- Richard B. Freeman
Richard B. Freeman (born 1943) is one of the leading labor economists in North America. The Herbert Ascherman Professor of Economics at
Harvard University , and Co-Director of the [http://www.law.harvard.edu/programs/lwp Labor and Worklife Program at Harvard Law School] , Freeman is also Senior Research Fellow on Labour Markets at theCentre for Economic Performance , an economic research lab part of theLondon School of Economics , funded by theEconomic and Social Research Council the UK's public body funding social science. Freeman directs the Science and Engineering Workforce Project (SEWP) at theNational Bureau of Economic Research (NBER), a network focused on the economics of science, technical, engineering, and IT labor which has received major long-term support from theSloan Foundation .He received his B.A. from
Dartmouth College in 1964 and his Ph.D. in Economics from Harvard University in 1969. He studied under Harvard Professor and Dean John T. Dunlop, who became U.S. Secretary of Labor under PresidentGerald Ford .One of the most prolific social scientists of the postwar period, Freeman has published over 300 articles on a wide range of subjects including global labor standards, the scientific workforce, the economics of crime, how the internet is transforming labor movements, and historical spurts in the growth of labor unions. He has delivered the Clarendon Lectures at Oxford University (1994), the Lionel Robbins Lecture at LSE (1999), the Luigi Einauidi Lecture at Cornell University (2002), and the Okun Lectures at Yale University (2003). His books include "America Works" (2007) "Can Labor Standards Improve Under Globalization?" (2003), "What Workers Want" (1999), "What Do Unions Do?" (1984), "Labor Economics" (1979), "The Overeducated American" (1976), "The Black Elite: The New Market for Highly Educated Black Americans" (1976), and "The Market for College Trained Manpower" (1971).
Freeman appeared on
The Colbert Report in early 2008.External links
*Richard Freeman's [http://www.nber.org/~freeman/ homepage at the NBER]
*The NBER [http://www.nber.org/~sewp/ Science & Engineering Workforce Project]
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