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Paving the Way for NYC High Roaders 

Holly Wallace and Ed Baum ’81 have expanded their support of ILRies to include paid summer internships.

Ed Baum ’81 and Holy Wallace
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Alumni Stories

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Groat and Alpern 2025 Recipients Announced

Scott Buchheit, M.S. ’77, will receive the ILR School’s 2025 Groat Award and Linda Gadsby ’88 will receive the 2025 Alpern Award on April 24 at The Pierre Hotel in New York City.
Groat and Alpern screen
Groat and Alpern 2025 Recipients Announced

ILR Education Shows Up for Boston-based Leader

Nia Evans ’00 says, “ILR has shown up in everything” she has done as the executive director of the Boston Ujima Project, a democratically governed investment fund.
Nia Evans '00 speaking during Moral Monday at the Massachusetts State House in September 2016
ILR Education Shows Up for Boston-based Leader

HR Strategy Learnings: Aboud’s Executive Master’s Program Journey

Months before graduation from the ILR School’s EMHRM program, Christina Aboud was offered multiple job opportunities.
Andrea Mooney, Megan Orlander, Christina Aboud, Smiley Zhao
HR Strategy Learnings: Aboud’s Executive Master’s Program Journey

ILRies Find Success at Niche Firm

In Ives, students are taught to approach compensation from the human side, as well as the quantitative side, which spurs a national firm to recruit at ILR.
student walking by the ILR School Ives Faculty wing
ILRies Find Success at Niche Firm

ILR Giving Day Finds Success Among Students

Students Today Alumni Tomorrow (STAT) is a new initiative from the ILR Alumni Affairs and Development Office that aims to engage current students in learning about the important role philanthropy plays at the school.
Students Today Alumni Tomorrow text next to an image of four students posing with an oversized ILR photo frame
ILR Giving Day Finds Success Among Students

Malcomb Leads ILR WIDE Undergraduate Research Program

Doctoral student Claire Malcomb supports undergraduate research on diversity, equity and inclusion.
Claire Malcomb
Malcomb Leads ILR WIDE Undergraduate Research Program

ILR Donors Make All the Difference

To Do the Greatest Good

The ILR community everywhere is continuing to do the greatest good. Each year, ILR alumni, parents and friends come together to support the ILR School to ensure all students have the resources they need to be successful. Each year, the school recruits and retains faculty who are outstanding educators and leading researchers.

Your gift helps ILR remain the preeminent school focused on work, employment and labor. ILR is proud to be developing the thought leaders and practitioners shaping the future of work, and your gift advances this mission.

Please read our ILR Case for Support here

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News

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“Stories of Belonging” Highlights Journeys of Central Americans

A traveling exhibit highlighting the intersections of racism, dispossession and migration grew out of LR Worker Institute Executive Director Patricia Campos-Medina’s doctoral thesis.
Jose Urias is featured in "Stories of Belonging"
“Stories of Belonging” Highlights Journeys of Central Americans

ILR Panel Discusses Collective Bargaining in Women’s Professional Hockey

A discussion focused on the evolution of, and challenges facing, women’s professional hockey was hosted on Monday by ILR International Visiting Fellow Kelly Pike, ’03, Ph.D. ’14.
Kelly Pike, ’03, Ph.D. ’14, Digit Murphy, CALS ’83, Brianne Jenner, A&S ’15, and David Doorey
ILR Panel Discusses Collective Bargaining in Women’s Professional Hockey

Pioneering Professor Took Risks

Francine Blau, among the first economists to research gender pay inequities, retires from ILR as an internationally acclaimed authority.
Francine Blau at her retirement part in 2024
Pioneering Professor Took Risks

Events

International Spirit of Zinck's Night - Cornell Club of Long Island

Join the Cornell Club of Long Island for Zinck's Night! The International Spirit of Zinck’s Night is an annual event for Cornellians around the world to celebrate Cornell. This year, we will be gathering with fellow alumni, so please join us in celebration of this longstanding Cornell tradition! Appetizers and non-alcoholic drinks will be provided, but it will be a cash bar for alcohol beverages. Event Questions? Contact Maria Krum

Localist event image for International Spirit of Zinck's Night - Cornell Club of Long Island
International Spirit of Zinck's Night - Cornell Club of Long Island

Labor & Macro Workshop: Thomas Le Barbanchon

Thomas Le Barbanchon How can traditional AI improve search and matching? Evidence from 59 million personalized job recommendations Abstract: We explore how Artificial Intelligence can be leveraged to help frictional markets to clear. We design a collaborative-filtering machine-learning job recommender system that uses job seekers' click history to generate relevant personalized job recommendations. We deploy it at scale on the largest online job board in Sweden, and design a clustered two-sided randomized experiment to evaluate its impact on job search and labor-market outcomes. Combining platform data with unemployment and employment registers, we find that treated job seekers are more likely to click and apply to recommended jobs, and have 0.6\% higher employment within the 6 months following first exposure to recommendations. At the job-worker pair level, we document that recommending a vacancy to a job seeker increases the probability to work at this workplace by 5\%. Leveraging the two-sided vacancy-worker randomization or the market-level randomization, we find limited congestion effects. We find that employment effects are larger for workers that are less-educated, unemployed, and have initially a large geographic scope of search, for jobs that are attached to several jobs, and are relatively older. Results also suggest that recommendations expanding the occupational scope yield higher effects.

Localist event image for Labor & Macro Workshop: Thomas Le Barbanchon
Labor & Macro Workshop: Thomas Le Barbanchon

Labor Economics Workshop: Kaushik Basu

Kaushik Basu Outline of a New Theory of Labor, with Mutating Goods Abstract: The standard model of microeconomics treats labor as an unwanted, time-consuming activity that one would not indulge in but for the income that this generates. We have generally presumed that the demand for this kind of labor will exist as long as we do. However, in the age of Artificial Intelligence, with rapidly advancing technology, the question is beginning to arise about what will happen when the demand for this kind of labor vanishes. This paper argues that the time has come to rethink the meaning and foundations of ‘labor’ and goes on to sketch a microeconomic model in which the status of the same time-consuming activity can mutate between ‘labor’ and consumption. A partial equilibrium model is built to illustrate how these mutations can occur because of exogenous changes. Thereafter, a simple, general-equilibrium model with mutating goods is described. This can provide a framework for future research. The model is then used to discuss new kinds of policy interventions that a government may want to design and implement in the new world of vanishing conventional labor.

Localist event image for Labor Economics Workshop: Kaushik Basu
Labor Economics Workshop: Kaushik Basu

How the Labor Movement Strengthens Democracy in the US and Globally

Labor unions form to negotiate with employers on behalf of workers. However, research shows that the impact of unionization extends beyond the worksite. Join us to discuss the impact of unions on their broader communities, unions' role in society and why they matter for democracy in the US and globally.

silhouette of construction wokers at a jobsite
How the Labor Movement Strengthens Democracy in the US and Globally

Missing in Brooks County: Film Screening of a Documentary Film

In a small town in Texas, the border wall has already arrived. Please join us as Lisa Molomot will presents her documentary film, "Missing in Brooks County," followed by a discussion. Synopsis: 70 miles north of the Mexican-US border lies Brooks County, Texas - a haunted, inhospitable place where thousands of immigrants have gone missing or died over the past decade. Missing in Brooks County follows the journey of two families who arrive in Brooks County to look for their loved ones, only to find a mystery that deepens at every turn. Stuck between the jurisdiction of border agents, local law enforcement, and cartels, the county is a barren landscape designed as a deterrent to illegal crossings. Despite this tactical designation, the municipality has never been provided the resources to process the remains of the hundreds of undocumented immigrants who succumb to dehydration and exposure each year. Missing in Brooks County is a potent reminder that these deaths are more than a statistic—each represents a living human being, loved by their family, now lost. Lisa Molomot is a documentary filmmaker and editor whose work has aired on Independent Lens, Discovery Channel, A&E, and ESPN, and has been seen at Sundance and SXSW. Her 2013 feature “The Hill” premiered on the PBS series America Reframed, and won Honorable Mention for the Paul Robeson Award at the Newark Black Film Festival. Her short “School’s Out” has been a leading element in the movement for outdoor primary school education; it premiered on the PBS series “Natural Heroes,” has screened at over 25 festivals worldwide, and is a bestseller at Bullfrog Films for over two years running. Sponsored by Cornell Brooks School of Public Policy and the ILR School.

Localist event image for Missing in Brooks County: Film Screening of a Documentary Film
Missing in Brooks County: Film Screening of a Documentary Film

Labor & Public Economics Workshop: Kalie Pierce

Kalie Pierce Abstract:

Localist event image for Labor & Public Economics Workshop: Kalie Pierce
Labor & Public Economics Workshop: Kalie Pierce

Meet our Team