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Savannah Marie Hunter

PhD Candidate in Sociology, University of California-Davis
Chapter Fellow, Sacramento SSN
Chapter Member: Sacramento SSN
Areas of Expertise:

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About Savannah

Hunter's research focuses on work and inequality. She studies precarious work, health and safety, and labor regulation and policy. She is committed to graduate and undergraduate student mentoring and has been active in civic data projects and labor organizing.

Contributions

How Precarious Scheduling Hurts Workers - And What Can be Done to Mitigate Problems

  • Savannah Marie Hunter

Publications

"Occupational Composition and Racial/Ethnic Inequality in Varying Work Hours in the Great Recession" (with Ryan Finnigan), in Research in the Sociology of Work, edited by Ethel L. Mickey, Adia Harvery Wingfield (Emerald Publishing Limited, 2018), 165-193.

Finds that varying work hours became more common for White, Black, and especially Latino/a workers during and after the Great Recession. The growth in varying hours for White and Latino workers was highest in predominantly minority occupations. However, Black workers experienced the greatest growth in varying hours in predominantly White occupations.

"Unstable Work Schedules and Earnings Volatility," Center for Poverty Research, September 1, 2018.

Summarizes the key literature on the extent of variable and unpredictable work schedules in the United States and highlights the relationship between unstable work schedules and volatility in earnings.