Juliet
Schor’s research over the last ten years has focussed on issues
pertaining to trends in work and leisure, consumerism, the relationship
between work and family, women's issues and economic justice. Schor's
latest book is Born to Buy: The Commercialized
Child and the New Consumer Culture (Scribner 2004). She
is also author of The Overworked American: The Unexpected
Decline of Leisure and The Overspent American: Upscaling,
Downshifting and the New Consumer. She has co-edited, The
Golden Age of Capitalism: Reinterpreting the Postwar Experience, The Consumer Society Reader, and Sustainable
Planet: Solutions for the 21st Century. Earlier in her career,
her research focussed on issues of wages, productivity, and profitability.
She also did work on the political economy of central banking. Schor
is currently is at work on a project on the commercialization of
childhood, and is beginning research on environmental sustainability
and its relation to Americans’ lifestyles.
Schor is a board member and co-founder of the Center
for a New American Dream, an organization devoted to transforming
North American lifestyles to make them more ecologically and socially
sustainable. She also teaches periodically at Schumacher
College, an International Center for Ecological Studies based
in south-west England.
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