When I was a relatively junior academic, one of the things I was interested in was how labour market prejudice is influenced by the state of the economic cycle. This was a period when Australia was undergoing a deep recession (early 1990s) and it was clear that hostility to immigrants had risen during this period. I was interested to see whether this was related. The interest goes back to my postgraduate days when I was studying labour economics and we considered labour market...
Read More »David F. Ruccio — Sciences of inequality
Last month, Philip Alston, the United Nations Special Rapporteur on extreme poverty and human rights (whose important work I have written about before), issued a tweet about the new poverty and healthcare numbers in the United States along with a challenge to the administration of Donald Trump (which in June decided to voluntarily remove itself from membership in the United Nations Human Rights Council after Alston issued a report on his 2017 mission to the United States). The numbers for...
Read More »Brittany Shoot — Bulletproof Backpacks: A Must-Have for Back-to-School in 2018?
This was on the front page of the Iowa City Press-Citizen yesterday. The article also reported rising sales of bulletproof glass.FortuneBulletproof Backpacks: A Must-Have for Back-to-School in 2018? Brittany Shoot
Read More »Rebecca Burns — How Lenders Are Turning Low-Level Courts Into Dickensian “Debt Collection Mills
Federal law outlawed debt prisons in 1833, but lenders, landlords and even gyms and other businesses have found a way to resurrect the Dickensian practice. With the aid of private collection agencies, they file millions of lawsuits in state and local courts each year, winning 95 percent of the time. If a defendant fails to appear at post-judgement hearings known as “debtors’ examinations,” collectors can seek a warrant for contempt of court — even if the debtor didn’t realize they were...
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