• Home
  • Journalists
    • Headlines
  • Community
    • Businesses
    • Jobs
    • Learning
    • Marketplace
  • Store
(@)

How Janelle Jones’s Story About Black Women and the Economy Caught On

The first Black woman to serve as chief economist at the Labor Department advanced the idea that lifting up people on the margins helps everyone else, too.

Lydia DePillis
Author: Lydia DePillis

Written by

Lydia DePillis

in

Black People, Content Type: Personal Profile, Discrimination, Janelle Jones, Labor and Jobs, Service Employees International Union, United States Economy, Wages and Salaries
←Michael Jordan Was an Activist After All
From Self-Taught Designer to Sought-After Couturier→

More posts

  • Bitcoin recrosses $71,000 but level acting as “resistance rather than a launchpad”

  • WATCH: Growing trend of young girls using makeup

  • Why A White Jogger’s Howard University Video Sparked Outrage

  • Michelle Pfeiffer on deciding to join “The Madison” and why she still gets nervous in new roles

About Us


Support Us

Trademark & Copyright 1998 – 2025 · MOSAEC

  • Facebook
  • Instagram
  • LinkedIn
  • YouTube