Earn certification and develop leadership skills in disability and employment-support practices through virtual courses through our Yang-Tan Institute on Employment and Disability.
Our instructors guide organizations to solve problems, change behaviors, and build inclusive workplaces right down to the core: from recruiting and onboarding through retention and promotion.
Our courses apply a wide range of research and practices (from emotional intelligence and communication to conflict resolution and investigations) to give your HR professionals skills they need to build employee relationships.
Every aspect of work involves the law, and understanding how it affects your organization will give you an edge in your career. Our courses are designed to be of immediate use, and cover topics from understanding legal implications to handling investigations.
We make use of research from the world's leading HR faculty to design professional training for the world's leading businesses. One in two Fortune 500 companies has an ILRie in a senior HR position.
Understanding how to lead with values, emotional intelligence, and negotiation skills gives leaders an edge. Our leadership training courses focus on thinking strategically when making decisions and solving problems.
Learn from researchers and practitioners that span organizational and organized labor to gain skills from negotiations through to bargaining and communications. Our programs train people to systematically solve problems.
A deep, practical understanding of conflict management can position you uniquely within your enterprise. These courses train people to solve problems and design resilient systems for their organizations.
Our institutional experience, world-class faculty, and deep relationships with labor organizations let us equip organizers to lead with labor's values, think strategically, and build collective-bargaining skills.
Topics
Please join us for the launch of Cornell ILR’s new Climate Jobs Institute!
New York and the nation’s transition to a climate-friendly, decarbonized economy is historic and monumental. To avoid the worst impacts of climate change, we must accelerate our efforts to drastically reduce greenhouse gas emissions. At the same time, inequality – of income, wealth, race, gender, and hope – has reached epic proportions. Building the clean energy economy is an opportunity to create a fairer, more inclusive economy with high-quality jobs.
Since 2012, Cornell’s Labor Leading on Climate Initiative, launched by The Worker Institute, has helped forge a critical link between bold climate action, worker protections and equity. Cornell’s impactful work has fostered a “climate jobs” movement in the U.S.
On January 25, 2023, Cornell ILR will deepen and expand its expertise and commitment to labor, climate and equity work by establishing a new Climate Jobs Institute. The Climate Jobs Institute’s mission is to guide NY and the nation’s transition to a strong, equitable, and resilient clean energy economy that tackles the climate crisis, creates high-quality union jobs, confronts racial and gender inequality, and builds a diverse and inclusive workforce. Now more than ever, policymakers, the labor and environmental movements, industry leaders and others need an institute that can help them navigate this historic transition – the Climate Jobs Institute will do that through excellent applied research, deep relationships with on-the-ground partners, and innovative training and education programs.
Please join us as we celebrate the launch of this important new Institute! The event will highlight important milestones in the journey to build a large, equitable clean energy economy with good jobs. We will also host a panel discussion on how NYS can use the Inflation Reduction Act and the Clean Air, Clean Water, and Green Jobs Bond Act to meet its important climate goals while creating high-quality, family and community sustaining careers, especially for frontline communities.
The event is presented by Cornell ILR’s Climate Jobs Institute, a part of the Center for Applied Research on Work, and co-sponsored by Climate Jobs NY and the Climate Jobs National Resource Center.
Get more information about ILR professional education
A Webinar Series Co-Hosted by US Department of Labor–Women’s Bureau & The Worker Institute at Cornell ILR
This webinar series will bring together researchers, policy makers, practitioners, unions, philanthropy, and advocates to share current research and praxis that address the need for a just economic recovery that reverses long-existent inequalities in job creation and access. The current crisis of inequality, made worse by the intersecting crisis of the pandemic and its impact on women and people of color, accelerates the need to envision job creation through the perspective of an equity lens.
Unprecedented levels of public investment to spur economic recovery after two years of the COVID-19 pandemic creates an historic opportunity to dismantle structural barriers and achieve equity and inclusion in economic development through high-quality jobs access for women and people of color. The question this webinar series will explore is how best to achieve equity goals. Drawing on existing models of practice from around the United States, this series will show how local and state actors have successfully implemented equity and job creation.
The goal of this series is to showcase current research on equity and its application to spur the upscaling of effective policy innovation at the state and local level at a time of record levels of economic investment by the federal government.
The ILR School of Cornell University is the leading college of the applied social sciences focusing on work, employment, and labor policy issues and practices of national and international significance.
Speakers
Dean, ILR School, Cornell University
Alexander Colvin, Ph.D. '99, is the Kenneth F. Kahn '69 Dean and the Martin F. Scheinman '75, 'MS '76 Professor of Conflict Resolution at the ILR School, Cornell University. He is an associate member of the Cornell Law Faculty. His research and teaching focuses on employment dispute resolution, with a particular emphasis on procedures in nonunion workplaces and the impact of the legal environment on organizations. His current research projects include empirical investigations of employment arbitration and a cross-national study of labor and employment law change in the Anglo-American countries. Read more.
Director, Women's Bureau, Department of Labor
Wendy Chun-Hoon serves as the 20th director of the Women’s Bureau, appointed by President Biden on February 1, 2021. Ms. Chun-Hoon is skilled at coalition building, bridging strategy across grassroots community organizing, and public sector policy making at state and national levels. She has held senior positions in Maryland state government and private philanthropy, overseeing large-scale, results-driven initiatives for worker and family economic justice. Read more.
Senior Extension Associate - Director of Research for Worker Rights and Equity, The Worker Institute
Anne Marie Brady is the Senior Extension Associate - Director of Research for Worker Rights and Equity for the Worker Institute. Dr. Brady holds a Ph.D. in Social Policy Research from the London School of Economics. She is trained in both quantitative and qualitative methods of social and labor market policy research and has a 10 -year record of designing research projects with a variety of stakeholders in the policy-making process. Read more.
Raahi Reddy is the Director of Metro's Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Program. Her team is responsible for ensuring Metro’s programs, investments and internal practices lead with a racial equity lens to effectively advance equity in the region. This work includes launching and leading the groundbreaking Construction Careers Pathways Project that is bringing together numerous public agencies and stakeholders in the Portland metro region to jointly plan, invest and support a new generation of diverse workers in the construction sector. Read more.
Director of Training, Smart SM, Local Union 28
Leah Rambo began her career as a sheet metal apprentice in 1988. In 2011 she was appointed as first woman to serve as Director of Training for SMART Local 28 and continues to work in this capacity. Her high energy and dedication have helped to attract and retain an increasing number of women. Local 28 has increased their percentage of female from 3% in 2011 to 13% in 2019. As Director of Training, Ms. Rambo has been responsible for the training of over 3,000 Local 28’s apprentices and active members. Read more.
Senior Director, Insight Center
Andrea Flynn is Senior Director at the Insight Center. Prior to joining Insight, she spent eight years at the Roosevelt Institute, where she was most recently the Director of Health Equity. She is the co-author of The Hidden Rules of Race (Cambridge University Press, 2017). She frequently writes and speaks about the race and gender dimensions of economic inequality, reproductive health and justice, and health equity. Read more.
New York State Secretary of Labor
Director of Metro's Diversity, Equity and Inclusion Program
Executive Director, Oregon Tradeswomen
Kelly Kupcak grew up in Cleveland, Ohio, where early on she realized the critical importance of speaking out against injustice and wrote her first letter to the editor of the local newspaper in the third grade. After raising her sons as a single mom, working as a union heavy equipment operator, and working as an advocate for women for almost two decades, she relocated to the Pacific Northwest to serve as Oregon Tradeswomen’s Executive Director in 2017. Read more.
New York State Department of Labor Commissioner Roberta Reardon was appointed in October 2015 to oversee the Department’s more than 3,300 employees. On June 15, 2016, Commissioner Reardon was unanimously confirmed by the New York State Senate. Commissioner Reardon graduated from the Cornell Industrial and Labor Relations School’s New York State AFL-CIO/Cornell Union Leadership Institute and holds a Bachelor of Arts from the University of Wyoming. She is a Worker Institute Fellow at Cornell University and sits on the Board of Trustees for the Actors Fund of America. Read more.
Policy Advisor at the Department of Labor in the Office of the Secretary
Katelyn Walker Mooney is a Policy Advisor at the Department of Labor in the Office of the Secretary. Walker Mooney is leading the Department’s Good Jobs Initiative, which is focused on providing critical information to workers, employers, and government agencies as they work to improve job quality. She recently served as the Associate General Counsel for the Committee on Education and Labor in the U.S. House of Representatives. Read more.
Overview
January 25, 2023
5:00 p.m. - 5:45 p.m.
Registration and Cocktail Reception
5:45 p.m. - 7:25 p.m.
Presentations and Panel Discussion
In-Person
Cornell University, ILR School
NYC Conference Center
570 Lexington Ave., 12th Floor
New York, NY 10022
This is a public event, which will be photographed and filmed and/or otherwise recorded. Your registration for this event constitutes your consent to such photography, livestreaming, filming and/or recording and to any use, in any and all media.
For more information,
please contact:
Katherine Solis-Fonte
kjs275@cornell.edu
On different sectors of the economy, bridging theory with practice in discussing how best to advance an equity lens in job creation.
February 2022 - September 2022
Hear from Experts
in the field
Researchers, policy makers, practitioners, and advocates will discuss a just recovery.
Online / In-Person
in the field
Three virtual webinars culminating with an in-person reception on September 22, 2022.
Grow Your Network
in the field
This series will allow attendees to share what they are working on in the field of equity and connect with others.
A Webinar Series Co-Hosted by US Department of Labor–Women’s Bureau & The Worker Institute at Cornell ILR
This webinar series will bring together researchers, policy makers, practitioners, unions, philanthropy, and advocates to share current research and praxis that address the need for a just economic recovery that reverses long-existent inequalities in job creation and access. The current crisis of inequality, made worse by the intersecting crisis of the pandemic and its impact on women and people of color, accelerates the need to envision job creation through the perspective of an equity lens.
Unprecedented levels of public investment to spur economic recovery after two years of the COVID-19 pandemic creates an historic opportunity to dismantle structural barriers and achieve equity and inclusion in economic development through high-quality jobs access for women and people of color. The question this webinar series will explore is how best to achieve equity goals. Drawing on existing models of practice from around the United States, this series will show how local and state actors have successfully implemented equity and job creation.
The goal of this series is to showcase current research on equity and its application to spur the upscaling of effective policy innovation at the state and local level at a time of record levels of economic investment by the federal government.
Previous events
Feb 24, 2022
Job Creation for a Just Society
We explore how equity in job creation is defined – with a focus on job growth through the current expansion of infrastructure investment.
April 26, 2022
Investing in Childcare Careers
We explore the challenges of the childcare industry and highlight local examples that are improving access to child care while also raising wages for child care workers.
Speakers
Is Wage Transparency
the Answer?
OCT 25, 2022
Co-sponsors
Announcing Cornell ILR’s
January 25, 2023
Mike Fishman
Climate Jobs National Resource Center (CJNRC)
PRESIDENT | EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
PRESIDENT, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR
Anne Marie Brady
Research for Worker Rights and Equity at the ILR Worker Institute
MODERATOR | DIRECTOR
Schedule
Registration and Cocktail Reception
Welcome, Introductions and Panelists
Alexander James Colvin, Kenneth F. Kahn ’69 Dean and Martin F. Scheinman ’75, MS ’76 Professor, Cornell University, ILR School
Roberta Reardon, Commissioner of Labor, New York State Department of Labor
Senator Jessica Ramos, New York State Senate, 13th District Chair of Committee on Labor
Gary LaBarbera, President, Building and Construction Trades Council of Greater New York and President, New York State Building and Construction Trades Council
Assembly Member LaToya Joyner, New York State Assembly, 77th Assembly District
Vincent Alvarez, President, New York City Central Labor Council, AFL-CIO
Aliya Haq, Vice President, U.S. Policy and Advocacy, Breakthrough Energy
Mike Fishman, President and Executive Director, Climate Jobs National Resource Center
Doreen M. Harris, President and CEO, New York State Energy Research and Development Authority
Lara Skinner, Director, Climate Jobs Institute, Cornell University, ILR School
Patricia Campos-Medina, Executive Director, The Worker Institute, Cornell University, ILR School
Ariel Avgar, David M. Cohen ’73 Professor of Labor Relations, Labor Relations, Law, and History Department, and Senior Associate Dean for Outreach and Sponsored Research, Cornell University, ILR School
Wednesday, January 25, 2023
5:00 P.M.
5:45 P.M.
6:30 P.M.
7:30 P.M.
7:45 P.M.
Panelists
PROFESSOR | ASSOCIATE DEAN
Ariel Avgar
Labor Relations, Labor Relations, Law, and History, Cornell University, ILR School
PROFESSOR ,
ASSOCIATE DEAN
Anne Marie Brady
Research for Worker Rights and Equity at the ILR Worker Institute
MODERATOR | DIRECTOR
Announcing Cornell ILR’s
Doreen M. Harris
New York State Energy Research and Development Authority (NYSERDA)
PRESIDENT | CEO
PRESIDENT, CEO