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  1. 13 de feb. de 2022 · We Can Move Beyond Political Polarization Through a Working-Class Economic Agenda. By. Karen Nussbaum. US politics have become hyperpolarized along partisan lines. But they don’t have to be. Millions of Americans worry more about paying the rent or medical bills than what’s on cable news. They can be won over by a working-class economic agenda.

  2. 0 Followers, 2,042 Following, 907 Posts - Karen Nussbaum (@ksnussbaum) on Instagram: " - Boy Mom ️ - PR maven Certified Pediatric Sleep Consultant *Opinions are my own*"

  3. View the profiles of people named Karen Nussbaum. Join Facebook to connect with Karen Nussbaum and others you may know. Facebook gives people the power...

  4. Karen Nussbaum, the founding director of Working America and the Working America Education Fund, has been fighting for the rights of working people for more than four decades. She was a founder and director of 9to5, the National Association of Working Women and president of District 925, SEIU. Karen served as the director of the U.S. Department ...

  5. 14 de mar. de 2022 · Karen Nussbaum was a cofounder of the pioneering labor-feminist organization 9to5. In an interview with Jacobin, she discusses why working women in the 1970s needed to organize as workers, 9to5’s hilarious tactics, and why “individually self-reliant but collectively powerless” women workers today still need to organize on the job.

  6. 9to5 co-founders Karen Nussbaum and Ellen Cassedy met as college students at the University of Chicago in the late 1960s. Nussbaum says she came from a family of anti-Vietnam War protestors. In a sense, she was born to be an activist. “My family was concerned about social justice,” Nussbaum comments in the documentary.

  7. womensmediacenter.com › profile › karen-nussbaumWomen’s Media Center

    10 de may. de 2017 · Karen Nussbaum is an activist, labor leader, and founder of 9to5, a pioneering labor organization for female clerical workers. She has also served as Director of the Women’s Bureau of the Labor Department during the Clinton Administration, and as the head of the Working Women’s Department of the AFL-CIO from 1996-2001.