
The Great Political Sorting of American Offices
from Good on Paper
by The Atlantic
Published: Tue Feb 11 2025
Show Notes
We’re often told that there’s “no room for politics at work,” and yet the workplace is one of the most politically segregated spaces in adult life. The Harvard economics researcher Sahil Chinoy explains the self-sorting happening at every stage of professional life and the trade-offs workers are willing to make in pursuit of ideological uniformity.
Further reading:
“Political Sorting in the U.S. Labor Market: Evidence and Explanations,” by Sahil Chinoy and Martin Koenen
“ThePolitical Polarization of Corporate America,” by Vyacheslav Fos, et al.
“Politicsat Work” by Emanuele Colonnelli, et al.
“DoesCommunicating Measurable Diversity Goals Attract or Repel Historically Marginalized Job Applicants? Evidence From the Lab and Field” by Erika Kirgios, et al.
The study behind Sahil Chinoy’s Good on Paper answer: “Pitfallsof Demographic Forecasts of US Elections”
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