How Phyllis Wallace tackled workplace discrimination
Phyllis Wallace took part in a landmark 1970s AT&T discrimination case and researched the working lives of young Black women.
Faculty
Robert McKersie is Professor Emeritus of Management at the MIT Sloan School of Management.
McKersie is an expert source on industrial and labor relations with a focus on bargaining. He researches strategies being pursued by different industries to bring about more effective organizational changes. McKersie is the author of A Decisive Decade: An Insider’s View of the Chicago Civil Rights Movement (SIU Press, 2013), where his participation as a white activist for black rights presented a firsthand account of the debates, boycotts, marches, and negotiations that impacted race relations in Chicago and the United States during the 1960s. He is also the coauthor of A Behavioral Theory of Labor Negotiations (ILR Press,1991), Strategic Negotiations (Harvard Business School Press,1995), The Transformation of American Industrial Relations (Basic Books,1986), and Pay, Productivity, and Collective Bargaining (Macmillan,1983).
McKersie holds an SB in electrical engineering from the University of Pennsylvania and an MBA and a DBA from Harvard University.
McKersie, Robert B. Negotiation Journal Vol. 39, No. 3 (2023): 279-296.
McKersie, Robert B. Negotiation Journal Vol. 37, No. 3 (2021): 301-323. Download Paper from DSpace.
McKersie, Robert B. Cornell, NY: Cornell Publishing, 2019.
Werner Sengenberger and Robert McKersie.
Kochan, Thomas A., Adrienne Eaton, Robert McKersie and Paul Adler. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 2009.
McKersie, Robert, Theresa Sharpe, Thomas A. Kochan, Adrienne Eaton, George Strauss and Marty Morgenstern. Industrial Relations Vol. 47, No. 1 (2008): 66-96.
Phyllis Wallace took part in a landmark 1970s AT&T discrimination case and researched the working lives of young Black women.
Insights into attitudinal restructuring and intra-organizational negotiations still hold the key to positive outcomes.