent Law Review 69 (1993): 97-127. Reprinted in abridged form in S. Friedman, R.W. Hurd, R.A. Oswald, and R.L. Seeber, eds., Restoring the Promise of American Labor Law (Ithaca: ILR Press, 1994): 15-28; reprinted in full in M.W. Finkin, The Legal Future of Employee Representation (Ithaca: ILR Press, 1994): 95-125.

113. “Workplace Representation Overseas: The Works Councils Story.” Pp. 97-156 in Richard B. Freeman, ed., Working Under Different Rules (New York: Russell Sage Foundation for NBER, 1994). With W. Streeck.

114. “Productive Solidarities: Economic Strategy and Left Politics.” Pp. 128-45 in David Miliband, ed., Reinventing the Left (London: Polity Press, 1994). With W. Streeck.

115. “Rebuilding American Democracy.” (October 1993). With R. Nader. 116. “Is it third party time?,” In These Times, 4 (October 1993): 28-29. 117. “Progressive Reform and the Clinton Moment.” Pp. 250-266 in Richard Caplan and John Feffer,

eds., State of the Union (Boulder: Westview, 1993). (Transcript of roundtable discussion with Heather Booth, Stan Greenberg, Saul Landau, Roger Wilkins.)

118. “Imagining Unions,” Boston Review 18 (October-November, 1993): 10-12. With C. Sabel. 119. “Associative Democracy.” Pp. 236-252 in P. Bardhan and J. Roemer, eds., Market Socialism (New

York: Oxford University Press, 1993). With J. Cohen. 120. “Associations and Democracy,” Social Philosophy and Policy 10 (Summer 1993): 282-312. With J.

Cohen. 121. “A New New Deal For Labor,” New York Times, (March 10, 1993). With R.B. Freeman. 122. “Don't Worry, Be Happy: The Postwar Decline of Private Sector Unionism in the United States.”

Pp. 48-71 in Jane Jenson and Rianne Mahon, eds., The Challenge of Restructuring: North American Labor Movements Respond (Philadelphia: Temple University Press, 1993).

123. “Clinton's Victory,” The Economist (Mainichi Newspapers), (December 22, 1992): 60-63. With J. Cohen. Also published in German as “Clintons Sieg,” Links 273 (February 1993): 17-19.

124. “Who Speaks for Us? Employee Representation in a Non-Union Labor Market.” Pp. 13-79 in B.E. Kaufman and M.M. Kleiner, eds., Employee Representation: Alternatives and Future Directions (Madison: IRRA, 1993). With R.B. Freeman.

125. “Secondary Associations and Democratic Governance,” Politics and Society 20 (December 1992): 393-472. With J. Cohen.

126. “What Needs to Be Done for Labor to Flourish,” Economic Notes 60 (July-August 1992): 11. 127. “Don't Whine, Organize! Out With the Old Politics, In With the New Party,” The Nation 255 (July

20, 1992): 102-105. With S. Pope. 128. “Can We Get There From Here? Workforce Readiness and Apprenticeship.” Pp. 48-58 in D. Dettke

and C. Weil, eds., Challenges for Apprenticeship and Vocational Training in the 1990s: German and American Perspectives (Bonn: Friedrich-Ebert Stiftung, 1992).

129. “No Way Out: American Politics in 1992,” The Economist (Mainichi Newspapers) (January 14, 1992): 74-77. With J. Cohen.

130. Wisconsin Metalworking Training Consortium: Recommendations for Action (Madison: COWS, 1991). With W. Streeck.

131. “The Wisconsin Training Effort.” Pp. 1-35 in J. Conant, ed., Dollars and Sense, vol. 2 (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1991): 1-35. With W. Streeck and E. Parker.

132. Rising Costs, Falling Coverage: The Wisconsin AFL-CIO Health Care Survey (Madison: COWS, 1991).

133. “The Transformation of American Business Disputing: A Sketch of the Wisconsin Project.” DPRP Working Paper 10-6. (Madison: Institute for Legal Studies, 1991). With M. Galanter, S. Macaulay, T. Palay.

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134. Skill Needs and Training Strategies in the Wisconsin Metalworking Industry (Madison: COWS, 1991). With W. Streeck.

135. “The Politics of Dealignment: The 1990 Elections in the U.S.,” The Economist (Mainichi Newspapers) (December 4, 1990): 50-53. With J. Cohen.

136. “A Transformation of American Business Disputing? Some Preliminary Observations,” Disputes Processing Research Program (DPRP) Working Paper # 10-3. (Madison: Institute for Legal Studies, 1991). With M. Galanter.

137. “In the Shadow of the Law: Institutional Aspects of Postwar U.S. Union Decline.” Pp. 283-302 in C. Tomlins and A. King, eds., New Directions in Legal History (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992).

138. “Traveling Light: State Theory and Sociolegal Research,” Studies in Law, Politics, and Society 11 (1991): 287-293.

139. “Knowledge, Morality and Hope: The Social Thought of Noam Chomsky,” New Left Review 187 (May-June 1991): 5-27. With J. Cohen. Reprinted as “Conocimeiento, moralidad y esperanza: el pensamiento social de Chomsky,” El Otro Derecho 7 (Winter 1991): 71-99; and “Knowledge, morality and hope: Chomsky’s social thought,” in C. Otero ed., Noam Chomsky: Critical Assessments (New York: Routledge, 1994): 554-577.

140. “Divide and Conquer: Further 'Reflections on the Distinctive Character of American Labor Laws',” University of Wisconsin Law Review (1990): 1-147.

141. “Reply to Beehler,” Canadian Journal of Philosophy 19 (December 1989): 583-87. With J. Cohen. 142. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy.” Pp. 213-235 in

Christian Joerges and David M. Trubek, eds., Critical Legal Thought: An American German Debate (Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft, 1989).

143. “Going Nowhere Fast: The 1988 Elections in Perspective,” The Economist (Mainichi Newspapers) (December 6, 1988): 50-57. With J. Cohen.

144. “Reaganomics — Zweiter Teil,” Links 222 (October 1988): 19-21. With J. Cohen. 145. “Too Much of Nothing? American Politics Enters the Post-Reagan Era” (Part II), The Economist

(Mainichi Newspapers) (September 27, 1988): 58-63. With J. Cohen. 146. “Too Much of Nothing? American Politics Enters the Post-Reagan Era” (Part I), The Economist

(Mainichi Newspapers) (September 20, 1988): 12-17. With J. Cohen. 147. “Life After Reagan: The Future of American Politics,” The Economist (Mainichi Newspapers)

(January 26, 1988): 44-50. With J. Cohen. 148. “Labor & Nicaragua,” The Nation 245 (October 31, 1987): 472-3. [Unsigned] 149. “Reaganism After Reagan.” Pp. 387-424 in Ralph Miliband, Leo Panitch, and John Saville, eds.,

The Socialist Register, 1988 (London: Merlin Press, 1988). With J. Cohen. 150. “Iranscam-Contragate: Its Impact on U.S. Politics,” The Economist (Mainichi Newspapers) (March

24, 1987): 32-37. With J. Cohen. 151. “Der Mythos vom Rechtsruck,” Links 200 (November, 1986): 59. With T. Ferguson. 152. “The Midterm Elections in the United States,” The Economist (Mainichi Newspapers) (November

4, 1986): 30-36. With J. Cohen. 153. “Big Business Backs the Freeze,” The Nation 243 (July 19-26, 1986): 43-47. With T. Ferguson. 154. “Big Business Deserts the Democrats,” The Nation 243 (July 5-12, 1986): 1, 16, 18-19. With T.

Ferguson. 155. “Eine neue Politik ohne neue Wähler: Der Rechtsruck der Demokraten in den U.S.A.,” Leviathan 14

(1986): 255-89. With T. Ferguson. 156. “Mondale's Right Turn,” The Texas Observer 78 (June 13 1986): 9-12. With T. Ferguson. 157. “The Myth of America's Turn to the Right,” The Atlantic 257 (May 1986): 43-53. With T.

Ferguson. 158. “The True Cost of Intervention,” The Nation 242 (April 12, 1986): 513-16. With J. Cohen. 159. “Labor Day, 1985,” The Nation 241 (September 7, 1985): 164-65. With T. Ferguson. 160. “Die Mondale-Katastrophe,” Links 175 (November 1984): 28-29. With T. Ferguson.

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161. “Les conséquences mondiales d'Un duel électoral: MM. Reagan et Mondale aux prises avec les déficits et le protectionnisme,” Le Monde diplomatique 368 (November 1984): 2-3. With T. Ferguson.

162. “Why Mondale Turned Right,” The Nation 239 (October 6, 1984): 313-15. With T. Ferguson. 163. “Big Labor is Hurting — Itself,” The Nation 239 (September 1, 1984): 129, 144-45. With T.

Ferguson. 164. “After the Fall,” Boston Review 9 (July-August, 1984): 18-20. With J. Cohen. 165. “Les démocrates sur la corde raide,” Le Monde diplomatique 364 (July 1984): 1, 8-9. With T.

Ferguson. 166. “The Politics of Voter Registration,” The Nation 239 (July 21-28, 1984): 34, 45-51. 167. “Neoliberals and Democrats,” The Nation 234 (June 26, 1982): 767, 781-86. With T. Ferguson. 168. “Manufacturing Disaster: The Great Japan Debate,” The Nation 234 (February 13, 1982): 167-71.

With T. Ferguson. 169. “The Reagan Victory: Corporate Coalitions in the 1980 Campaign.” Pp. 3-64 in Thomas Ferguson

and Joel Rogers, eds., The Hidden Election: Politics and Economics in the 1980 Presidential Campaign (New York: Pantheon Books, 1981). With T. Ferguson.

170. “La défaite du mouvement syndical américain,” Le Monde diplomatique 332 (November 1981): 11. With T. Ferguson.

171. “More Than Academic: Oligopoly in the Idea Market,” The Nation 233 (October 3, 1981): 303-308. With T. Ferguson.

172. “Der Sieg Reagans: Interessengruppen und ihre Koalitionen in der Wahlkampagne von 1980,” Probleme des Klassenkampfs 11 (3) [PROKLA Heft 44] (September 1981): 57-86. With T. Ferguson.

173. “The Empire Strikes Back,” The Nation 231 (November 1, 1980): 436-40. With T. Ferguson. 174. “Un président nationaliste pour l’Amérique en crise?,” Le Monde diplomatique 317 (August 1980).

With T. Ferguson. 175. “Empire as a Way of Life,” The Nation 231 (August 2-9, 1980): 123-24. With T. Ferguson. 176. “Another Trilateral Election?,” The Nation 230 (June 28, 1980): 769, 783-87. With T. Ferguson. 177. “The Knights of the Roundtable,” The Nation 229 (December 15, 1979): 620-25. With T. Ferguson. 178. “How Business Saved the New Deal,” The Nation 229 (December 8, 1979): 589-92. With T.

Ferguson. 179. “Un capitalisme divise,” Le Monde diplomatique 306 (September 1979). With T. Ferguson. 180. “The State of the Unions,” The Nation 228 (April 28, 1979): 462-65. With T. Ferguson. 181. “Labor Law Reform and Its Enemies,” The Nation 228 (January 6-13, 1979): 1, 17-20. With T.

Ferguson. 182. “Miller of the Fed,” The Nation 227 (August 21-26, 1978): 134-36. With T. Ferguson. 183. “U.S. still in Vietnam,” Politicks and Other Human Interests 1 (3) (November 22, 1977): 24. Book Reviews

1. David Brody, Labor Embattled: History, Power, Rights (Champaign/Urbana, IL: Illinois University Press, 2005), Labor History 47 (4) (November 2006): 559-566. (Review entitled “History We Haven’t Made Yet.”)

2. James Weinstein, The Long Detour: The History and Future of the American Left (Boulder, CO: Westview Press, 2003), The Nation (web edition, www.thenation.com), June 25, 2004. (Review entitled “Unfulfilled Promise.”)

3. Simon Head, The New Ruthless Economy: Work and Power in the Digital Age (New York: Oxford University Press), The New Leader 38 (November-December 2003): 28-29. (Review entitled “This Call May Be Recorded.”)

4. William Easterly, The Elusive Quest for Growth: Economists’ Adventures and Misadventures in the Tropics (Cambridge: MIT Press, 2001) and Joseph Stiglitz, Globalization and Its Discontents (New

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York: W.W. Norton, 2002), New Labor Forum 12: 2 (Summer 2003): 114-121. (Review entitled “Humanizing the Marketplace.”) With J. Cohen.

5. Richard Rorty, Truth and Progress: Philosophical Papers, Volume Three (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1998) and Achieving Our Country: Leftist Thought in Twentieth-Century America (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1998), The Lingua Franca Book Review (Spring 1998): 8-9. With J. Cohen. (Review Entitled “Our Town”)

6. Ian Ayres and John Braithwaite, Responsive Regulation: Transcending the Deregulation Debate (New York: Oxford University Press, 1991), Contemporary Sociology 22 (May 1993): 338-339. (Review entitled “A Toolkit for Regulatory Reform”)

7. Richard Neely, Judicial Jeopardy: When Business Collides With the Courts (Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley, 1986), Law and Society Review 21 (1988): 753-763. (Review entitled “Another Brief for Business”)

8. Mike Davis, Prisoners of the American Dream (London: Verso, 1986), Against the Current 2 (May-June 1987): 27-32. (Review entitled “Will the Giant Awaken?”)

9. Jeff McMahan, Reagan and the World: Imperial Policy and the New Cold War (New York: Monthly Review Press, l986) and David A. Stockman, The Triumph of Politics: Why the Reagan Revolution Failed (New York: Harper & Row, 1986), Monthly Review 38 (January 1987): 42-51. With J. Cohen. (Review entitled “The Worst and the Dumbest: Perspectives on the Reagan Era”)

10. Sarah E. Evans and Harry C. Boyte, Free Spaces: Sources of Democratic Change in America (New York: Harper & Row, 1986), Contemporary Sociology 16 (1987): 667-668.

11. David Abraham, The Collapse of the Weimar Republic: Political Economy and Crisis (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1981) and Richard Bessel and E.J. Feuchtwanger, eds. Social Change and Political Development in Weimar Germany (Totowa, New Jersey: Barnes and Noble Books, 1981), Journal of Economic History 42 (June 1982): 452-454.

12. Edward S. Herman, Corporate Control, Corporate Power (New York: Cambridge University Press, 1981), democracy 2 (January 1982): 107-119. (Review entitled: “Contested Terrain”)

13. Robert Justin Goldstein, Political Repression in Modern America (Cambridge: Schenkman Publishing Company, 1978), Journal of Politics 41 (November 1979): 1233-1234.

Sustaining Wisconsin Columns (Published in The Capital Times but often republished around the state, these were part of an 18 month public education campaign COWS ran before the 2002 WI gubernatorial primary election. NB: Not responsible for article titles.) 1. “‘Privatize’ Equals ‘Redistribute’,” The Capital Times, August 24, 2002. 2. “Social Security Scare is Big Lie,” The Capital Times, August 12, 2002. 3. “Keep the Government, Dissolve the People!,” The Capital Times, July 29, 2002. 4. “Wow! Greed Really Isn’t Enough!,” The Capital Times, July 8, 2002. 5. “An Economic Plan – Not,” The Capital Times, June 24, 2002. 6. “Scams for Rich Spotlight Greed,” The Capital Times, June 10, 2002. 7. “Base Opinion Of Power: The Future On All The Facts,” The Capital Times, June 4, 2002. 8. “Has U.S. Forgotten Its Ideals?,” The Capital Times, May 27, 2002. 9. “No End in Sight to State Deficits,” The Capital Times, May 21, 2002. 10. “Power Plan Would Take U.S. For Fools,” The Capital Times, May 13, 2002. 11. “Just Who’s Taking’ What?,” The Capital Times, May 6, 2002. 12. “Step to Regain State Democracy,” The Capital Times, April 29, 2002. 13. “Let’s Clean up Elections First,” The Capital Times, April 22, 2002. 14. “Can State Return to Greatness?” The Capital Times, April 15 2002. 15. “No Fun In Dysfunctional Government,” The Capital Times, April 9, 2002. 16. “Anti-Tax Slogans Just Don’t Fit,” The Capital Times, April 1, 2002. 17. “Assembly Budget Truly Sad,” The Capital Times, March 25, 2002. 18. “Budget Fix Demands ‘T’ Word,” The Capital Times, March 18, 2002.

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19. “‘Taxes Bad’ Mantra is Wrong,” The Capital Times, March 11, 2002. 20. “The Governor and the L Word,” The Capital Times, March 4, 2002. 21. “How Taxes Used is What Counts,” The Capital Times, February 25, 2002. 22. “Deficit Blues II: The Myths,” The Capital Times, February 18, 2002. 23. “Deficit Blues Settle Over State,” The Capital Times, February 11, 2002. 24. “Mini-Enron Gives U.S. a Chance,” The Capital Times, February 4, 2002. 25. “SOS! Milwaukee Needs Help,” The Capital Times, January 28, 2002. 26. “Potential High for Inner Cities,” The Capital Times, January 22, 2002. 27. “A Wish List For Wisconsin,” The Capital Times, December 24, 2001. 28. “Economy Needs Old, New,” The Capital Times, December 17, 2001. 29. “Economy Breeds Greed,” The Capital Times, December 10, 2001. 30. “Working Women Left In Lurch,” The Capital Times, December 3, 2001. 31. “The Changing State of Work,” The Capital Times, November 26, 2001. 32. “Inequalities Hit Middle Class,” The Capital Times, November 19, 2001. 33. “Let's Talk About the Big Issues,” The Capital Times, November 12, 2001. 34. “Stimulus is Anything But,” The Capital Times, November 5, 2001. 35. “Budget Bomb Incoming,” The Capital Times, October 29, 2001. 36. “Profiting from Terror,” The Capital Times, October 22, 2001. 37. “A Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Bush Presidency,” The Capital Times, October 15, 2001. 38. “Get Fiscal House in Order,” The Capital Times, October 8, 2001. 39. “A Progressive Approach to Force,” The Capital Times, October 1, 2001. 40. “Ending the War in Vietnam,” The Capital Times, September 24, 2001. 41. “The United States is not Blameless,” The Capital Times, September 17, 2001. 42. “U.S. Works More, for Less,” The Capital Times, September 10, 2001. 43. “Workers Face Bitter Reality,” The Capital Times, September 3, 2001. 44. “Social Costs Run High,” The Capital Times, August 27, 2001. 45. “Make it Right to Begin With,” The Capital Times, August 20, 2001. 46. “A Better Energy Policy,” The Capital Times, August 13, 2001. 47. “Don't give in to Almighty Market,” The Capital Times, August 6, 2001. 48. “We Control Energy Choices, but within Limited Options,” The Capital Times, July 30, 2001. 49. “Energy Success Stories,” The Capital Times, July 23, 2001. 50. “Clean Energy Potential High,” The Capital Times, July 16, 2001. 51. “A Proposal for Investing $500 Million on Energy,” The Capital Times, July 9, 2001. 52. “Anti-Green State Subsidies Cost Taxpayers Plenty,” The Capital Times, July 2, 2001. 53. “Americans Show They Have a 'Wise Heart',” The Capital Times, June 25, 2001. 54. “Be it Resolved: 'Yes, There is an Alternative',” The Capital Times, June 18, 2001. 55. “Public Should be in the Know on Subsidies,” The Capital Times, June 11, 2001. 56. “Wisconsin Could Take Lead in Clean Energy,” The Capital Times, June 4, 2001. 57. “Rail Could Ease Commuters Nightmares,” The Capital Times, May 14, 2001. 58. “Capitalism, Nature and Us,” The Capital Times, May 8, 2001. 59. “Budget Shortfall Easy to Solve,” The Capital Times, April 30, 2001. 60. “High Taxes Are Really Not the Problem,” The Capital Times, April 23, 2001. 61. “Citizens See Flaws, Disparity in Gov’s Budget,” The Capital Times, April 16, 2001. 62. “Few Legislators Have Voice in Budget Process,” The Capital Times, April 9, 2001. 63. “Gov's budget is key to State Policy Choices,” The Capital Times, April 2, 2001. 64. “Progressivism’s Seeds are Here for the Planting,” The Capital Times, March 26, 2001. 65. “Workers Need Greater Voice, Power,” The Capital Times, March 19, 2001. 66. “Where are John and Jane Q. Public?,” The Capital Times, March 12, 2001. 67. “Dialogue Sets Best Direction for the Future,” The Capital Times, February 26, 2001.

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TALKS AND UNPUBLISHED PAPERS

1. “Let’s Jump Off a Fiscal Cliff!” La Crosse Area Development Corporation 52nd Economic Forum. La Crosse, WI, October 2012.

2. “Welcome ALICE!” UW Law American Constitution Society Chapter. Madison, WI, October 2012. 3. “Jobs and the Economy in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin League of Women Voters Education Network

Issues Briefing. Madison, WI, October 2012. 4. “Direct Money Influence,” Harvard-Georgetown Market Democracy Project. Washington, DC,

October 2012. 5. “Progressive Legislation,” Teaching Social Justice, Expanding Access to Justice: The Role of Legal

Education and the Legal Profession, Society of American Law Teachers (SALT) Teaching Conference. Baltimore, MD, October 2012.

6. “Working more Effectively with Cities,” SSTI COP 6. Detroit, MI, September 2012. 7. “What Does It Mean to be a Progressive in the Twenty-first Century?” American Sociological

Association Annual Meeting. Denver, CO, August 2012. 8. “Productive Democracy,” American Sociological Association Annual Meeting. Denver, CO, August

2012. 9. “Toward Infotopia: Harnessing the Power of Transparency for Freedom and Democracy,” American

Sociological Association Annual Meeting. Denver, CO, August 2012. 10. “Can Mayors Really Still Innovate?” MIP 2012 Summer Meeting. Eugene, OR, August 2012. 11. “Resilience, Equity and Skill Formation in the Clean Energy Economy,” COWS conference on

“Greener Reality.” Washington, DC, June 2012. 12. “Productive Democracy,” Boston College Sociology, “Summer Institute in New Economics.”

Chestnut Hill, MA, June 2012. 13. “Intersections in Scholarship and Activism,” Labor Law Group Annual Conference. Asheville, NC,

June 2012. 14. “ALICE: A Progressive Response to ALEC,” American Constitution Society National Convention

“Democracy at Stake.” Washington, DC, June 2012. 15. “Introducing ALICE,” ACLU New York offices. New York, NY, June 2012. 16. “Why Our Democracy is Broken and What We Need To Do About It,” Madison East High School

Teach-in “What’s at Stake in the 2012 Election: From the Local to the Global.” Madison, WI, May 2012.

17. “Putting Seattle on the High Road,” Seattle Office of Sustainability and Environment. Seattle, WA, May 2012.

18. “A Strategy for Green Economic Development,” Global Teach-In. Madison. New York, Stockholm, London, et al (webcast), April 2012.

19. “The Future of SSTI,” SSTI COP 5. Detroit, MI, April 2012. 20. “Rebuilding the Middle Class,” Madison Civics Club. Madison, WI, April 2012. 21. “State and Local Government,” NCL Northeast Conversation. New York, NY, March 2012. 22. “Are Democratic Workplaces Possible, or Only Necessary to Our Survival?” University of Nevada

Las Vegas, William S. Boyd School of Law “Democracy and the Workplace Symposium.” Las Vegas, NV, February 2012.

23. “MIP and National Politics.” MIP 2012 Winter Meeting. Washington, DC, January 2012. 24. “The Fall and Rise of American Democracy,” L’Chaim Lunchtime Plus. Madison, WI, December

2011. 25. “State and Local Power,” NCL (New Leaders Council) 2011 Winter Institute Conference. Miami

Beach, FL, December 2011. 26. “How Stupid Can We Be?,” SSTI COP 4. Detroit, MI, November 2011. 27. “State Infrastructure Finance,” Annie E. Casey/UC Berkeley conference on “Big Ideas for Job

Creation.” Washington, DC, November 2011. 28. “Apocalypso,” COWS conference on “Greener Reality.” Madison, WI, November 2011.

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29. “Lessons Learned the Past Few Years,” RE-AMP Energy Efficiency Finance Meeting. Madison, WI, October 2011.

30. “Overview,” CSI State Policy Directors 4th Annual Meeting. Washington, DC, October 2011. 31. “Lessons from COWS,” Wisconsin Library Association conference on “Government Information in

Action: How to Make Government Information Relevant to the Public.” Madison, WI, September 2011.

32. “What Role for Private Finance in Infrastructure,” EARN 14th Annual Conference. Milwaukee, WI, September 2011.

33. “Fighting Foreclosure,” EARN 14th Annual Conference. Milwaukee, WI, September 2011. 34. “Democratizing Campaign Finance,” EARN 14th Annual Conference. Milwaukee, WI, September

2011. 35. “Localizing Finance,” EARN 14th Annual Conference. Milwaukee, WI, September 2011. 36. “What is to be Done and How Can EARN Help Do It,” EARN 14th Annual Conference. Milwaukee,

WI, September 2011. 37. “Developing State and Local Program,” ECC Capacity Building Conference. Atlanta, GA, August

2011. 38. “Managing in the New Normal,” SSTI COP 3. Detroit, MI, July 2011. 39. “Harnessing Private Finance: Worthwhile or Impossible,” COWS-T4A-CNT conference on “Private

Financing of Infrastructure.” Washington, DC, June 2011. 40. “Challenges Ahead.” Institute for Sustainable Communities Climate Leadership Academy on “Low

Carbon Transportation,” Arlington, VA, June 2011. 41. “Developing the MUSH+ Sector,” Emerald Cities Collaborative Capacity Building Program. Detroit,

MI, May 2011. 42. “What’s at Stake, What Should be Done, and Why It Hasn’t Been,” Regional National Lawyers Guild

Conference/ University of Wisconsin Law School. Madison, WI, April 2011. 43. “Towards a Multi-State, Multi-Issue Agenda For Rebuilding America’s Economy and Its Middle

Class,” EARN. Washington, DC, March 2011. 44. “What do we mean by ‘high road’ development,” Emerald Cities Collaborative Capacity Building

Program. Los Angeles, CA, February 2011. 45. “What’s Our Big Agenda?,” SSTI COP 2. Seattle, WA, February 2011. 46. “The Mess We’re In, and How to Get Out of It,” Policy Matters: Scholarly and Practical Perspectives

on Contemporary Problems, University of Iowa. Iowa City, IA, February 2011 47. “New Possibilities for High Road Metros,” Mayors Innovation Project 2011 Winter Meeting.

Washington, DC, January 2011. 48. “Building a BRIM (Building Retrofit Industry and Market),” White House Policy Briefing on

Greening America’s Cities. Washington, DC, January 2011. 49. “Progressive Federalism Again! Money, Politics, and Law,” EARN 13th Annual Conference. Atlanta,

GA, December 2010. 50. “Get a Grip, Hold On and Squeeze,” Center for Working Families NY State Policy conference on

“Good Ideas in Hard Times.” New York, NY, December 2010. 51. “Green Jobs & You,” USGBC Central Florida Chapter 2010 LEEDership Dinner. Orlando, FL,

October 2010. 52. “Strategies for Broader System Reform and Design,” COWS/CLASP/NSC roundtable “Green and

Beyond II: Skills Standards, Credentialing and Workforce System Reform.” Washington, DC, October 2010.

53. “What’s Next?,” CSI State Policy Directors 3nd Annual Meeting. Washington, DC, October 2010. 54. “Meeting of the Minds, A Conversation with University of Wisconsin Faculty.” New York, NY,

September 2010. 55. “SSTI’s Own Strategy,” SSTI COP 1. Minneapolis, MN, September 2010. 56. “‘The Wisconsin Idea’ Now," NASWA (National Association of State Workforce Agencies) 74th

Annual Conference. Madison, WI, September 2010.

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57. “BetterBuildings Finance,” Clean Energy BetterBuildings Roadshow. Chicago, IL, September 2010. 58. “Commercial & Multi-Family Efficiency,” Clean Energy BetterBuildings Roadshow. Chicago, IL,

September 2010. 59. “Driving Consumer Demand,” Clean Energy BetterBuildings Roadshow. Chicago, IL, September

2010. 60. “Scaling Wisconsin Clean Energy Efforts,” Department of Energy, Emerald Cities Collaborative and

the Wisconsin Office of Energy Independence. Milwaukee, WI, August 2010. 61. “Emerald Cities Collaborative,” Milwaukee Area Workforce Funding Alliance. Milwaukee, WI, July

2010. 62. “Workers Movement and Basic Income,” 13th International Congress of the Basic Income Earth

Network – BIEN, Faculty of Economics and Administration, University of São Paulo. São Paulo, Brazil, July 2010.

63. “Learning from Other Countries,” Institute for Public Policy Research “Green Jobs Summit.” London, England, June 2010.

64. “Defining the Field,” Conference on “Catalyzing the Clean Economy.” Garrison, NY, May 2010. 65. “Building a Better System – Vision and Action,” COWS/CLASP/NSC roundtable on “Green &

Beyond: Skill Standards, Credentialing, and Workforce System Reform.” Washington, DC, April 2010.

66. “Green Jobs: Two Perspectives,” NLRB (National Labor Relations Board). Washington, DC, April 2010.

67. “Earth Day XL - A Transportation Forum for Northeastern Illinois,” Chicago Metropolis 2020. Chicago, IL April 2010.

68. “How Boomers Can Help the Nation Go Green,” CAEL (Council for Adult and Experiential Learning) Webinar. April 2010.

69. “Sparking Change: New Frontiers in Collaboration,” Yale School of Management Conference on “Making the Connection: Partnerships in Sustainable Energy and Development Finance.” New Haven, CT, April 2010.

70. “Can Wisconsin Get on the High Road?” Wisconsin chapter of American Planning Association and Wisconsin chapter of American Society of Landscape Architects Annual Meeting. Madison, WI, March 2010.

71. “Educating the Clean Energy Workforce of the Future,” Apollo Alliance and Center on American Progress conference on “Picking a Winner: How to Make the U.S. a Leader in the Clean Energy Economy,” Washington, DC, March 2010.

72. “Goals of SSTI,” CSI GA/KY/LA/MS/TN SSTI meeting. Memphis, TN, January 2010. 73. “Whoosh!” Mayors Innovation Project 2010 Winter Meeting. Washington, DC, January 2010. 74. “Goals of SSTI,” CSI DC/MD/OH/PA SSTI meeting. Baltimore, MD, January 2010. 75. Manufacturing Roundtable, Surdna Foundation. New York, NY, January 2010. 76. “Goals of SSTI,” CSI IA STTI meeting. Ames, IA, January 2010. 77. “Infrastructure Investment and High Road, Green Construction Jobs,” Labor and Employment

Relations Association Annual Meeting. Atlanta, GA, January 2010. 78. “Goals of SSTI,” CSI NC Smart State Transportation Initiative (SSTI) meeting. Raleigh, NC,

December 2009. 79. “Liberal Democracy, Social Democracy, and Beyond,” Harvard University conference on “Re-

Embedding the Market: Crisis and Reinvention” Harvard University. Cambridge, MA, December 2009.

80. "Prospects for Economic and Social Reform in the Global North," conference on “Re-Embedding the Market: Crisis and Reinvention,” Harvard University. Cambridge, MA, December 2009.

81. “Emerald Cities,” National Network of Sector Practitioners. Washington, DC, November 2009. 82. “Coordinating Work on Equitable and Sustainable Transportation Policy II,” Rockefeller

Grantee/Metropolitan Policy Program. Washington, DC, November 2009.

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83. “Strengthening the State-Metro Partnership in a MetroNation,” Brookings Institution. Washington, DC, October 2009.

84. “Cities are the Answer: Taking the High Road in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin Academy. Wausau, WI, October 2009.

85. “Productive Democracy,” High-Level European Roundtable on Social and Civil Dialogue, “Beyond the Social-Civil Dialogue Dichotomy.” Brussels, BE, October 2009.

86. LIUNA Energy Efficiency Investment Meeting. Washington, DC, October 2009. 87. “The New Federalism.” EARN 12th Annual Conference. Detroit, MI, September 2009. 88. “Regional Economic Policy,” EARN 12th Annual Conference. Detroit, MI, September 2009. 89. “Goals of SSTI,” CSI “Sustainability Roundtable.” Chicago, IL, September 2009. 90. “Increasing Jobs through High-Road, Revenue-Neutral Innovations,” CSI State Policy Directors 2nd

Annual Meeting. Washington, DC, September 2009. 91. “Productive Democracy,” American Sociology Association Annual Meeting. San Francisco, CA,

August 2009. 92. “What’s Needed to Encourage Metropolitan Innovation,” Brookings Institution. Washington, DC,

July 2009. 93. “High Road ARRA Implementation,” CSI “Midwest State Recovery Roundtable.” Des Moines, IA,

July 2009. 94. “New Energy Jobs,” Connecticut Bootcamp on Green Jobs, Meriden, CT, July 2009. 95. “Building the Clean Energy Economy Town by Town,” Climate and Energy Funders Group.

Washington, DC, May 2009. 96. “Selected Residential Energy Efficiency Business Models,” National Residential Energy Efficiency

Business Model Summit. Washington, DC, May 2009. 97. “High Road ARRA Implementation,” CSI conference on “High Road ARRA Implementation.”

Annapolis, MD, May 2009. 98. “Productive Democracy,” Inequality and Social Policy Seminar, Harvard University. Cambridge,

MA, April 2009. 99. “Getting NJ On the High Road,” conference on “New Directions for New Jersey.” East Brunswick,

NJ, April 2009. 100. “Social Justice & Climate Policy,” Chicago Jobs Council. Chicago, IL, March 2009. 101. “Perspectives on the Stimulus Package: The Role of the Private Sector,” 2009 Wisconsin Renewable

Energy Summit. Milwaukee, WI, March 2009. 102. Energy Roundtable with WI and U.S. Energy Officials. Milwaukee, WI, March 2009. 103. “The Obama Moment,” Max Planck Institute. Köln, FRG, March 2009. 104. “How to Think About High Road ARRA Implementation,” CSI conference on “High Road ARRA

Implementation.” Washington, DC, March 2009. 105. “Why Not Save the World?” PowerShift 2009. Washington, DC, February 2009. 106. National Climate Prosperity Project Leadership Meeting. San Jose, CA, February 2009. 107. “What Treasurers Should Do,” CSI State CFO Roundtable, Cummings Foundation. New York, NY,

February 2009. 108. “Efficiency First: Laying the Foundation for the Clean Energy Economy,” conference on “Good Jobs

Green Jobs.” Washington DC, February 2009. 109. “Taking the High Road in Wisconsin.” University Roundtable Lecture, University of Wisconsin-

Madison. Madison, WI, February 2009. 110. “Defining ‘Green’ Jobs So They Don’t Exist,” ICLEI (International Coalition on Local

Environmental Initiatives) and Johnson Foundation STAR Technical Advisory Committee Inaugural Retreat. Racine, WI, February 2009.

111. “Energy Choices for NJ,” CSI Strategy Academy. Newark, NJ, February 2009. 112. “And Now We May Perhaps Begin?” MIP (Mayors Innovation Project) Winter 2009 Meeting.

Washington, January 2009. 113. “Educational Choices for Iowa,” CSI Strategy Academy. Des Moines, IA, December 2008.

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114. “Sustainable State Transportation Policy Technical Assistance,” Rockefeller Foundation. Washington, DC, December 2008.

115. “Climate Change and Equity,” EARN 11th Annual Conference. Las Vegas, NV, December 2008. 116. “Economic and Workforce Development,” EARN 11th Annual Conference. Las Vegas, NV,

December 2008 117. “Green Jobs.” Wisconsin Sustainable Business Council Conference, Verona, WI, November 2008. 118. “High Road and Green Jobs.” The Future of Ohio’s Workforce, Columbus, OH, November 2008. 119. “Vision, Opportunities, and Nation Policy Efforts.” National Green Industries Policy Retreat,

Pocantico, NY, October 2008. 120. “Building a Green Innovation Economy in the Face of Changing Climate and Energy Challenges.”

Grow Smart Maine, Augusta, ME, October 2008. 121. “CSI Agenda,” CSI State Policy Directors 1st Annual Meeting. Washington, DC, September 2008. 122. “Retrofitting your State,” CSI State Policy Directors 1st Annual Meeting. Washington, DC,

September 2008. 123. “Greener Economic Pathways in Older Cities,” Funders Network on Smart Growth. Newark, NJ,

September 2008. 124. “Me2,” Cleveland Foundation. Cleveland, OH, August 2008. 125. “What’s new with MIP?” Mayors Innovation Project Summer Meeting. Madison, WI, July 2008. 126. “Green Jobs: The Milwaukee Opportunity,” Milwaukee Community Service Corps. Milwaukee, WI,

July 2008. 127. “A High Road Region?” Midwest/Great Lakes Economic Development Summit. Columbus, OH,

July 2008. 128. “A Region with Interests.” Midwest/Great Lakes Economic Development Summit. Columbus, OH,

July 2008. 129. “Creating Quality Places: Making Housing Part of the Sustainability Solution.” Brooking Institution

Summit for American Prosperity, Washington, DC, June 2008. 130. “Building Strong Communities: Investment to Expand Enterprises and Create Jobs.” Harvard

Worklife Program conference on Investing to Build Strong and Sustainable Communities, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA, June 2008.

131. “Opportunities to Reduce Energy Use in the Building Sector.” Kresge Foundation. Troy, MI, May 2008.

132. “Growing Montana’s Workforce.” Governor’s Workforce Conference. Billings, MT, May 2008. 133. “A North American Perspective.” IPPR conference on Working Out of poverty: A Progressive

Labour Market. London, England, May 2008. 134. “Green Buildings.” Living Cities Green Day. Cleveland, OH, April 2008. 135. “Milwaukee Energy Efficiency.” University of Wisconsin-Madison Gaylord Nelson Institute

conference on “Sustaining Wisconsin’s Environment & Economy: Responding to Climate Change.” Madison, WI, April 2008.

136. “Strategic Planning for the Economy in Wisconsin: How’re We Doing?” WEA Trust. Madison, WI, April 2008.

137. “Energy Efficiency and Green Collar Jobs.” Green For All conference on “A Dream Reborn.” Memphis, TN, April 2008.

138. “Why Green Jobs Now?” Green For All conference on “A Dream Reborn.” Memphis, TN, April 2008.

139. “Green Jobs Community Initiative.” Mass. Power Shift conference, Boston, MA, April 2008. 140. “Creating Jobs through Energy Efficiency,” conference on “Good Jobs, Green Jobs.” Pittsburgh, PA,

March 2008. 141. “Strategies for Rebuilding the Heartland with Clean Energy and Efficiency,” conference on “Good

Jobs, Green Jobs.” Pittsburgh, PA, March 2008. 142. “Green Jobs: What’s Real and What’s Not.” 2008 Wisconsin Renewable Energy Summit.

Milwaukee, WI, March 2008.

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143. “Introduction to Transportation issues for Ohio.” CSI Strategy Academy, Columbus, OH, March 2008.

144. “Role of Labor/Management partnerships as leading this intermediary work.” Health Care Workforce/Workforce Investment Board Meeting. Los Angeles, CA, February 2008.

145. “Further Reflections from a National Perspective: Labor as a Driver of Green Jobs,” Chicago Building Trades Climate Action Summit. Chicago, IL, February 2008.

146. “Democracy in Wisconsin: Cleaning up our Act,” Wisconsin Academy of Science, Arts, and Letters. Madison, WI, February 2008.

147. “Green Jobs – A New Opportunity for Business and Workers,” Seattle Mayor’s Cabinet Retreat. Olympia, WA, February 2008.

148. “National Perspective,” Seattle Mayor’s Cabinet Retreat. Olympia, WA, February 2008. 149. “Regulating for Energy Efficiency,” Midwest Energy Efficiency Association “Midwest Energy

Solutions Conference: Leading the Way.” Chicago, IL, January 2008. 150. “New York’s Key Choices in Economic and Workforce Development.” CSI Strategy Academy,

New York, NY, December 2007. 151. “Colorado’s Key Choices in Economic and Workforce Development.” CSI Strategy Academy.

Denver, CO, December 2007. 152. “New Mexico’s Key Choices on Environmental Investing.” CSI Strategy Academy. Santa Fe, NM,

December 2007. 153. “Ohio’s Key Choices in Economic and Workforce Development,” CSI Strategy Academy.

Columbus, OH, December 2007. 154. “Inside Working America: Its Trajectory & Structure.” Working America Conference, Harvard Law

School. Cambridge, MA, November 2007. 155. “Building a 21st Century Economy in America’s Industrial Regions,” American Assembly. Hershey,

PA, November 2007. 156. “Growing Green Jobs,” PowerShift: A National Youth Summit to Solve the Climate Crisis. College

Park, MD, November 2007. 157. “What’s Great about CNT and What Might be Improved.” Center for Neighborhood Technology

2007 Board Retreat, Chicago, IL, October 2007. 158. “So What is to be Done?” Roosevelt Institutions Energy Conference. Madison, WI, October 2007. 159. “CSI and Iowa.” CSI (Center for State Innovation) Strategy Academy. Des Moines, IA, October

2007. 160. “Making it last: Building Progressive Movements into Local Institutions,” conference on “The High

Road Runs through the City. Albany, NY, September 2007. 161. “Is U.S. Manufacturing Toast and Should we Care?” EARN 10th Annual Conference. Minneapolis,

MN, September 2007. 162. “The National Agenda: Energy and Environment.” EARN 10th Annual Conference. Minneapolis,

MN, September 2007. 163. “Green Collar Jobs/Clean Energy Corps.” NYC Apollo Alliance. New York, NY, September 2007 164. “Elements of Green Jobs Corps/Clean Energy Corps at the Local Level,” Open Society Institute.

New York, NY, September 2007. 165. “Election 2008,” American Sociological Association Annual Meeting. New York, NY, August 2007. 166. “The Erosion and Rebirth of American Democracy,” American Sociological Association Annual

Meeting. New York, NY, August 2007. 167. “A Progressive Agenda for the States,” Take Back America Conference. Washington, DC, June

2007. 168. “Tough Choices or Tough Times.” Building Workforce Partnerships Conference. San Jose, CA, May

2007. 169. “Why not save the World? Politics, Climate and You,” St Thomas University. St. Paul, Minnesota,

April 2007.

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170. “How Global Warming Can Save Democracy,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Gaylord Nelson Institute Gaylord Nelson Lecture. Madison, WI, March 2007.

171. “Cows etc: How the University Can Help with Large Social Problems,” Wisconsin Department of Community Resource Development Annual Community Development Symposium. Madison, WI, March 2007.

172. “What NCP Should be Demanding in Policy,” New Cities Project Winter Meeting. Washington, DC, January 2007.

173. “Industry Strategies.” COWS/Brennan Center conference on “Industry Strategies.” New York, NY, January 2007.

174. “The Apollo Challenge: Energy for Labor?” Harvard Trade Union Program Forum. Cambridge, MA, January 2007.

175. “What Progressives Legislators Can Do in States,” Joint Senate and House Maine State Democratic Caucus. Augusta, ME, January 2007.

176. “Your Time in Now.” Center for Policy Alternatives. Summit on the States. Washington, DC, December 2006.

177. “Introducing the Commons Project,” Governors Breakfast Briefing. Washington, DC, December 2006.

178. “Why Unions need a State and Local Program.” Harvard Law School and American Rights at Work conference on “Forging a New Labor Policy for the 21st Century.” Cambridge, MA, December 2006.

179. “10th Anniversary Forum Discussion,” Open Society Institute. New York, NY, November 2006. 180. “Why Not Save the World: Politics, Climate, and You,” UN Day conference. Janesville, WI,

November 2006. 181. “Your Time is Now: Reforming Adult Education,” National Council for Continuing Education and

Training (NCCET). Milwaukee, WI, October 2006. 182. “Coalitions and Activism,” EARN 9th Annual Conference. St. Louis, September 2006. 183. “Metro Futures,” EARN 9th Annual Conference. St. Louis, September 2006. 184. “Apollo Alliance,” Latino Congreso. Los Angeles, CA, September 2006. 185. “Energy Futures,” Latino Congreso. Los Angeles, CA, September 2006. 186. “Reclaiming Our Future,” Sierra Student Coalition conference and Climate Challenge Summit.

Meriden, NH, August 2006. 187. “Workforce Partnerships,” NGA Center for Best Practices, National Association of State Liaisons

for Workforce Development Partnerships. Milwaukee, WI, August, 2006. 188. “Building Partnerships to Compete in a Global Economy,” California Federation of Labor, Building

Workforce Partnerships conference. San Diego, CA, July 2006. 189. “Apollo in the States,” Take Back America conference. Washington DC, June 2006. 190. “Energy Policy,” Schwartz Center for Economic Policy Analysis conference on “Public Investment

in the 21st Century.” New York City, New York, April 2006. 191. “Gravity’s Rainbow: How Democracy Can Win Under Globalization,” Minnesota Growth and

Justice. St. Paul, MN, March 2006. 192. “Democrats as Working Class Heroes,” Grassroots Northshore. Milwaukee, WI, March 2006. 193. “Why Not Save the World?” Campus Climate Challenge Midwest Leadership Conference. Madison,

WI, March 2006. 194. “Great Lakes Economic Initiative,” Brooking Institution Metropolitan Policy Program. Columbus,

OH, March 2006. 195. “Labor Coordination on a Global Scale,” Harvard Working Life Program conference on “Unions and

the Internet.” Cambridge, MA, February 2006. 196. “Organizing a High Road Economic Development Plan: Data and Resources,” New Cities Project.

Washington, DC, January 2006. 197. “Improving Energy Efficiency Standards,” Center for Policy Alternatives “2005 Summit on the

States.” Washington, DC, December 2005.

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198. “ACORN at 35: Past, Present, Future,” conference on “Researching ACORN: Past, Present, Future.” West Hartford, CT, December 2005.

199. “High Road Strategies for Economic Development: Expanding Economic Opportunity for Low-Income People,” Corporation for Enterprise Development and Ford Foundation. New York City, December 2005.

200. “Gravity’s Rainbow: How Democracy Can Win Under Globalization,” Cummings Foundation. New York City, December 2005.

201. “A Strategic Initiative on Corporations?” Corporate Ethics International. San Francisco, CA, November 2005.

202. “Rebuilding a More Just Economy,” ACORN Community Forum on Rebuilding New Orleans. Baton Rouge, LA, November 2005.

203. “Politics & Advocacy: The Status of the Progressive Agenda at the National, Regional and State level,” North Carolina Justice Center conference on “North Carolina Progress 2005.” Raleigh, NC, October 2005.

204. “Blue Sky Thinking for Blue Skies Ahead,” School District of South Milwaukee Discussion Series. South Milwaukee, WI, October 2005.

205. “The Use and Misuse of Cluster Analysis,” EARN 8th Annual Conference. Cleveland, OH, September 2005.

206. “Building Business Support for the High Road,” EARN 8th Annual Conference. Cleveland, OH, September 2005.

207. “A New Egalitarianism?” Institute for Human Sciences and Boston University conference on “Values and Social Policy.” Boston, MA, September 2005.

208. “Jobs, Wages and Growth: A Progressive Legislative Agenda,” Progressive Legislative Action Network conference on “Planning Progress 2005.” Seattle, WA, August 2005.

209. “The Apollo Alliance.” New Cities Project conference on “Building Competitive Advantage in Transportation and Energy.” Chicago, IL, June 2005.

210. “The Promise of Progressive Federalism,” Institute for Research on Poverty conference on “Making the Politics of Poverty and Inequality,” UW-Madison. Madison, WI, April 2005. With R.B. Freeman.

211. “Economic and Workforce Development,” New Cities Project and Johnson Foundation. Racine, WI, February 2005.

212. “More than Cosmetic Changes,” New York Law School conference on “Next Wave Organizing.” New York City, January 2005.

213. “State Energy Programs,” Conference on Policy Alternatives 2004 Summit on the States. Washington, DC, December 2004.

214. “Seizing the Opportunity in the States,” Conference on Policy Alternatives 2004 Summit on the States.” Washington, DC, December 2004.

215. “The Apollo Alliance.” ACORN Organizers Forum. New Orleans LA, December 2004. 216. “State Energy Policies for the 21st Century that Create Jobs,” EARN 7th Annual Conference.

Oakland CA, December 2004. 217. “A State Economic Agenda,” EARN 7th Annual Conference. Oakland CA, December 2004. 218. “Federal and other Challenges to High Road Regionalism,” High Road Economic and Workforce

Development conference. Washington, DC, November 2004. 219. “Winning in the States: Progressive State Collaboration Project,” Phoenix Project. New York, NY,

October 2004. 220. “Wisconsin’s Economy: How’re We Doing?,” Wisconsin Technical College System conference for

Wisconsin Administrators of Marketing and Business Occupations (WAMBO). Madison, WI, October 2004.

221. “The Apollo Alliance,” Solar Power 2004 Conference. San Francisco, CA, October 2004.

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222. “The Current Condition of the Wisconsin Economy: And What You Can Do About It” WATS (Wisconsin Association of Textile Services) Annual Conference. Lake Delavan, WI, September, 2004.

223. “Wisconsin’s Economic Future,” Wisconsin Public Power Inc. Annual Conference. Madison, WI, September 2004.

224. “Demographic, Social and Economic Factors Affecting Adult Basic Education Students in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin Technical College System – Adult Basic Education Deans and Community Based Organizations. Wausau, WI, August 2004.

225. “Tapping Labor's Capital: Pension and Investment Funds and Job Creation,” Boston Social Forum. Boston, MA, July 2004.

226. “Workers’ Empowerment and Workers’ Entitlement,” Boston Social Forum. Boston, MA, July 2004.

227. “Economic Opportunities in Wisconsin: And Why We’re Not Reaching Them,” WAPA (Wisconsin Chapter of the American Planning Association) 2004 Spring Conference. Madison, WI, June 2004.

228. “Preparing for Life After Oil,” State Board of the Wisconsin Technical College System. Madison, WI, May 2004.

229. “Taxation in Wisconsin ‘Where’s the Money Going’,” Wisconsin Council of Churches Legislative Issues Briefing Day. Sun Prairie, WI, May 2004.

230. “Wisconsin’s Federal Funding: What Might be Improved?,” Competitive Wisconsin. Milwaukee, WI, May 2004.

231. “Free Trade and Fair Trade,” LaCrosse Area Development Corporation. LaCrosse, WI, April 2004. 232. “Toward a New Egalitarianism: Reconstructing the Welfare State,” Institute for Human Sciences.

Vienna, AT, March 2004. 233. “New Approaches to Governance in EU Europe.” Madison, WI, October 2003. 234. “Raising Labor,” California Union Leadership School. Ansilomar, CA, September 2003. 235. “What to Expect of the WI Economic Growth Council.” Jobs With a Future (JWF) 1st Annual

Summit, “Advancing the Vision.” Madison, WI, September 2003. 236. “Emerging Elements of a Progressive Infrastructure in the States: At Last, Maybe.” EARN 6th

Annual Conference, Pittsburgh, September 2003. 237. “Understanding Apollo.” Cummings Foundation, New York City, NY, September 2003. 238. “Building A Counter to ALEC,” Center for Policy Alternative, Washington, DC, August 2003. 239. “Moving Regionalism from Theory to Practice.” Ford Foundation conference on “The Future of

Economic Development.” New York City, July 2003. 240. “An Agenda for Labor Law & Related Research.” Columbia University/University of London Labor

and Employment Law Group, London, UK, July 2003. 241. “A Regional Solution for Wisconsin.” Wisconsin Department of Revenue, Madison, WI, June 2003.

With Ed Huck. 242. “A Research Agenda on Progressive Devolution.” Institute on Labor and Employment, University of

California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, June 2003. 243. “Integrating Multiple Engagement Strategies.” Conference on “Practical Voter Engagement Projects

and Capacities,” Washington DC, 2003. 244. “Recent Progressive Progress in the States.” Institute for America’s Future conference “Take Back

America,” Washington, DC, June 2003. 245. “What’s Possible at the State Level.” California Labor Federation conference on “Building

Workforce Partnerships 2003,” San Francisco, CA, May 2003. 246. “How To Measure Policy For Low Wage Workers.” Conference on “Honoring Work in Wisconsin,”

Madison Area Technical College, May 2003. 247. “Strategies for Labor 2.” Institute on Labor and Employment, University of California Los Angeles,

April 2003. 248. “Labor and Economic Development.” UCLA Labor Center, Los Angeles, CA, April 2003.

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249. “Strategies for Labor 1.” Institute on Labor and Employment, University of California-Berkeley, Berkeley, CA, April 2003.

250. “Labor Under the ‘War of Terrorism’.” Ray Marshall Center conference on “The Future of Organized Labor: Restoring the Balance in a Market Economy,” Washington, DC, April 2003.

251. “Pension Funds and Globalization: Progressive Strategies for Change.” Socialist Scholars Conference, Cooper Union, New York City, March 2003.

252. “Choices for Wisconsin.” WI AFL-CIO Community Services & Education Conference, Wisconsin Rapids, WI, March 2003.

253. “Progressive Media: What Should We Be Doing?” Mailman Conference Center, Santa Barbara, CA, February 2003.

254. “Globalization and Labor.” Yale Law School, New Haven, CT, February 2003. 255. “Building Infrastructure.” Progressive Donor Network, Washington, DC, February 2003. 256. “State Strategies for Labor.” International Association of Machinists conference on “The Next North

American Expansion: An IAM Conference for Exploring Public Policy Options for Job Creation,” Upper Marlboro, MD, January 2003.

257. “What You Should Be Doing For the Cities.” Ford Foundation, New York City, December 2002. 258. “Building the High Road in States.” Center for Policy Alternatives “Summit on the States,”

Washington, DC, November 2002. 259. “How to Think About Economic Development.” Kentuckians for Economic Justice conference on

“Economic Development in Kentucky: New Visions, New Voices.” Morehead, KY, November 2002.

260. “After Engagement: The Problem with Activist Organization.” Campaign for America’s Future/CTSG conference on “The Future of Political Engagement,” Washington DC, November 2002.

261. “State Policy Choices.” Wisconsin Alliance of Cities, Appleton WI, November 2002. 262. “In the Red: How to Think About the State Budget Mess.” Forum sponsored by the

Intergovernmental Cooperation Council of Milwaukee County, Southeaster Municipal Executives (SEME), Mid-Moraine Group of Washington and Ozaukee Counties, Waukesha Municipal Executives, Milwaukee WI, October 2002.

263. “State Budget Choices.” Wisconsin League of Municipalities, Madison, WI, October 2002. 264. “Engendering Democracy.” League of Women Voters of Wisconsin Issues Briefing 2002, Fond du

Lac, WI, September 2002. 265. “Developing Local Program.” AFL-CIO Department of Field Mobilization Conference on

“Connecting Politics to Organizing,” Washington DC, September 2002. 266. “Wisconsin Choices.” Wisconsin League of Municipalities Chief Executives Workshop,

Rhinelander, WI, August 2002. 267. “Thinking About Shared Revenue.” Wisconsin Alliance of Cities, August 2002. 268. “Current and Future Status of Progressive Policy in the Midwest.” Center for Policy Alternatives’ 2nd

annual Midwest Regional Meeting, Milwaukee, WI, August 2002. 269. “Generalizing the High Road.” California Federation of Labor 10th Annual Building Partners

Conference, Los Angeles, June 2002. 270. “Wisconsin Choices.” Madison Kiwanis, Madison WI, June 2002. 271. “Covering Sprawl.” Association of Alternative Newsweeklies 25th Annual Conference, Madison WI,

May 2002. 272. “Establishing a Right to Organize.” Service Employees International Union, Washington DC, May

2002. 273. “The Challenge: Building a High Road Economy,” COWS, Madison Institute, and Institute for

Wisconsin’s Future conference on Underfunding, A Threat to our Civil Society: A Symposium on Increasing Tax Yield and Tax Equity. Madison WI, May 2002.

274. “Wisconsin Choices,” Annual Fox River Valley Central Labor Council Labor Management Dinner, Darboy, WI, May 2002.

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275. “Wages and the Housing Equation,” Hudson Institute, WISCAP, Wisconsin Council on Children and Families, and Wisconsin Partnership for Housing Development conference on Making Housing Work For Working Families. Milwaukee WI, April 2002.

276. “How to Reinvent Civic Engagement,” New Patriotism Project. Madison WI, April 2002. 277. “Lessons from Wisconsin.” American Assembly conference on Workforce Intermediaries: Investing

in America’s Workforce. New York City, April 2002. 278. “Choices Facing Wisconsin,” AFSCME Council 40 Annual Convention. Appleton WI, April 2002. 279. “Next Steps,” Campaign for America’s Future and Institute for American’s Future conference on

Reclaiming America, Washington D.C., April 2002. . 280. “Labor in the New Economy: What Should You Be Doing?” Service Employees International

Midwest Leadership Conference. Cleveland, April 2002. 281. “Choices Facing Wisconsin,” 3rd Congressional District Democratic Party. Viroqua WI, March 2002. 282. “Economic Development: Where We Are Going,” EARN conference on Developing a High Road

Economic Development Agenda. Austin TX, March 2002. 283. “The Future of Healthcare Reform,” ABC for Health Care conference on Health Care Access and

Reform. Madison WI, March 2002. 284. “Sustaining Wisconsin,” Stevens Point Rotary. Stevens Point, WI, February 2002. 285. “Future Directions for the University,” University of Wisconsin Economic Summit. Madison,

January 2002. 286. “How to Get More Effective,” Policy Matters Board Retreat. Cleveland, OH. February 2002. 287. “Choices for Wisconsin,” Oshkosh Rotary. Oshkosh WI, January 2002. 288. “Sustaining Wisconsin,” Kenosha Rotary. Kenosha WI, December 2001. 289. “Choices for Wisconsin,” Whitewater Rotary. Whitewater WI, December 2001. 290. “What Your Program Should Be,” Working Families Party Strategic Retreat. Albany, New York,

November 2001. 291. “Whose Vote Counts?” Shaking the Foundations conference, Stanford Law School. Palo Alto CA,

November 2001. 292. “Lawyers and Organizing,” Shaking the Foundations conference, Stanford Law School. Palo Alto

CA, November 2001 293. “Addressing the Needs of Low-Income Working Families,” National Governors Association.

Washington, D.C., October 2001 294. “What’s Happening With the Economy and What Does it Mean for State Research?,” EARN 4th

Annual Conference. Chicago, October 2001. 295. “Models of Economic Development,” EARN 4th Annual Conference. Chicago, October 2001. 296. “Sectoral Strategies of Economic Development,” EARN 4th Annual Conference. Chicago, October

2001. 297. “The Forgotten Majority,” Center for Working Class Studies, University of Illinois-Chicago Circle.

Chicago, October 2001. 298. “Employee Accountability and Ethics,” DOT Senior Manager’s Meeting. Madison, September 2001. 299. “Cloward and Voting,” Celebration of Richard Cloward, CUNY. New York, September 2001. 300. “Tools and Techniques for Developing Regional Workforce Development Strategies,” Annie E.

Casey Foundation Jobs Initiative Showcase Conference. Baltimore, September 2001. 301. “What We Were About in Milwaukee,” Casey Jobs Initiative Leaders’ Panel, Annie E. Casey

Foundation Jobs Initiative Showcase Conference. Baltimore, September 2001. 302. “The Next Step: After Welfare Reform,” National Health Policy Forum Conference. Milwaukee,

August 2001. 303. “Teaching the High Road,” AFL-CIO. Washington, D.C., July 2001. 304. “Emerging Issues in Worker Benefits,” Pension Research Council Conference on “Benefits for the

Workplace of Tomorrow,” Wharton School of Finance, University of Pennsylvania. Philadelphia, May 2001.

305. “High-Road Regional Development,” University of Oregon. Eugene, OR, May 2001.

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306. “Moving Workers from Poverty,” Making the New Economy Work for Working Families 2001 Annual Conference. San Jose, CA, April 2001.

307. “Beyond Clients and States: Public-Interest Law and Social Activism,” Yale Law School Tercentennial Conference on “Dissolving Boundaries: Law, Law Jobs, and the Role of Law Schools in the New Century.” New Haven, April 2001.

308. “Sustaining Wisconsin,” PLATO. Madison, WI, April 2001. 309. “Justice Scalia’s Constitution,” Marquette University Law School. Milwaukee, WI, March 2001. 310. “Workforce Development Needs, and Illusions,” State of Wisconsin Department of Workforce

Development “Dialogue on Wisconsin’s Economy.” Madison, WI, March 2001. 311. “Policy Research Models,” University of California Center on Labor and the Economy Conference

on “The New Economy and Labor Responses.” Los Angeles, CA, March 2001. 312. “The New Economy: Opportunities and Challenges,” University of California Center on Labor and

the Economy Conference on “The New Economy and Labor Responses.” Los Angeles, CA, March 2001.

313. “The Future of Labor Politics,” Berkeley Journal of Labor and Employment Law and La Raza Law Journal conference on “The Changing Face of Labor: Critical Labor, Immigration, and Employment Issues in the New Global Economy.” Berkeley, CA, February 2001.

314. “Building Technical Assistance to High Road Partnerships,” U.S. Department of Labor., Washington DC, December 2000.

315. “Navigating the New Economy: Sectoral Consortia, Career Ladders, and Other Good Stuff,” Greater Cleveland Growth Association. Cleveland, OH, November 2000.

316. “Democrats and the Future,” Dane County Democratic Party. Madison, WI, November 2000. 317. “Looking to the Future,” EARN 3rd Annual Conference. Chicago, November 2000. 318. “After the Keynesian Welfare State: Is There a New Egalitarianism?” WAGENET conference on

“The Future of the Welfare State.” Madison WI, November 2000. 319. “What Do Workers Want?,” The University of Wisconsin-Madison Office of Human Resource

Development Manager/Supervisor conference on “Promoting Effective Workplace Dynamics.” Madison, WI, October 2000.

320. “What Workers Want,” Wisconsin Industrial Relations Research Association Luncheon. Milwaukee WI, October 2000.

321. “Can Third Parties Transform the Two-Party System?” CUNY Graduate Center conference on “Independent Politics in a Global World.” New York, NY, October 2000.

322. “Career Pathways and the Emerging Economy,” National Network for Sector Practitioners conference on “Moving On Up: Building Career Paths in High-Wage and Low-Wage Sectors.” Washington DC, October 2000.

323. “Regional Skills Partnerships: Obstacles & Opportunities,” U.S Department of Labor conference on “Regional Skills Alliances.” Greensboro, NC, August 2000.

324. “Metroperspectives & Jobs: Perspectives on Economic Development,” Future 2000. Chicago IL, August 2000.

325. “Democracy 21: Federalism in the 21st Century,” Demos Workshop. New York, NY, July 2000. 326. “Wisconsin’s Economic Policy Choices,” Rotary Club of Madison. Madison WI, July 2000. 327. “The Basics of Community Audits: What You Should Look Out For and What We Have to Look

Forward To,” U.S Department of Labor Community Audit Expert Panel. Washington DC, June 2000.

328. “What Workers Want: Worker Attitudes and NLRB Practice,” National Labor Relations Board Headquarters Non-Supervisory Staff Attorneys Professional Development Conference. Washington D.C., June 2000.

329. “Made in the USA: Transforming Low Road Motivations into High Road Possibilities,” Working for America Institute conference on “Good Jobs and Strong Communities: Tools for Building the High Road.” New York, NY, May 2000.

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330. “The Membership Theory of Poverty: The Role of Group Affiliations in Determining Socioeconomic Outcomes,” University of Wisconsin-Madison’s Institute for Research on Poverty conference on “Understanding Poverty in America: Progress and Problems.” Madison WI, May 2000. Chair.

331. “Europeanization through Multilevel Governance: Local Labor Market Strategies and Regional Economic Development in the U.S.,” University of Wisconsin-Madison European Union Center conference on “Work, Welfare, and Governance in Europe and the U.S.: A Transatlantic Dialogue.” Madison WI, April 2000. With L. Dresser.

332. “What Workers Want? Reflections of the Implications of the Freeman & Rogers Study,” University of Pennsylvania Law School Journal of Labor and Employment Law Symposium. Philadelphia, PA, April 2000.

333. “The American Political Process in Transformation: Are We in Need of a Change?” American University Washington College of Law. Washington D.C., April 2000.

334. “Wisconsin Sectoral Strategies,” AFL-CIO National Conference. Milwaukee WI, April 2000. 335. “What Workers Want: Findings from the National Worker Representation and Participation Study,”

Flyway Area Labor-Management Council Conference. Lomira, WI, March 2000. 336. “What Workers Want: Findings from the National Worker Representation and Participation Study,”

Dubuque Area Labor-Management Council Conference. Dubuque, IA, March 2000. 337. “Associational Innovation in the U.S.: Recent Experiments in Labor Market Administrative

Reform,” EUREXTER. Berlin, Germany, February 2000. 338. “How to Grow the Central City,” Advancement Project. Los Angeles, CA, December 1999. 339. “Strategies for Sustainable Development,” Blue Mountain Center. Blue Mountain, NY, October

1999. 340. “Labor and Skills Standards: What are the Questions, and What are Some Answers?” AFL-CIO

Annual Convention. Los Angeles, CA, October 1999. 341. “How to Build High Road Partnerships,” AFL-CIO Annual Convention. Los Angeles, CA, October

1999. 342. “Here and There, Then and Now: Regionalism in the U.S. and Western Europe,” WAGE (Work and

Global Economy” conference on “Regional Governance and Innovation.” Madison, WI, October 1999.

343. “What Is To Be Done? Strategic Choices for EARN,” EARN 2nd Annual Conference. Chicago, October 1999.

344. “Regional Economic Development,” Economic Analysis and Research Network (EARN) 2nd Annual Conference. Chicago, October 1999.

345. “High Road Regional Partnerships: What’s Real and What’s Not,” AFL-CIO. Washington, DC, September 1999.

346. “Independent Politics in the US: The Bad News and The Good,” American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Atlanta, GA, September 1999.

347. “Metro Perspectives & Jobs: Perspectives on Economic Development,” Future 2000. Fort Lauderdale, FL, August 1999.

348. “From the Family Wage to the Social Wage: Labor, Gender, and the Welfare State,” American Sociological Association 94th Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL, August 1999.

349. “Organized Labor and Civil Society in the U.S.,” Georgetown University conference on “U.S. Civil Society.” Washington, DC, June 1999.

350. “The New Metro Synthesis on Development,” Policy Link. Oakland, CA, June 1999. 351. “The State of Working Wisconsin,” The Kiwanis Club of Downtown Madison. Madison, WI, April

1999. 352. “Understanding Social Movements,” National Bureau of Economic Research conference on

“Emerging Labor Market Institutions for the 21st Century.” Washington, D.C., May 1999. 353. “What Does the Research Tell U.S. about Labor’s Capital?” Heartland Labor Capital Conference.

Washington, DC, April 1999.

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354. “Using Labor’s Capital Effectively,” Fifth Annual David N. Dinkins Leadership and Public Policy Forum on “Labor and Community Building.” New York, NY, April 1999.

355. “What Workers Want: Voice, Representation, and Power in the American Workplace,” Columbia University Program in Economic Policy Management and School of International and Public Affairs conference on “Democracy, Participation, and Economic Development.” New York, NY, April 1999.

356. “What’s Worth Worrying About in the New Economy, and What is Not,” Friedrich-Ebert Stiftung, Hans Böckler Stiftung, and U.S. Embassy conference on “Die Zukunft der Arbeitsgesellschaft.” Berlin, Germany, April 1999.

357. “Living Standards of Wisconsin Workers & the Milwaukee Jobs Initiative,” Wisconsin State Legislature. Madison, WI, March 1999.

358. “After Social Democracy,” South African Congress of Textile Workers Unions. Capetown, South Africa, February 1999.

359. “Regional Strategies for Economic Development,” University of the Witwatersrand. Johannesburg, South Africa, February 1999.

360. “The ‘New Voices’ at the AFL-CIO,” South Africa Labor Bulletin. Johannesburg, South Africa, February 1999.

361. “The Need for State-Based Policy Institutes,” MacArthur Foundation. Chicago, IL, February 1999. With L. Dresser.

362. “The State of Working Wisconsin,” University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire. Eau Claire, WI, November 1998. With L. Dresser.

363. “Working Families Today: Winners and Losers in the Wisconsin Economy,” Institute for Wisconsin's Future. Milwaukee, WI, November 1998.

364. “The State of Working Wisconsin,” SEIU District 1199 Representative Assembly. Madison, WI, October 1998.

365. “Rebuilding Progressive Electoral Power,” In These Times conference on “Back to Basics.” Chicago, IL, October 1998.

366. “Revitalizing Our Cities,” In These Times conference on “Back to Basics.” Chicago, IL, October, 1998

367. “Metropolitics,” In These Times conference on “Back to Basics.” Chicago, IL, October 1998. 368. “A Strategy for Labor,” The First Annual Tucson Teach-In. Tucson, AZ, September 1998. 369. “Progressives and Electoral Politics,” Coalition Collaborative. Atlanta, GA, June 1998. 370. “Building Metro Coalitions for Sustainable Development,” Coalition Collaborative. Atlanta, GA,

June 1998 371. “The Opportunity and Challenge of Metro Unionism,” COWS, University of Washington Labor

Studies Program, and AFL-CIO Department of Field Mobilization conference on “Metro Unionism.” Seattle, WA, June 1998.

372. “Regional Cooperation for Better Jobs Policy,” Annie E. Casey Jobs Initiative conference on “Unions, Manufacturing and the Central City Worker.” Milwaukee, WI, June 1998.

373. “American Manufacturing: Trends, Problems, and Opportunities,” Annie E. Casey Jobs Initiative conference on “Unions, Manufacturing and the Central City Worker.” Milwaukee, WI, June 1998.

374. “Shared Capitalism,” Milken Institute conference on “Democratizing Capital.” Los Angeles, CA, June 1998.

375. “Campaign for a Sustainable Milwaukee: Comprehensive Strategies for Family Supporting Jobs,” Sustainable America General Assembly. Portland, OR, May 1998.

376. “Community Career Ladders in Dane County, WI,” Boston Workforce Development Coalition. Boston, MA, May 1998.

377. “Trends in American Politics,” People for the American Way conference on “Threats to Democracy.” Washington, D.C., May 1998.

378. “Democracy Now,” Alverno College conference on “Democracy in Our Lives: Promises and Practices.” Milwaukee, WI, April 1998.

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379. “Building Metropolitan Coalitions,” COWS, Economic Policy Institute, and Johnson Foundation conference on “Building a Progressive Policy and Research Infrastructure,” Racine, April 1998.

380. “Saving America’s Cities,” MacArthur Fellows Reunion. Chicago, IL, March 1998. 381. “Revitalizing Cities,” University of Minnesota. Minneapolis, MN, March 1998. 382. “Devolution and Capacity Building at the State and Regional Levels,” Ford Foundation. New York,

NY, January 1998. 383. “Metro Futures: Repealing the Iron Law of Urban Decay,” Open Society Institute. New York, NY,

January 1998. 384. “The Impact of Welfare Reform on Women and Children,” 6th Annual Women and Substance Abuse

National Conference on “Substance Abuse Treatment for Women, Children, and Their Families.” Madison, WI, 1997.

385. “Building Jobs with a Future in Dane Country,” University of Wisconsin Town & Gown. Madison, WI, November 1997.

386. “Metropolitan Perspectives on Economic Development,” Neighborhood Funders Group Annual Conference. New York, NY, October 1997.

387. “Involving the Corporate Sector,” Neighborhood Funders Group Annual Conference. New York, NY, October 1997.

388. “What do Workers Want? Voice, Power and Representation in the American Workplace,” Cornell University Law School. Ithaca, NY, October 1997.

389. “What do Workers Want? Findings of the ‘Worker Representation and Participation Survey,’” Cornell University School of Industrial and Labor Relation. Ithaca, NY, October 1997.

390. “What do Workers Want? Voice, Power, and Representation in the American Workplace,” Swarthmore College Cooper Committee Lecture. Swarthmore, PA, September 1997.

391. “Competitive Advantage and Metropolitan Economic Development,” Frank Hawkins Kenan Institute of Private Enterprise workshop, University of North Carolina. Chapel Hill, NC, September 1997.

392. “Where is Your Money and Where Could it Be?” University of California Institute of Industrial Relations conference on “High Performance Pensions: Multi-Employer Plans and the Challenges of Falling Pension Coverage and Retirement Insecurity.” Berkeley, CA, September 1997.

393. “High Road Regional Partnerships,” Robert Bosch Foundation Scholars Program in Comparative Public Policy and Comparative Institutions Book Preparation Workshop. Washington, D.C., August 1997.

394. “Elections and the Economy: The New Economics of Voting,” 93rd American Political Science Association Annual Convention. Washington, D.C., August 1997. With R. Teixeira.

395. “Almost Two Years and Counting...The New AFL-CIO,” 93rd American Political Science Association Annual Convention. Washington, D.C., August 1997.

396. “Political Parties under the Constitution,” 93rd American Political Science Association Annual Convention. Washington, D.C., August 1997.

397. “Bad News and What To Do About It,” Communications Workers of America. Buffalo, NY, July 1997.

398. “Introduction to Sustainable Development,” State University of New York at Buffalo. Buffalo, NY, July 1997.

399. “Model Deutschland in the 1990’s: Problems and Prospects,” Wissenschaftszentrum. Berlin, DE, June 1997.

400. “High Road Regional Partnerships: The Next Step in Labor Market Reform?” UCLA Industrial Cluster Conference. Los Angeles, CA, June 1997.

401. “Employees as Stakeholders in the American Corporation,” New York University Law School. New York, NY, May 1997.

402. “Rebuilding Job Access and Career Advancement Systems in the New Economy,” W.T. Grant Foundation and the Institute on Education and the Economy conference on “The Emerging Post-Industrial Market.” New York, NY, May 1997. With L. Dresser.

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403. “How Do We Get Where We Want to Go?” University of Washington conference on “The Future of Labor.” Seattle, WA, May 1997.

404. “Strategic Dialogues on Local/National Democracy,” National Center for Economic and Security Alternatives. Washington, DC, May 1997.

405. “Sectoral Initiatives to Improve Labor Market Access and Advancement: Lessons from the Field,” Prospects for Training Reform, Madison, WI, May 1997. With L. Dresser.

406. “National Strategies,” MacArthur Consortium on International Peace and Cooperation at the International Institute conference on “Labor and Social Justice in the Global Economy,” Madison, April 1997.

407. “Sectoral Strategies of Labor Market Reform: Emerging Evidence from the U.S,” European Union conference on “Knowledge at Work: Knowledge Production, Dissemination, and Innovation for Business and the Labour Market.” Amsterdam, NL, April 1997. With L. Dresser.

408. “The Milwaukee Jobs Initiative: Connecting Central City Residents to Jobs,” Institute for Research on Poverty seminar on “Research in Race and Ethnic Studies.” Madison, April 1997. With L. Dresser.

409. “Progressive Electoral Politics,” Socialist Scholars Conference, New York, March 1997. 410. “What’s Next? Building a Progressive Politics that Actually Wins,” First Unitarian Society.

Madison, March 1997. 411. “New Strategies for the Labor Movement,” 20th Century Fund Taskforce on the Future of the

American Labor Movement, Washington, D.C., March 1997. 412. “Metro Futures: A Strategy for Rebuilding America’s Cities,” University of Montana. Missoula,

March 1997. 413. “Sectoral Training Consortia: A Model of Sustainable Development,” Sustainable America General

Assembly. Atlanta, March 1997. 414. “Jobs, Labor Relations and Social Security: Can Germany Learn from the Guidelines Developed by

COWS?” Max-Kade-Institute, Madison, February 1997. 415. “COWS,” University of Wisconsin–Madison Max-Kade-Institute. Madison, WI, February 1997. 416. “Fusion,” AFL-CIO Political Directors Meeting. Los Angeles, CA, February 1997. 417. “Jobs and Economic Development: Strategies and Practices,” Russell Sage Foundation. New York,

NY, January 1997. 418. “Elements of a Winning Campaign: Research, Polling, and Message Development; Organizing and

Mobilizing Working Families; and Targeting the Opposition,” AFL-CIO Living Wage Conference. Washington, D.C., January 1997.

419. “Milwaukee Jobs Initiative: Connecting Central City Workers with Metro Jobs,” Industrial Relations Research Association, Madison, January 1997. With L. Dresser.

420. “Is There a Progressive Future for American Politics?” Harvard University. Cambridge, MA, December 1996.

421. “Building Community Career Ladders,” Regional Technology Strategies and Corporation for Business, Work, and Learning conference on “Building Community Career Ladders.” Cambridge, MA, December 1996, With L. Dresser.

422. “Labor and Economic Development,” HRDI (Human Resources Development Institute) Pre-Conference. San Francisco, CA, December 1996.

423. “How to Think about ‘High-Road’ Regional Economic Development,” National Planning Association. Washington, D.C., November 1996.

424. “The Milwaukee Jobs Initiative: Why Business Should Support It,” Keynes Group. Madison, WI, November 1996.

425. “Trends in Metro Manufacturing,” First Occasional Conference on Small Manufacturer Performance. New York, NY, November 1996.

426. “Labor and the Academy,” University of Minnesota. Minneapolis, MN, November 1996. 427. “After November: Toward a Winning Progressive Strategy,” Wesleyan University. Middletown, CT,

October 1996.

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428. “The Election and Beyond,” MacArthur Foundation Fellows Meeting. Chicago, IL, October 1996. 429. “Globalization and the American Standard of Living,” Columbia University Teach-In, “The Fight

for America's Future.” New York, NY, October 1996. 430. “The Incorporation of America,” Columbia University Teach-In, “The Fight For America’s Future.”

New York, NY, October 1996. 431. “The State of Working Wisconsin: What Labor Should Be Doing About It,” Wisconsin State AFL-

CIO Annual Convention. Green Bay, WI, October 1996. With L. Dresser. 432. “Wage Trends and Modernization Strategies,” Wisconsin Department of Administration. Madison,

WI, September 1996. 433. “Community Career Ladders,” Madison Area Quality Improvement Network. Madison, September

1996. With L. Dresser. 434. “Labor and Politics in 1996 and Beyond,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Industrial Relations

Research Institute Alumni Dinner. Madison, WI, September 1996. 435. “Building a New Progressive Movement,” Keystone Research Center Conference on “Is There a

Better Way? The Future of Work, Education, and Community in Pennsylvania.” Lancaster, PA, September 1996.

436. “What is to Be Done?: Toward a New Egalitarian Politics,” 92nd American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. San Francisco, CA, August 1996.

437. “Property Rights, Inequality, and Economic Performance,” 92nd American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. San Francisco, CA, August 1996.

438. “The Changing Workforce and Union Response,” 45th ALRA (Association of Labor Relations Agencies) Conference. Ottawa, CA, July 1996.

439. “The Future of Work: Prospects for the Poor in Advanced Economies,” Rockefeller Foundation. Bellagio, IT, July 1996.

440. “Unions and Economic Development: The Role of the Central Labor Council,” National Labor Council Conference, AFL-CIO. Denver, CO, July 1996.

441. “The Debate About Big Government in the United States,” Symposium on Science, Reason, and Modern Democracy conference on “The Question of 'Big Government'.” Prague, CZ, June 1996.

442. “What Do Workers Want: Findings of the Worker Representation and Participation Survey,” National Center for the Study of Collective Bargaining in Higher Education and the Professions. New York, NY, April 1996.

443. “Everything that Moves: Leverage, Critical Mass, Union Organizing in Political Space,” AFL-CIO/Cornell University conference on “New Strategies of Union Organizing.” Washington, D.C., April 1996.

444. “New Strategies for Regional Economic Development,” University of Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh, PA, April 1996.

445. “Emerging Workforce and Workplace Issues,” South Central Iowa Federation of Labor conference on “Breaking the Cycle, Changing the System.” Des Moines, IA, March 1996.

446. “What’s Next? Building a Progressive Politics that Actually Wins,” First Unitarian Society. Madison, WI, March 1996.

447. “Building the Institutional Supports for Workplace Change and Skill Development,” 48th Annual Meeting of the Industrial Relations Research Association. Madison, WI, March 1996.

448. “Jobs, Labor Relations, and Social Security: Can Germany Learn from the Guidelines Developed by COWS?” University of Wisconsin-Madison Max-Kade-Institute. Madison, WI, February 1996.

449. “New Strategies for Labor,” WEAC UniServe Conference. Madison, WI, February 1996. 450. “What We Should Want Out of Campaign Finance Reform, And How to Get It,” Center for a New

Democracy/Franklin Pierce Law School conference on “Money and Politics.” Concord, NH, January 1996.

451. “How to Think About Regional Economies,” Annie E. Casey Foundation. Baltimore, MD, December 1995.

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452. “The Responsibility of Intellectuals,” University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. Milwaukee, WI, December 1995.

453. “Worker Demand for Voice: Results of the WRPS,” Chicago Industrial Relations Research Association. Chicago, IL, November 1995.

454. “Should Cities Be Saved and If So How?” National Housing Conference. Chicago, IL, November 1995.

455. “New American Politics,” Midwest Students Conference. Madison, WI, October 1995. 456. “New Strategies for Labor,” Communications Workers of America. Atlantic City, NJ, September

1995. 457. “Economic Development in the Context of Community Needs,” Rockefeller Foundation and

Milwaukee Foundation. Milwaukee, WI, September 1995. 458. “The Crisis of Labor and the State,” American Political Science Association 91st Annual Meeting,

Chicago, IL, September 1995. 459. “Outside In: Progressives in Politics,” American Political Science Association 91st Annual Meeting.

Chicago, IL, August 1995. 460. “Economic Analysis,” Sustainable America, Madison, WI, July 1995. 461. “Rebuilding America's Cities,” Boston Freedom Summer. Boston, MA, July 1995. 462. “The Future of Worker-Management Relations: New Directions in Law and Practice,” New York

University’s 48th National Conference on Labor. New York, NY, May 1995. 463. “Labor Law Reform: Where Does the Labor Movement Go From Here?” University of Wisconsin-

Madison Havens Center. Madison, WI, May 1995. 464. “After Liberalism: Post-Contract Politics in America,” University of Minnesota. Minneapolis, MN,

April 1995. 465. “What Do Workers Want?” Secretary of Labor's Task Force on Excellence in State and Local

Government Through Labor-Management Cooperation. Washington, D.C., March 1995. 466. “Career Ladder Models, Best Practices, and Jobs for the Future,” Jobs with a Future Work Group.

Madison, WI, March 1995. 467. “A Strategy for Labor,” University of Iowa, February 1995. 468. “Regional Industrial Policy,” National Commission for Economic Conversion and Disarmament,

Conference on “Jobs, Conversion, and Sustainability.” Washington, D.C., January 1995. 469. “A Strategy for Labor,” Midwest Center for Labor Research. Chicago, IL, January 1995. 470. “The Worker Representation and Participation Survey: Preliminary Findings,” 47th Annual Meeting

of the Industrial Relations Research Association. Washington, D.C., January 1995. With R.B. Freeman.

471. “Building a Progressive Movement,” U.S. PIRG Annual Meeting. Denver, CO, December 1994. 472. “Early Findings of the Worker Representation and Participation Survey,” AFL-CIO and U.S.

Department of Labor. Washington, D.C., December 1994. 473. “Rebuilding Milwaukee from the Ground Up,” Sustainable Milwaukee Community Congress.

Milwaukee, WI, October 1994. 474. “It’s Not Just About Consumption,” Australian Consumers Federation. Melbourne, Sydney, and

Canberra, AU, October 1994. 475. “Solidarity, Democracy, Association,” 16th World Congress of the International Political Science

Association. Berlin, DE, August 1994. 476. “Poverty, Inequality, and the Low-Wage Labor Market,” Wisconsin State Legislature. Madison, WI,

August 1994. 477. “How Divided Progressives Might Unite,” Highlander Center. New Market, TN, May 1994. 478. “Reforming U.S. Labor Relations: What We Really Need to Make this System Work,” 27th Annual

Pacific Coast Labor Law Conference. Seattle, WA, May 1994. 479. “My Utopia or Yours? Comments on A Future for Socialism,” University of Wisconsin-Madison

Havens Center conference on “The Future of Socialism.” Madison, WI, May 1994.

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480. “What's Left and What's To Be Done With It,” Manhattan Alliance for Peace and Justice. Manhattan, KS, April 1994.

481. “How to Think About Manufacturing Modernization,” Industrial Union Department, AFL-CIO. Washington, D.C., April 1994.

482. “What Does Democracy Require Today?” Industrial Areas Foundation Training Conference. Austin, TX, March 1994.

483. “The Tasks of Labor Law Reform,” University of Miami Law School. Coral Gables, FL, February 1994.

484. “Reforming U.S. Labor Relations,” MIT Sloan School Seminar on Industrial Relations. Cambridge, February 1994.

485. “What You Should Do About 8(a)2,” Commission on the Future of Labor/Management Relations. Washington, D.C., January 1994.

486. “'School-To-Work' in Context: Current Labor Market Trends,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Center on Education and Work conference on “Tech Prep, Apprenticeship, and Workplace Education: Connecting with Business and Industry.” Madison, WI, January 1994.

487. “Regional Modernization Efforts: The Role of Labor,” conference on “National Industrial Policy.” Washington, D.C., January 1994.

488. “The Wisconsin Regional Training Partnership: A National Model for Regional Modernization Efforts?” Industrial Relations Research Association, 46th Annual Meeting. Boston, MA, January 1994.

489. “What Labor Law Reform is Needed,” AFL-CIO Committee on the Evolution of Work. Williamsburg, VA, December 1993.

490. “The Politics of Local Economic Development,” Center for Neighborhood Technology conference on “Jobs and the Environment.” Chicago, IL, December 1993.

491. “Kill the King: Cyclical Patterns in Computer Industry Litigation,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Institute for Legal Studies conference on “Changing Patterns of Business Disputing.” Madison, WI, November 1993. With M. Zeidenberg.

492. “'The More Things Change ...': Business Litigation and Governance in the American Automobile Industry,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Institute for Legal Studies conference on “Changing Patterns of Business Disputing.” Madison, WI, November 1993. With L. Kenworthy and S. Macaulay.

493. “Corporations in Court: Big Business Litigation in U.S. Federal Courts, 1971-91,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Institute for Legal Studies conference on “Changing Patterns of Business Disputing.” Madison, WI, November 1993. With T. Dunworth.

494. “Reforming 8(a)2 or Not?” University of Wisconsin-Madison Industrial Relations Research Institute conference on “Labor Law Reform.” Madison, WI, November 1993.

495. “Reforming U.S. Labor Relations,” AFL-CIO/Cornell University Labor Law Reform conference on “Reforming U.S. Labor Relations.” Baltimore, MD, October 1993.

496. “Regaining Competitiveness in the Global Economy: Creating the New Workplace,” Aspen Institute conference on “Globalization and the North American Free Trade Agreement: Impact on Rural Communities.” Queenstown, MD, October 1993.

497. “High-Performance Work Organization: Models of How to Get There From Here,” Governor's Statewide Employment and Training Conference. Madison, WI, October 1993.

498. “Producing Solidarity,” Institute for Public Policy Research conference on “Where Next for the European Left?” West Sussex, GB, September 1993.

499. “Industrial Policy: Panacea or Synoptic Delusion?” 89th American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C., September 1993.

500. “Third Parties in America: Obstacles and Opportunities,” 89th American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C., September 1993.

501. “Labor Strategies,” Service Employees International Union Annual Organizers Meeting. Baltimore, MD, July 1993.

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502. “What the Dunlop Commission Should Do,” Georgetown Law School. Washington, D.C., July 1993.

503. “Background and Rational for Training and Skills Standards,” Commission on Behavior and Social Science and Education, National Academy of Science/National Research Council. Woods Hole, MA, June 1993.

504. “Progressive Reform and the 'Clinton Moment': A Roundtable Discussion,” Institute for Policy Studies. Washington, D.C., June 1993.

505. “Works Councils and U.S. Labor,” Economic Policy Institute. Washington, D.C., June 1993. 506. “High Performance Work Organization: What It Is and How To Get It in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin

Labor-Management Council. Milwaukee, WI, June 1993. 507. “Workplace Representation Overseas: The Works Councils Story,” National Bureau of Economic

Research conference on “Working Under Different Rules.” Washington, D.C., May 1993. 508. “High Performance Work Organization and the Demand-Side Training Problem,” Center on

Education and Work conference on “Connecting Education and Work: The Challenge of Systemic Change.” Madison, WI, May 1993.

509. “How to Think About Plant Shutdowns: Testimony on 1993 Assembly Bill 324,” Wisconsin State Assembly. Madison, WI, April 1993.

510. “The Role of the States in Industrial Policy,” Canada/United States Law Institute conference on “An Industrial Policy for North America.” Cleveland, OH, April 1993.

511. “What it Takes: Democracy in America,” Kenyon College. Kenyon, OH, April 1993. 512. “Industrial Upgrading in Wisconsin: What's the Problem? What's the Solution,” COWS conference

on “Industrial Upgrading in Wisconsin.” Milwaukee, WI, March 1993. 513. “Wisconsin's Workforce in the Year 2020,” University of Wisconsin-Madison La Follette Institute

2020 Series. Madison, WI, March 1993. 514. “Campaign Finance Reform: Design Lessons,” Center for Responsive Politics conference on

“Money and Politics.” Madison, WI, November 1992. 515. “The November Elections — What Do They Mean for Labor?” CWA Local 189. Washington, D.C.,

November 1992. 516. “Industrial Upgrading: Current Issues,” Conference on “Work Organization, High Skills, and Public

Policy.” Chicago, IL, October 1992. 517. “Movements and Parties in the U.S.: Historical Lessons, Recent Experience,” MIT Social Movement

Seminar. Cambridge, MA, October 1992. 518. “Labor's Role in Industrial Upgrading,” Wisconsin State AFL-CIO Annual Convention. Lacrosse,

WI, September 1992. 519. “School-to-Work Transition Programs,” Midwest Conference of NASBO (National Association of

State Budget Officers). Madison, WI, September 1992. 520. “Fusion Politics and a Third Party,” UW Center-Marinette Lorman A. Ratner Colloquium.

Marinette, WI, May 1992. 521. “Basic Design Issues in Standard Setting,” American Society for Training and Development,

COWS, Jobs for the Future conference on “Training Standards and Modular Training Delivery.” Washington, D.C., May 1992.

522. “Why American Politics Doesn’t Work,” University of Wisconsin Alumni Series. Madison, WI, June 1992.

523. “Why American Politics Doesn’t Work,” University of Pennsylvania Annenberg School of Communications. Philadelphia, PA, May 1992.

524. “Why American Politics Doesn't Work,” Council on Foundations. Miami, FL, April 1992. 525. “New Relationships Among the Great Economic Powers,” University of Wisconsin conference on

“The New International Context of Development.” Madison, WI, April 1992. 526. “Reforming U.S. Training Institutions: Some Notes from Practical Experience,” University of

Wisconsin LaFollette Institute. Madison, WI, March 1992. 527. “The Crisis in Training: Real or Imagined?” Wisconsin AFL-CIO. La Crosse, WI, March 1992.

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528. “America's Training Problem: What It is and How to solve It,” Milwaukee Sentinel 29th Forum for Progress. Milwaukee, WI, May 1992.

529. “Training Needs in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin Executive Cabinet for a Quality Workforce. Appleton, WI, February 1992.

530. “What You Should Learn From Germany,” Wisconsin Youth Apprenticeship Program. Madison, WI, September 1991.

531. “Improving the Wisconsin Training System,” Executive Cabinet on Workforce Quality. Madison, WI, September 1991.

532. “Can We Get There From Here? Workforce Readiness and Apprenticeship,” 15th Biennial Labor-Management-Government Conference on Apprenticeship. Stevens Point, WI, August 1991.

533. “Training in Metalworking: An Overview of the Problems,” Jobs for the Future conference on “New Training Strategies for a High Performance Metalworking Industry.” Pittsburgh, PA, June 1991.

534. “The Future of Apprenticeship in Wisconsin,” Bureau of Apprenticeship Standards, Department of Industry, Labor Human Relations. Madison, WI, May 1991.

535. “Economic Development in Wisconsin,” Wisconsin State Legislature “Third Wave Economic Development Forum.” Madison, WI, May 1991.

536. “Corporations in Court: Trends in Big Business Litigation in the U.S.,” Stanford University. Palo Alto, CA, April 1991.

537. “Rural Communities: Facing our Economic Future,” Partnership for Democracy conference on “Rural Economic Organizing.” Minneapolis, MN, February 1991.

538. “Mandatory Works Councils,” 42nd Industrial Relations Research Association Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C., December 1990.

539. “The Relevance of the German Apprenticeship Model to the U.S.,” Friedrich Ebert Stiftung conference on “Challenges for Apprenticeship and Vocational Training in the 1990's: German and American Perspectives.” Detroit, MI, December 1990.

540. “The Future of American Industrial Relations,” General Accounting Office. Washington, D.C., October 1990.

541. “What is to be Done?: Policy Recommendations to the Commission,” Governor's Commission for a Quality Workforce. Marshfield, WI, August 1990.

542. “Trends in Business Disputing in the U.S.,” International Center for the Sociology of Law. Oñati, ES, July 1990. With M. Galanter and S. Macaulay.

543. “Secondary Associations in Democratic Governance,” International Sociological Association Meetings. Madrid, ES, July 1990. With J. Cohen.

544. “Corporations in Court: Recent Trends in American Business Litigation,” Law and Society Association Annual Meetings. Berkeley, CA, May 1990. With T. Dungworth and M. Galanter.

545. “The Wisconsin Skills Project: Lessons for Vocational Training in Wisconsin,” Governor's Commission for a Quality Workforce. West Bend, WI, May 1990.

546. “Symbolism and Institutional Politics,” University of Wisconsin-Madison conference on “Symbolism, Language, and Politics” (honoring Murray Edelman). Madison, WI, March 1990.

547. “In the Shadow of the Law: Institutional Aspects of Postwar U.S. Union Decline,” Johns Hopkins University conference on “Labor Law in America: Historical and Critical Perspectives.” Washington, DC, March 1990.

548. “Secondary Associations in Democratic Governance,” 85th American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Atlanta, GA, August 1989. With J. Cohen.

549. “Changes in the Corporate Demand for Legal Services,” American Bar Foundation and University of Wisconsin Law School Institute for Legal Studies conference on “The Transformation of the Large Law Firm.” Madison, WI, July 1989.

550. “The Limits of Legal Liberalism: Implementation and Empowerment in Administrative Regulation,” Law and Society Association Annual Meeting. Madison, WI, 1989.

551. “Legitimacy, Autonomy, and Hegemony: Perspectives on Law and the State,” Law and Society Association Annual Meeting. Madison, WI, June 1989. .

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552. “Wither the State? Internationalization, 'Disorganized Capitalism,' and the Future of Democratic Governance,” Comparing Capitalist Economies Project conference on “Variations in the Governance of Sectors,” Rockefeller Center. Bellagio, IT, May-June 1989.

553. “Public Ownership: Comments on Roemer,” Conference for the Study of Political Thought 1989 International Meeting on “Markets and Political Theory.” Williams College, Williamstown, MA, April 1989. With J. Cohen.

554. “Internationalization and U.S. Party Politics,” University of Wisconsin-Madison. Madison, WI, March 1989.

555. “Don't Worry, Be Happy: Institutional Dynamics of the Postwar Decline of Private Sector U.S. Unionism,” American Bar Foundation-Northwestern University Law School Seminar. Chicago, IL: February 1989.

556. “Improving the Economic Status of Wisconsin Women,” Wisconsin Women's Council. Madison, WI, February 1989.

557. “Don't Worry, Be Happy: Institutional Dynamics of the Postwar Decline of Private Sector U.S. Unionism,” Harvard Center for International Affairs Conference on “North American Labor Movements into the 1990s: Similarities and Differences.” Cambridge, MA, February 1989.

558. “The 1988 Presidential Election in the Perspective of 200 Years,” American Historical Association Annual Meeting. Cincinnati, OH, December 1988.

559. “The Transformation of American Business Disputing? Some Preliminary Observations,” American Bar Foundation. Chicago, IL, December 1988. With M. Galanter.

560. “Reaganism After Reagan: Perspectives on the 1988 Election,” Hobart and William Smith Colleges. Geneva, NY, October 1988.

561. “Reaganism After Reagan: The Future of American Politics,” John Kenneth Kyle Lecture, University of Wisconsin-Whitewater. Whitewater, WI, September 1988.

562. “The Future of Professionalism,” American Bar Foundation conference on “Professionalism, Ethics, and Economic Change in the American Legal Profession.” Evanston, IL, September 1988.

563. “Marxism and Recent Democratic Theory,” 84th American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C., September 1988.

564. “The Postwar Decline of U.S. Union Density: Structural Variables in a Political Context,” 84th American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C., September 1988.

565. “Silences in Research and Theory: The Role of the State in Sociolegal Studies,” Law and Society Association Annual Meeting. Vail, CO, June 1988.

566. “The Transformation of American Business Disputing? Some Preliminary Observations,” Law and Society Association Annual Meeting. Vail, CO, June 1988. With M. Galanter.

567. “Comment on Kochan,” Catholic University Columbus School of Law conference on “Cycles in Labor Law and Industrial Relations: Projections into the Next Century.” Washington, D.C., April 1988. .

568. “Divide and Conquer: Further Reflections on the Distinctive Character of American Labor Laws,” University of Toronto Faculty of Law Legal Theory Workshop. Toronto, Canada, March 1988.

569. “Turning the Tide: U.S. Policy in Central America,” Michigan State University. East Lansing, MI, November 1987.

570. “Reaganism After Reagan?” Illinois State University. Normal, IL, October 1987. 571. “U.S. Policy in Central America,” Ben Linder Conference. Portland, OR, September 1987. 572. “Business, Labor, and American Democracy: Fits and Misfits,” 83rd American Political Science

Association Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL, September 1987. 573. “The Politics of Industrial Change,” 83rd American Political Science Association Annual Meeting.

Chicago, IL, September 1987. 574. “Socialism and Rights,” 83rd American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL,

September 1987. 575. “The Nation State and Violence,” Law and Society Association Annual Meeting. Washington, D.C.,

June 1987.

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576. “Divide and Conquer: Further Reflections on the Distinctive Character of American Labor Law,” Georgetown Law School “Workshop on Critical Perspectives on the History of American Labor Law.” Washington, DC, June 1987.

577. “The Global/Domestic Budget Connection,” Center for Global Education. Washington, D.C., April 1987. With J. Cohen.

578. “Labor and the Democratic Party,” Institute for Labor Research. New York, NY, March 1987. 579. “Why the Democrats Have Moved to the Right,” Women's National Democratic Club. Washington,

D.C., January 1987. With T. Ferguson. 580. “Comment on Wolff, and Recent Marxism,” Association of American Law Schools 1987 Meetings.

Los Angeles, CA, January 1987. 581. “Central America and U.S. Politics,” Policy Alternatives for the Caribbean and Central America.

Cambridge, MA, October 1986. 582. “The State and the Unions,” American Society for Legal History Annual Meetings. Toronto, CA,

October 1986. 583. “Near Term Prospects for U.S. Politics,” North American Congress on Latin America. New York,

NY, October 1986. 584. “Legal Aspects of Postwar U.S. Labor Regulation,” Harman Lecture, JFK School of Government,

Harvard University. Cambridge, MA, October 1986. 585. “The Constitution and Capitalism,” 82nd American Political Science Association Annual Meeting.

Washington, D.C., August 1986. 586. “Power and Ideology,” 82nd American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. Washington,

D.C., August 1986. . 587. “American Politics After Reagan,” 82nd American Political Science Association Annual Meeting.

Washington, D.C., August 1986. 588. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” conference on

“American and German Traditions of Sociological Jurisprudence and Critical Legal Thought.” Bremen, DE, July 1986.

589. “Toward a Critical Legal History of the Modern Business Corporation,” Law and Society Association 1986 Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL, May 1986.

590. “Law and the Welfare State,” Law and Society Association 1986 Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL, May 1986.

591. “The State and Civil Litigation,” Law and Society Association 1986 Annual Meeting. Chicago, IL, May 1986.

592. “The Legal History of the Corporation,” University of Wisconsin-Madison Institute for Legal Studies and American Bar Foundation. Chicago, IL, May 1986.

593. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” University of Wisconsin-Madison. Madison, WI, April 1986.

594. “The Withering Away of the State,” Socialist Scholars Conference. New York, NY, April 1986. 595. “On Democracy,” Political Philosophy Program, Princeton University. Princeton, NJ, April 1986. 596. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” University of Miami

School of Law. Miami, FL, March 1986. 597. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” University of

California at San Diego. San Diego, CA, February 1986. 598. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” Cardozo Law School.

New York, NY, February 1986. 599. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” University of

California at Los Angeles. Los Angeles, CA, December 1985. 600. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” University of

Massachusetts-Amherst. Amherst, MA, November 1985. 601. “Legal Aspects of U.S. Labor Policy,” University of Wisconsin Law School. Madison, WI,

November 1985.

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602. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” Industrial Relations Research Institute, University of Wisconsin-Madison. Madison, WI, November 1985.

603. “Recent Democratic Theory,” Law School, City University of New York. New York, NY, October 1985.

604. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” Georgetown University Law Center. Washington, DC, October 1985.

605. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” Baruch College conference on “Critical Perspectives in Organizational Analysis.” New York, NY, September 1985.

606. “Right Turn: The 1984 Election and the Future of American Politics,” 81st American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. New Orleans, LA, August 1985. With T. Ferguson.

607. “The Politics of Voter Registration,” 81st American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. New Orleans, LA, August 1985.

608. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” 81st American Political Science Association Annual Meeting. New Orleans, LA, August 1985.

609. “Radical Democratic Theory,” 81st American Political Science Association Annual Meeting, New Orleans, LA, August 1985.

610. “Divide and Conquer: The Legal Foundations of Postwar U.S. Labor Policy,” Law and Society Association 1985 Annual Meeting. San Diego, CA, June 1985.

611. “Reply to Clarke and Cunningham,” Symposium on On Democracy, Canadian Philosophical Association Annual Convention. Montreal, CA, May 1985. With J. Cohen.

612. “Beyond Capitalist Democracy: Political Freedom in the Era of Bad Feeling,” Columbia University Seminar on the Political Economy of War and Peace. New York, NY, December 1984. With J. Cohen.

613. “The Politics of Voter Registration,” New York Public Interest Research Group Fall Conference. New York, NY, October 1984.

614. “The 1984 Election,” Social Text Seminar. New York, NY, June 1984. 615. “Indeterminacy in Administrative Law: The Case of U.S. Labor Regulation,” Law and Society

Association 1984 Annual Meeting. Boston, MA, June 1984. 616. “On Democracy,” New School for Social Research conference on “Methods in Philosophy and the

Sciences.” New York, NY, May 1984. With J. Cohen. 617. “On Democracy,” New School for Social Research. New York, NY, December 1983. With J. Cohen. 618. “On Democracy,” Rutgers University Political Economy Colloquium. New Brunswick, NJ,

November 983. With J. Cohen. 619. “The Political Theory of the Administrative State: A Comment,” 79th American Political Science

Association Annual Convention. Chicago, IL, September 1983. 620. “Rights in the Welfare State: A Comment,” conference on “Reflexive Law and the Regulatory

Crisis,” University of Wisconsin-Madison. Madison, WI, July 1983. 621. “Beyond Capitalist Democracy,” Inter-University Centre course on “Philosophy and Social Science:

Aspects of Democratic Theory.” Dubrovnik, YU, March 1983. With J. Cohen. 622. “Beyond Capitalist Democracy: Political Freedom in the Era of Bad Feeling,” Columbia University

Seminar on the State. New York, NY, December 1982. With J. Cohen. 623. “`Economic Democracy' as a Labor Alternative to the Growth Strategy in the Weimar Republic ...

And Why It Will Return in the Post-Godesberg Post-Keynes Period,” Rutgers University Political Economy Colloquium. New Brunswick, NJ, December 1982.

624. “On Democracy,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Cambridge, MA, November 1982. With J. Cohen.

625. “Redemocratization in Latin America and the United States,” Princeton University. Princeton, NJ, November 1982.

626. “The 1982 Elections: Instant Analysis and Near Term Prospects,” New York Institute on the Humanities. New York, NY, November 1982.

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627. “Notes on the Concept and Measurement of Labor Strength,” Williams College Political Economy Program conference on the “Political Economy of Inflation and Unemployment.” Williamstown, MA, October 1982. With T. Ferguson.

628. “Labor's Current Prospect,” Institute for Policy Studies. Washington, D.C., February 1982. 629. “The New Right,” Australian Public Radio. New York, NY, February 1982. With T. Ferguson. 630. “Writers in the Academy,” Writers Congress. New York, NY, October 1981. With T. Ferguson. 631. “The End of Liberalism,” 77th American Political Science Association Annual Convention. New

York, NY, September 1981. 632. “The Political Economy of Trade Union Organization,” 77th American Political Science Association

Annual Convention. New York, NY, September 1981. 633. “The Current Crisis of U.S. Labor,” New School for Social Research. New York, NY, March 1981. 634. “Perspectives on the 1980 Election,” Mid-Atlantic Radical Historians Organization. New York, NY,

November 1980. 635. “Legitimation Problems in Advanced Industrial States,” 76th American Political Science Association

Annual Convention. Washington, D.C., September 1980. 636. “Perspectives on the Thought of Antonio Gramsci,” 76th American Political Science Association

Annual Convention. Washington, D.C., August 1979. 637. “U.S. Labor and the N.I.E.O. (New International Economic Order),” UN conference on “Obstacles

and Opportunities for the N.I.E.O.” Mexico City, MX, January 1979. PROFESSIONAL & OTHER SERVICE

Member of — American Economic Association, American Political Science Association, American Sociological Association, Labor and Employment Relations Association, Phi Beta Kappa Reviewer for — American Political Science Review, American Sociological Review, Industrial Relations Industrial and Labor Relations Review, Labor History Private extracurricular — Apollo Alliance (co-founder, Chair 2005-06, Board member 2003-present), Brookings Institution (Senior Non-Resident Fellow 2008-present), Boston Review (Editorial Board member and Contributing Editor of “New Democracy Forum” 1996-2007, Contributing Editor 2007-present), Center for Popular Democracy (Advisory Board 2012 – present), Economic Analysis Research Network (co-founder and Advisory Board member 2000-present), Emerald Cities Collaborative (co-founder and Board member, 2009-present), Industry Studies Association, Founding Member (2011–present), Institute for Labor and Employment (Advisory Board member 2001-present), New York State Bar (member 1977-present [admitted to U.S. Supreme Court and 7th Circuit Court of Appeals]), The Nation (Contributing Editor 1985-present), Wissenschaftszentrum Berlin für Sozialforschung (Advisory Board member 2008-present) Public extracurricular (noted only since 2002) — WI-National Governors Association Sectoral Strategy Core Team (2008-2009); Wisconsin Council on Workforce Investment (Vice Chair 2004-2011); Governor’s Economic Growth Council (member 2003-2005), UW Economic Summit Steering Committee (member 2000-2002), Wisconsin Economic Development Action Group (member 2002); Wisconsin Governor-Elect Transition Team (member 2002); Wisconsin Task Force on Job Creation and Economic Development (member 2002-3) GRANTS & CONTRACTS RECEIVED AS PRINCIPAL INVESTIGATOR

2012–RE-AMP ($6,000), SEIU ($118,000), UW Letters and Science ($300,000), Joyce Foundation ($75,000), Rockefeller Foundation ($500,000), Surdna Foundation ($400,000), Energy Foundation ($7,000), RE-AMP ($6,000), Innovation Network for Communities ($8,000), Barr Foundation ($92,000).

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2011–Ford Foundation ($200,000), REAMP ($40,000), Mayors Innovation Project Multi-Donor ($35,500), Surdna Foundation ($200,000), REAMP ($10,000), Baldwin Endowment ($97,073), Bellwether ($25,000), RE-AMP ($7,000), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($300,000), Hilldale Trust ($300,000). 2010–Nathan Cummings Foundation ($325,000), Energy Foundation ($50,000), REAMP ($100,000), Bellwether Foundation ($20,000), US Department of Transportation ($1,500,000), Rockefeller Foundation ($1,500,000), REAMP ($20,000), REAMP ($53,500), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($300,000), Service Employees International Union ($25,000), National Science Foundation ($84,646), Hilldale Trust ($300,000) 2009–Nathan Cummings Foundation ($325,000), Bellwether Foundation ($25,000), 1000 Friends of Wisconsin ($4,000), Annie E Casey Foundation ($24,045), Ford Foundation ($325,000), Surdna Foundation ($400,000), Ecology Center ($17,250), REAMP ($50,000), Hilldale Trust ($300,000) 2008–REAMP ($130,000), Energy Center of Wisconsin ($80,000), Rockefeller Foundation ($250,000), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($300,000), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($325,000), Living Cities ($100,000), Open Society Institute ($250,000), Bikes Belong ($10,000), Carnegie Corporation ($50,000), Garfield Foundation ($22,500), Tides Foundation ($50,000), Joyce Foundation ($100,000), Hilldale Trust ($300,000) 2007–Carolyn Foundation ($25,000), Sloan Foundation ($35,000), Urban League ($5,000), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($250,000), Surdna Foundation, ($15,000), Wallace Global Fund ($40,000), Ford Foundation ($325,000), Open Society Institute ($300,000), Joyce Foundation ($340,000), Change to Win Wisconsin ($24,000), Workforce Development Board of South Central Wisconsin ($85,000), Hilldale Trust 2006–Economic Policy Institute ($50,000), Institute for America’s Future ($275,000), Annie E. Casey Foundation ($35,000), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($215,000), Joyce Foundation ($175,000), Ford Foundation ($50,000), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($200,000), Ford Foundation ($135,000) 2005–Institute for America’s Future ($300,000), Workforce Development Board of South Central Wisconsin, CWI-GROW ($116,622), Workforce Development Board of South Central Wisconsin ($70,109), Energy Center of Wisconsin ($65,000), Hilldale Trust ($300,000) 2004–Workforce Development Board of Southeastern Wisconsin ($72,000), Institute for America’s Future ($250,000), Joyce Foundation ($300,000), Nathan Cummings Foundation ($150,000), Ford Foundation ($450,000), U.S. Department of Labor ($250,000), Hilldale Trust ($300,000) 2003–Hilldale Trust (300,000) 2002–City of Madison ($36,000), Sloan Foundation ($299,020), Joyce Foundation ($200,000), Ford Foundation ($15,000), Economic Policy Institute ($20,000), JKW Foundation ($62,500), Ford Foundation ($300,000), Annie E. Casey Foundation ($25,000), Annie E. Casey Foundation ($12,500), Hilldale Trust ($300,000) 2001–Wisconsin Manufacturing Extension Program ($65,000), Annie E. Casey Foundation ($200,000), Beldon Trust ($25,000), Wisconsin Department of Workforce Development ($75,000), Evjue Foundation ($40,000), City of Madison ($96,000), South Central Workforce Development Board ($50,000), Sloan Foundation ($135,000), Hilldale Trust ($300,000)

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2000–Working Partnerships U.S.A. ($121,000), W. Alton Jones ($40,000), Hilldale Trust ($300,000) 1999-1989–Hilldale Trust ($300,000 annually from 1996), Joyce Foundation ($150,000,1999), Ford Foundation ($300,000, 1999), Dane County ($25,000, 1999), W. Alton Jones ($25,000, 1999), George Meany Center for Labor Studies ($44,000, 1999), Joyce Foundation ($150,000, 1998), Ford Foundation ($500,000, 1998), Annie E. Casey Foundation ($2,200,000, 1997), University of Wisconsin Graduate School, 1996 ($35,000, 1996), Ford Foundation ($500,000, 1996), Joyce Foundation ($190,000, 1996), Arca Foundation ($50,000, 1996), Carnegie Corporation ($50,000, 1996), Russell Sage Foundation ($145,000, 1995), McArthur Foundation ($270,000, 1995), McKay Foundation ($20,000, 1994), Veatch Program ($90,000, 1994), Rockefeller Foundation ($75,000, 1994), Arca Foundation ($50,000, 1994), US Department of Labor ($42,000, 1994), Joyce Foundation ($150,000, 1994), Joyce Foundation ($92,000, 1993), Joyce Foundation ($75,000, 1993), Russell Sage Foundation ($270,000, 1993), Sloan Foundation ($40,000, 1993), State of Wisconsin, Department of Industry, Labor, and Human Relations ($248,500, 1994), Joyce Foundation, ($240,000, 1992), State of Wisconsin, Department of Industry, Labor, and Human Relations ($25,000, 1992), Mott Foundation ($35,000, 1991), Joyce Foundation ($55,000, 1991), National Bureau of Economic Research ($29,500, 1990), Graduate School Research Committee, UW-Madison, 1987-92 (declined or accepted in part), Wisconsin Board of Vocational Technical and Adult Education ($40,000, 1990), Robert M. La Follette Institute for Public Affairs ($20,000, 1989), Fund for Dispute Resolution ($240,000, 1989). REFERENCES

Available upon request.