Last updated: 10/25/96
College of Behavioral and Social Sciences
Dean: Joel KassiolaLabor Studies Program
HSS 382
415-338-2885
Director: Brenda CochraneUndergraduate Adviser: Brenda Cochrane
Faculty
Professors--Bradley, Cherny, LeVeen, Reisch, Sampson, SchneiderPrograms
B.A. in Labor StudiesProgram Scope
The Labor Studies Program attracts students interested in how our lives are shaped by work and its results. Starting from the practical problems of work, workers and their organizations, labor students investigate the underlying economic, political, and cultural forces. Drawing on the full range of social science and other disciplines, students develop practical and analytical skills needed in working with labor, government, and other organizations in the labor field.Career Outlook
Labor Studies graduates work in a variety of occupations. Some are employed by local and national labor unions as organizers, representatives, researchers, negotiators, trainers, and trust-fund administrators. Others work for government agencies responsible for worker rights and protection in the National Labor Relations Board, U.S. Department of Labor, California Department of Industrial Relations, and other government agencies. Still others are elected union officers, labor educators training unionists in union representation, or journalists covering labor relations for print or electronic media. Labor Studies graduates also go on to advanced study in industrial and labor relations, public administration, law, and other disciplines.BACHELOR OF ARTS IN LABOR STUDIES
The Labor Studies major is organized into four tiers. The first tier, which includes LABR 250 and 300, provides a basic introduction to the field, including the range of topics and ways of studying those topics through the use of social science concepts and methodologies. The second tier builds upon this foundation in four areas: labor economics, labor and government, organizational theory and practice, and labor's relation to the larger society. The third tier, which is elective in nature, provides a way for the Labor Studies major to focus upon those areas of knowledge and skill directly related to his/her vocational objectives. The final tier, usually taken in the final semester before graduation, provides a career development seminar, vocationally-related internship, or field experience.Tier I: Foundations
Units
LABR 250 Introduction to the Study of Labor 3
LABR 300 Researching Labor Issues 3
Total for Tier I 6
Tier II: Four Required Courses
LABR 400 Union Structure and Administration 3
LABR 500 Labor and Government 4
ECON 510 Labor Economics 45 3
One course selected from the following: 46 3-4
HIST 474 History of Labor in the United States
SS 343 Women and Work
SOC 488 Industrial Sociology (4)
Total for Tier II 13-14
Tier III: Vocationally Related Electives
The student and his/her faculty adviser should work
out a plan through which these fifteen units of electives will
further the career objectives of the student. 47 15
Tier IV: Final Experience
An internship with an appropriate labor-related organization or government agency, under
the auspices of an appropriate course or
A field study course, applying the knowledge and skills acquired in the Labor
Studies program to the analysis of some appropriate labor-related program, organi-
zation, government agency, event, etc., under the auspices of an appropriate
course; e.g., SS 680, Field Course in Social Science, or LABR 699, Special
Study 3-4
Total for major 37-39
MINOR IN LABOR STUDIES
LABR 250 Introduction to the Study of Labor 3
LABR 300 Researching Labor Issues 3
LABR 400 Union Organization and Administration 3
LABR 500 Labor and Government 4
ECON 510 Labor Economics 3
Electives on advisement 7
Total for minor 23