Ellen Galinsky, President of Families and Work Institute, is a nationally and internationally recognized researcher, author and speaker who examines the intersection of work, family and community; trends in the American workforce and workplace; child development; early learning; youth attitudes; women's leadership; multi-generational workforces and elder issues. She is the author of over 35 books and reports, including the groundbreaking book, Ask the Children, selected by The Wall Street Journal as one of the best work-life books of 1999. At the Institute, Ms. Galinsky co-directs The National Study of the Changing Workforce, the most comprehensive nationally representative study of the U.S. workforce, dating back to 1977, and The National Study of Employers, a nationally representative study that has tracked trends in employment benefits, policies, and practices since 1998.

Blog Entries by Ellen Galinsky

Healthier Employees and Cost Savings: Expanding our Definition of Wellness at Work

1 Comments | Posted October 7, 2009 | 05:09 PM (EST)


In her recent piece celebrating National Work & Family month, Donna Klein of Corporate Voices notes that "progressive personnel policies and a work culture supportive of occasional flexibility" offers companies "enhanced recruitment, retention, engagement, cost control, productivity and financial performance."

Here's another reason to support an effective and flexible...

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Women, Men, and Happiness: We're All in Transition

20 Comments | Posted September 23, 2009 | 08:01 PM (EST)


We're all talking about the Huffington Post column in which Marcus Buckingham dropped two pieces of disheartening news: "a) women are less happy than they were 40 years ago, compared with men, and b) as women get older, they get sadder." Using data over time from the General Social...

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Wellness is the Responsibility of Business as Well as Worker

2 Comments | Posted September 22, 2009 | 09:30 AM (EST)


No matter what your position is on the health care debate, almost everyone seems to agree that the path we are on is an untenable route to increasing costs and diminishing returns. New data show American workers are getting less healthy each year, and this obviously will increase health care...

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Peaceful Revolution: How Do Smart Employers Make Work "Work" in a Down Economy?

Posted August 11, 2009 | 04:28 PM (EST)


Smart employers are using flexible work options to manage through the recession -- and help their employees manage. The organization I head, the Families and Work Institute, highlights 260 award-winning employers across the U.S. using innovative approaches and practices including:

• Giving employees four Fridays off in the summer...

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Peaceful Revolution: What Would You Say to the First Lady?

8 Comments | Posted May 11, 2009 | 02:23 PM (EST)


On May 7th I attended the event that is now plastering the news: the First Lady Michelle Obama spoke out on work-life issues.

You may have heard some of the lines from her speech at Corporate Voices for Working Families -- that she is a 120-percenter, meaning that if...

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Peaceful Revolution: Work Life: Moving from the Personal to the Political

Posted October 14, 2008 | 11:40 AM (EST)


I am glad that the 2008 election has raised the issue of working families. This has been a "sleeper" issue, but no more! After the nomination of Sarah Palin, working families are responding in such high numbers that they are jamming the airwaves, filling up blogs, even crashing websites as...

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