Book: The jobless future, by Stanley Aronowitz and William DiFazio, 2010.
Stanley Aronowitz has taught at the Graduate Center of the
City University of New York since 1983, where he is Distinguished Professor of
Sociology and Urban Education. He received his B.A. at the New School in 1968
and his Ph.D from the Union Graduate School in 1975. He studies labor, social
movements, science and technology, education, social theory and cultural
studies and is director of the Center for the Study of Culture, Technology and
Work at the Graduate Center.
He is author or editor of twenty-five books including:
Against Schooling: For an Education that Matters (2008); Left Turn: Forging a
New Political Future (2006); Just Around Corner (2005); How Class Works (2003);
The Last Good Job in America (2001); The Knowledge Factory (2000); The Jobless
Future (1994, with William DiFazio); and False Promises: The Shaping of
American Working Class Consciousness (1973, 1992).
He has published more than two hundred articles and reviews
in publications such as Harvard Educational Review, Social Policy, The Nation,
and The American Journal of Sociology. Prior to coming to the Graduate Center
he taught at the University of California–Irvine and Staten Island Community
College (now The College of Staten Island). He has been visiting professor or
scholar at University of Wisconsin–Madison, the University of Paris VIII, Lund
University (Sweden), and Columbia University. [Information taken from the author's information page on the website of the City University of New York Graduate Center.]
William DiFazio is Professor of Sociology and Anthropology
at St. Johns University in New York City.
He has a Ph.D. from the City University of New York. He teaches and does research in the sociology
of poverty, work and technology, urban sociology, and social theory. He is the
author of numerous research articles and books, like Ordinary Poverty: A Little
Food and Cold Storage. [Information taken from the author's information page on the website of St. John's University.]
Aronowitz is the main author of this book, and his
background, professional position, and publications indicate that he is well
qualified to write a book primarily about labor.
DiFazio also seems well qualified by his background, professional
position, and publications to be co-author of a book on this topic.
This book was published in 2010. It is about labor and automation,
things that can change very rapidly. So
though this book is only six years old, if it is used for a research project
about how automation is affecting labor, it should be supplemented by more
recently published books and/or scholarly articles.
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