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Remote Work and Labor Force Participation: Evidence of Expanded Access Post-Pandemic
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
8 hours ago
21 min read
Rethinking Graduate Underemployment: Beyond the Headlines to Nuanced Understanding
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
1 day ago
21 min read
The Remote Work–AI Paradox: Rethinking the Decline in Early-Career Hiring
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
2 days ago
23 min read
The Ethics of Managerial Robin Hoodism: When Leaders Take Justice into Their Own Hands
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
3 days ago
35 min read
Psychological Capital Is Your Most Underleveraged Competitive Advantage
4 days ago
5 min read
Inclusive Leadership and Team Innovation: Harnessing Failure as a Catalyst for New-Generation Workforce Performance
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
4 days ago
26 min read
Leadership as the Catalyst: Building Psychological Safety to Unlock Organizational Innovation
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
5 days ago
13 min read
Revitalizing Double-Loop Learning: From Conceptual Foundations to Organizational Transformation
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
6 days ago
28 min read
People Analytics and Trust: When Transparency Reveals Too Much
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
Jun 2
20 min read
Calibrating Human–AI Teams: A Knowledge Management Framework for Optimizing Collective Intelligence
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
Jun 1
21 min read
Human Capital Leadership Review
2026 Job Hunt Anxiety: New Data Reveals Candidates' Pressure Points
4 hours ago
2 min read
A Smarter Way For Leaders To Test Ideas Before Going All In
4 hours ago
4 min read
Remote Work and Labor Force Participation: Evidence of Expanded Access Post-Pandemic
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
8 hours ago
21 min read
Rethinking Graduate Underemployment: Beyond the Headlines to Nuanced Understanding
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
1 day ago
21 min read
The Remote Work–AI Paradox: Rethinking the Decline in Early-Career Hiring
NEXUS INSTITUTE FOR WORK AND AI
2 days ago
23 min read
The Ethics of Managerial Robin Hoodism: When Leaders Take Justice into Their Own Hands
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
3 days ago
35 min read
"Too Old to Hire" New Research Exposes the Age Bias Pushing Older Americans Out of the Workforce
4 days ago
5 min read
Psychological Capital Is Your Most Underleveraged Competitive Advantage
4 days ago
5 min read
Inclusive Leadership and Team Innovation: Harnessing Failure as a Catalyst for New-Generation Workforce Performance
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
4 days ago
26 min read
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HCL Review Research Videos
HCL Review Research Infographics
Blog: HCI Blog
Human Capital Leadership Review
Featuring scholarly and practitioner insights from HR and people leaders, industry experts, and researchers.
Human Capital Innovations
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31:17
Temporary Leave without Permanent Setbacks, with Beth Wanner
In this HCI Webinar, I talk with Beth Wanner about providing temporary leave options within your organization. Beth Wanner is the founder and CEO of Mother Cover, an agency providing interim and fractional coverage that helps companies across the U.S. and Canada maintain momentum while supporting employees through parental and caregiver leave. A former tech executive, she launched Mother Cover after her own experience of being terminated at 8-months pregnant exposed critical gaps in how workplaces support parents. She has become a vocal advocate for women and parents in the workplace, focused on changing how leave is handled operationally—not just in policy.
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30:11
Temporary Leave without Permanent Setbacks, with Beth Wanner
In this podcast episode, Dr. Jonathan H. Westover talks with Beth Wanner about providing temporary leave options within your organization. Beth Wanner (https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.linkedin.com/in/bethwanner/&sa=D&source=calendar&usd=2&usg=AOvVaw3Km2EaraYy0UDgfclm2N8S) is the founder and CEO of Mother Cover (https://www.google.com/url?q=https://www.mothercoveragency.com/&sa=D&source=calendar&usd=2&usg=AOvVaw2zoBidYXTTtbZuq5wwMgaR) , an agency providing interim and fractional coverage that helps companies across the U.S. and Canada maintain momentum while supporting employees through parental and caregiver leave. A former tech executive, she launched Mother Cover after her own experience of being terminated at 8-months pregnant exposed critical gaps in how workplaces support parents. She has become a vocal advocate for women and parents in the workplace, focused on changing how leave is handled operationally—not just in policy. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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07:06
Remote Work Revolution - Expanding Workforce Participation Post Pandemic
The sudden shift to remote work in 2020 sparked widespread anxiety about productivity, collaboration, and the future of work. For decades, the office environment was considered essential for innovation and teamwork, underpinning traditional work routines and management structures. When millions transitioned to working from home, fears arose about distraction, disengagement, and economic instability. Contrary to early skepticism, extensive data revealed that productivity did not decline; instead, many workers and companies adapted, innovated, and thrived. Remote work emerged as a powerful catalyst for workforce inclusion, opening opportunities for parents, caregivers, people with disabilities, and those living outside urban centers. The remote work revolution dismantled barriers such as long commutes and rigid schedules, enabling a more flexible, equitable, and resilient labor market. Between 2020 and 2026, the participation rate of prime-age workers reached record highs, driven by remote and hybrid models now comprising 30% of full-time workdays, a sixfold increase from pre-pandemic times. Highlights 🌍 The global shift to remote work revolutionized traditional office-dependent work models. 💼 Productivity remained stable or improved despite initial fears of remote work failure. ♿ Remote work significantly increased workforce participation among people with disabilities and caregivers. 🚀 Remote and hybrid work models have expanded labor force participation to record levels. 🏡 Flexible work eliminates commutes and location-based barriers, enabling a more diverse workforce. 🛠️ Companies focusing on outcomes over presence build trust, inclusion, and accountability. 🌟 The future of work is flexible, inclusive, and designed to unlock human potential across industries. Key Insights 🌐 Remote work dispels the myth that physical offices are essential for productivity. Early assumptions about remote work predicted chaos and disengagement, but the reality proved resilience and innovation. Workers adapted their environments and communication methods, maintaining and often exceeding productivity benchmarks. This insight challenges long-standing beliefs about “optimal” work settings and underscores adaptability as a critical workforce strength. 🔓 Flexibility is a catalyst for workforce inclusion and economic empowerment. Remote work inherently removes traditional barriers—long commutes, fixed hours, and geographic restrictions—that previously excluded large populations, including parents, caregivers, and people with disabilities. The resulting increase in labor participation supports economic growth by tapping into underutilized talent pools and fostering diversity in ideas and perspectives. 💼 Workforce participation growth signifies not just recovery but positive transformation. By 2026, labor force participation among prime-age workers reached 83.8%, surpassing pre-pandemic levels. This leap demonstrates a structural shift in employment paradigms, where flexible and hybrid models contribute not only to maintaining workforce size but also to expanding it, showing that work can evolve beyond rigid frameworks. 🖥️ Remote collaboration and creativity thrive in the absence of physical proximity. Virtual tools and asynchronous communication have proven effective in sustaining team dynamics and innovation. Companies like GitLab have thrived operating fully remotely with robust documentation and asynchronous workflows. This reveals that proximity bias—favoring those physically present—can be overcome with deliberate cultural and management shifts, expanding opportunities for remote contributors. 👩👧👦 Remote work supports work-life balance, especially benefiting caregivers and women. The flexibility of working from home allows parents and caregivers to manage family responsibilities without stepping back from careers. This shift advances gender equity in the workforce by reducing the pressure to choose between caregiving and professional growth, contributing to broader societal benefits like economic stability and gender parity. 🌍 Geographical boundaries no longer limit talent acquisition or economic opportunity. The ability to work from anywhere opens doors for individuals in rural and remote areas to access top-tier jobs without relocating. This diffusion of economic opportunity helps reduce urban-rural disparities and stimulates local economies, fostering balanced regional development. 🔄 Successful remote organizations emphasize outcomes over physical presence, building trust and accountability. The shift from “time at desk” to results-based evaluation requires managerial training to avoid proximity bias and focus on measurable achievements. This evolution promotes equity among employees, ensures fairness in performance assessments, and encourages a culture of transparency and mutual respect.
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03:53
The Flexibility Frontier
This research explores how remote work has evolved from a temporary crisis measure into a permanent structural shift that enhances labor market participation. By removing physical and geographic barriers, flexible arrangements have significantly expanded employment access for caregivers, individuals with disabilities, and those in isolated regions. The research highlights that prime-age worker participation has reached record highs, refuting early fears that off-site work would harm productivity or engagement. Successful organizations are shown to thrive by adopting intentional digital infrastructures and outcome-based performance metrics rather than relying on physical presence. Ultimately, the research frames modern flexibility as a crucial innovation for building a more inclusive and resilient global workforce.
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04:47
AI's De Coring Effect - Reshaping Skills for the Future
This video presents a thoughtful exploration of the profound transformation that artificial intelligence (AI) is bringing to the world of work. Unlike traditional machines that amplified physical capabilities and operated within fixed rules, AI fundamentally changes the cognitive dimension of labor by learning, adapting, and making predictions from vast amounts of data. This shift means that AI no longer merely automates routine manual tasks but collaborates with human intellect in areas such as analysis, creativity, communication, and decision-making. Highlights 🤖 AI fundamentally changes work by augmenting human cognition, not just automating manual tasks. 🔄 Traditional deep expertise is losing value; versatility and adaptability are becoming more important. 🎨 AI shifts creative roles, turning specialists into multi-skilled collaborators who guide AI tools. 📉 Education systems struggle to keep pace with the AI-driven demand for broad, flexible skills. 🛠 Lifelong learning and upskilling are crucial to thriving in the evolving AI workforce. 🤝 Countries and companies with strong retraining and safety nets better manage labor transitions. 🌍 AI is not about replacing humans but about redefining roles to focus on creativity, empathy, and critical thinking. Key Insights 🤖 AI Extends Cognitive Capabilities, Redefining “Work”: Unlike past automation that replaced manual labor, AI augments intellectual functions such as pattern recognition, creativity, and decision-making. This signals a paradigm shift from augmenting muscles to augmenting minds, fundamentally changing the nature of human contribution and redefining the value of work in society. 🔄 The Decline of Specialized Mastery & Rise of Versatility: AI’s ability to execute specialized tasks quickly and accurately devalues career paths built on deep knowledge in a single domain. The emerging labor market rewards those who combine multiple skills—technical, analytical, creative, and digital—and who can curate AI output effectively rather than rely solely on manual mastery. 🎨 Creative Professions Transformed by AI Tools: The example of Maria, the graphic designer, illustrates how AI shortens production time and emphasizes the skill of prompting and guiding AI rather than traditional techinical prowess. Creative workers shift from sole creators to AI collaborators, highlighting the need to understand and harness AI as an extension of creativity. 📚 Education Systems Are Misaligned with AI-Era Workforce Needs: Traditional education models emphasize deep specialization and mastery, but these become liabilities as job requirements pivot toward adaptability and multi-domain competence. The widening gap between educational output and job market demand signifies an urgent need to reform curricula to include digital skills, creativity, and lifelong learning mindsets. 🔄 Lifelong Learning as a Survival Skill: The rapid evolution driven by AI requires ongoing retraining and skill development. The notion that education ends with formal schooling is obsolete. Continuous learning, supported by flexible training programs, will be essential to maintaining workforce relevance and employability in the AI age. 🛡 The Role of Institutional Support in Workforce Adaptation: Countries with robust safety nets and active retraining policies (e.g., Denmark) exemplify how social systems can mitigate AI disruption. Similarly, forward-thinking companies investing in employee upskilling create sustainable transitions. Coordinated efforts between governments, businesses, and educational institutions are pivotal for equitable adaptation. 🌍 A Human-Centered AI Future Depends on Adaptation and Collaboration: AI offers opportunities to focus more on inherently human traits such as creativity, empathy, and critical thinking. The transition to an AI-driven economy is not about replacement but transformation. Success depends on collective efforts grounded in curiosity, resilience, and solidarity, enabling society to harness AI as a tool for enhancing human potential rather than diminishing it.
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03:48
Navigating the New Anatomy of Work
This research explores the de-coring phenomenon, a shift in the labor market where artificial intelligence flattens skill hierarchies and broadens the range of required competencies at shallower depths. This structural change suggests that rather than eliminating jobs entirely, AI reconfigures the internal task mix of existing roles, frequently placing a heavy reskilling burden on small firms and less-educated workers. To achieve sustainable workforce development, organizations are encouraged to adopt proactive strategies such as transparent communication, modular credentialing, and preserving human discretion in automated workflows. The research emphasize that educational systems must evolve from narrow vocational tracks toward flexible, portable skill frameworks to remain aligned with shifting employer demands. Ultimately, the research highlights that the quality of AI implementation—specifically how it incorporates worker voice and procedural justice—dictates whether technology augments human capability or undermines job quality.
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Leading through Conflict in the Workplace, with Dallin Cooper
In this HCI Webinar, I talk with Dallin Cooper about leading through conflict in the workplace. Dallin Cooper is an author, entrepreneur, and award-winning shepherd. From small Wyoming towns to one of the largest cities in China, Dallin has helped audiences challenge their assumptions to understand perspectives outside their own.
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21:34
Remote Work and Labor Force Participation: Evidence of Expanded Access Post-Pandemic
Abstract: The post-pandemic labor market has witnessed a surprising resilience in labor force participation rates, particularly among prime-age workers (25–54 years), challenging predictions that widespread remote work adoption would diminish employment. Current data from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reveals prime-age labor force participation has returned to pre-pandemic levels and continues climbing, reaching 83.8% as of April 2026. This article examines the relationship between remote work arrangements and labor supply, distinguishing between the acute disruptions of pandemic lockdowns and the structural benefits of flexible work arrangements. Drawing on labor economics research, organizational case studies, and workforce participation data, we demonstrate that remote work has functionally expanded labor supply by reducing barriers to employment for caregivers, workers with disabilities, individuals in geographically isolated areas, and those facing long commutes. Organizations that have strategically implemented remote and hybrid models report improved retention, expanded talent pools, and enhanced employee wellbeing. The evidence suggests that flexible work arrangements, when thoughtfully designed, represent not a threat to employment but an inclusive infrastructure innovation that enables broader workforce participation. See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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Nov 15, 2024
8 min read
CATALYST CENTER FOR WORK INNOVATION
How to Beat Procrastination at Work
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