Employee Ownership Ideas Forum – Videos

Note: This is a past event, additional resources may be available below.

long color picture with US Capitol building and a tree in the foreground plus Aspen & Rutgers logos

Date

Jun 14 – 15 2023
12:00am

Location



Contact

The Employee Ownership Ideas Forum — co-hosted by the Aspen Institute Economic Opportunities Program and the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing at Rutgers University — brought together leading policymakers, practitioners, experts, and the media for a robust discussion on how we can grow employee ownership for the shared benefit of American workers and businesses. We are pleased to share recordings of sessions from both days of the Forum. Click below to learn more:


Day One

Growing economic freedom and prosperity: the case for employee ownership

Ownership on the March: Recent Progress in Supporting Employee Ownership

Unleashing an Ownership Economy: The Role of Government Agencies

Owning the Future: Creating the Next Generation of Employee Owners


Day Two

Rebuilding the Middle Class through Employee Ownership

Ownership for Equity: Building an Inclusive Economy through Employee Ownership

Employee Ownership and the Company of the Future

American Values and the Competitive Advantage of Employee Ownership

The Employee Ownership Ideas Forum — co-hosted by the Aspen Institute Economic Opportunities Program and the Institute for the Study of Employee Ownership and Profit Sharing at Rutgers University — brought together leading policymakers, practitioners, experts, and the media for a robust discussion on how we can grow employee ownership for the shared benefit of American workers and businesses. We are pleased to share recordings of sessions from both days of the Forum. Click below to learn more:


Day One

Growing economic freedom and prosperity: the case for employee ownership

Ownership on the March: Recent Progress in Supporting Employee Ownership

Unleashing an Ownership Economy: The Role of Government Agencies

Owning the Future: Creating the Next Generation of Employee Owners


Day Two

Rebuilding the Middle Class through Employee Ownership

Ownership for Equity: Building an Inclusive Economy through Employee Ownership

Employee Ownership and the Company of the Future

American Values and the Competitive Advantage of Employee Ownership

Fixing Work: Recent Lessons from the Field

The Aspen Institute Economic Opportunities Program will soon release a report, Fixing Work: Lessons from Job Quality Practitioners, based on in-depth interviews with more than 20 leaders across the country about the work they are doing to create good jobs that provide economic security, the opportunity to advance and grow, and a safe, dignified, and equitable workplace. 

2025 Aspen Cyber Summit

Join us in celebrating 10 years of dialogue at the 2025 Aspen Cyber Summit in Washington, DC, on Tuesday, November 18.

Advising Small Businesses on Job Quality: Lessons from CDFIs

Hear from CDFIs about their approaches to building job quality advising into their work, and share your questions and comments. We are eager to hear what you think!

Job Quality Fellowship Webinar – Transcript

In addition to providing an overview of the nomination and application process, we’re pleased to welcome two Job Quality Fellows to this conversation — Neidi Dominguez Zamorano, founding executive director of Organized Power in Numbers, and Bo Delp, executive director of the Texas Climate Jobs Project — who will share their experience as members of the Fellowship.

Working and Homeless in America — A Book Talk with Brian Goldstone — Resources

“There Is No Place for Us” not only brings these unseen lives into focus but also forces us to confront a pressing question: If hard work is no longer enough to keep a roof over one’s head, what does that say about the promise of economic opportunity in the US?

Marketcrafters: The 100-Year Struggle To Shape the American Economy — A Book Talk with Chris Hughes

Markets and our economy don’t just happen — they’re crafted. While we often hear about the “free market” as a natural force governed by the invisible hand, the reality is far more intentional.