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Session Submission Type: Paper Session (90 minute)
If researchers on work and labor have identified precarity as the key feature that characterizes work today, there is much less certainty or agreement on strategies for countering precarity. To what extent can legal remedies work? Under what conditions are they appropriate? What role do unions have to play? What strategies have worked, and which have not? This session brings together a group of papers to examine these questions and more.
Building Solidarity in the Shadow of the Law: The Role of Law in Domestic Employer Organizing - Diana Reddy, University of California Berkeley
Constructed, Constricted, and Contested Fields: Farmworker Legal Exclusions, Supply Chain Pressures, and Pro-Worker Interventions - Victor Yengle, University of Virginia
Global trends in precarious and unequal work: Some good news, much bad news - Chris Tilly, University of California-Los Angeles
Mobilizing Immigrant Worker Rights through Deferred Action - Youbin Kang, City College of New York; Shannon Marie Gleeson, Cornell University; Kati L. Griffith, Cornell University