
Enter a keyword, SMLR faculty or staff name, publication, and/or date range to search for SMLR experts in the news.
The Daily Targum reports Bill and Lois Dwyer are making the largest gift in the history of SMLR, quoting Bill’s student Thomas Costello IV and Dean Adrienne Eaton.
Employee-Owned America covers research by the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing, quoting research fellow Janet Boguslaw and noting she co-authored the study with Lisa Schur.
American Entrepreneurship Today publishes a summary of research by the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing, quoting Joseph Blasi, research fellow Janet Boguslaw, Glenda Gracia-Rivera of the Center for Women and Work, Douglas Kruse, and Lisa Schur.
The Courier News and Home News Tribune publish a Rutgers Today story on how SMLR helped Bill Dwyer reached the peak of his profession, quoting Dwyer, his student Thomas Costello IV, and Dean Adrienne Eaton.
The Daily Targum publishes an editorial arguing that immigrants strengthen America, quoting Janice Fine of the Center for Innovation in Worker Organization.
New Jersey Business Magazine publishes a summary of research by the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing, quoting Joseph Blasi, research fellow Janet Boguslaw, Glenda Gracia-Rivera of the Center for Women and Work, Douglas Kruse, and Lisa Schur.
New Mobility profiles Airbnb product manager Srin Madipalli, noting the company hired him to improve access for travelers with disabilities after a study led by Mason Ameri of the Program for Disability Research revealed serious gaps.
ROI-NJ reports employee stock ownership plans can level the economic playing field in America, citing research by the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing and quoting Joseph Blasi and Douglas Kruse.
The New Food Economy asks why only 1.3 percent of restaurant workers in the U.S. are unionized, quoting Rebecca Kolins Givan.
The Stanford Social Innovation Review publishes an op-ed on the need to reign in excessive compensation for fund managers, noting SMLR researchers are studying alternative funds, holding companies, and deal structures.