Overview

Southern workers have unique barriers to building worker voice and power that restrict their economic mobility. Low labor standards in the South, alongside laws that restrict collective organizing and efforts to improve working conditions, leave low-wage workers more vulnerable to exploitation and limit their ability to advance. Overcoming these barriers requires innovative approaches to strengthen labor standards in the South. 

 

Worker advocates, local policymakers, and employers in Southern states need reliable evidence on what’s needed to improve labor conditions and economic outcomes for low-wage workers, their communities, and their employers. Supporting Southern workers’ ability to get safe, secure, and family-sustaining jobs is key to their upward economic mobility.

Latest Content

Economic context, Workers in the South January 19, 2021
Changemaker Q&A

A Call for Innovation in the Labor Movement: A Q&A with David Rolf

The founder and president emeritus of SEIU 775 and author of The Fight for Fifteen shares why worker power is essential to building an equitable labor market where economic mobility is possible. 

Elisabeth Jacobs

January 19, 2021
Skills and training, Young workers, Support during upskilling, Workers in the South December 30, 2020
Changemaker Q&A

Supporting Workers and Families through a Pandemic: A Q&A with David Zammiello

Project QUEST's executive director reflects on his organization's pivot to providing intensive coaching, mentoring, and other wraparound services entirely online.

Elisabeth Jacobs

December 30, 2020