Good Jobs Collaborative
A project of Center on Education & Labor
The Good Jobs Collaborative is a diverse coalition of labor, policy, and research organizations committed to building a good jobs economy in which the benefits of economic growth are fairly shared with workers. We advocate for workforce and economic development strategies that build worker power, address structural inequities in access to good jobs, and provide critical support to people experiencing unemployment and economic precarity.
Show More
Workers are mobilizing and demanding more for their labor— higher wages, decent hours, and a voice in their workplaces. The relentless rise of income inequality over the last 40 years has hollowed out the middle class and left a majority of Americans without the economic security they want and deserve.
The Good Jobs Collaborative is a coalition of labor, policy, and research organizations committed to building a good jobs economy in which the benefits of economic growth are fairly shared with workers, their families, and their communities. See our guiding principles here.
The Good Job Collaborative includes the Advancing Black Strategies Initiative, AFL-CIO, Aspen Institute’s Economic Opportunities Program, Center for Law and Social Policy (CLASP), Center on Education & Labor at New America, Economic Policy Institute (EPI), Healthcare Career Advancement Program (H-CAP), High Road Strategy Center at University of Wisconsin, Jobs to Move America, Jobs with Justice, Joint Center for Political and Economic Studies, Milwaukee Area Service and Hospitality Workers Organization (MASH), Restaurant Opportunities Centers (ROC) United, Roosevelt Institute, and the Service Employees International Union (SEIU).
Featured
It’s Time to Put Workers at the Center of Workforce Development Policy
Event / In-Person
Launching the Good Jobs Collaborative
It’s Time for a New Approach to Workforce Development
Event / Virtual
Better Together: Worker Rights and Workforce Development
Experts
Mary Alice McCarthy
Senior Director, Center on Education & Labor
Morgan Polk
Senior Policy Analyst, Center on Education & Labor