Director, Stone Center
Professor of Political Science and Sociology
James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Distinguished Chair in Socio-Economic Inequality
CUNY Graduate Center
Janet Gornick joined the CUNY faculty in 1994 and is currently professor of political science and sociology at the Graduate Center. From 2006 to 2016, she served as director of LIS (formerly the Luxembourg Income Study), a cross‐national data archive and research center located in Luxembourg. Since 2016, she has served as director of the Graduate Center’s Stone Center on Socio‐Economic Inequality, and has held the James M. and Cathleen D. Stone Distinguished Chair in Socio-Economic Inequality since it was established in 2021. The Stone Center includes the LIS satellite office, known as the U.S. Office of LIS.
Most of her research is comparative and concerns social welfare policies and their impact on gender disparities in the labor market, poverty, income inequality, or wealth concentration. She is the coauthor or coeditor of four books: Families That Work: Policies for Reconciling Parenthood and Employment (Russell Sage Foundation, 2003), Gender Equality: Transforming Family Divisions of Labor (Verso Press, 2009), Income Inequality: Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries (Stanford University Press, 2013), and Measuring Distribution and Mobility of Income and Wealth (University of Chicago Press, 2022). She has served as a guest editor for several journal issues, including a double issue of the Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis focused on work-family reconciliation policies (2006–2007), and “Single-Parent Families and Public Policy: Evidence from High-Income Countries”, a volume of The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science (2022).
Her research has been published in many journals, including American Sociological Review, Annual Review of Sociology, Social Forces, Socio‐Economic Review, Journal of European Social Policy, European Sociological Review, Social Science Quarterly, Monthly Labor Review, Feminist Economics, Journal of Economic Inequality, and Social Indicators Research. She also regularly presents her work in popular venues, including The American Prospect, Dissent, and Challenge Magazine.
Gornick attended Harvard University, where she was awarded a B.A. (psychology and social relations, 1980), an M.P.A. (Kennedy School, 1987), and a Ph.D. (political economy and government, 1994). She is the recipient of an Honorary Doctorate from Stockholm University and is an elected member of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences.
Areas of Expertise
Gender and Work
Income Inequality
Social Welfare Policy
Cross-national Comparisons
LIS and LWS Data
Featured Work
Income Inequality: Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries
Edited by Janet C. Gornick and Markus Jäntti
This state-of-the-art volume presents comparative, empirical research on a topic that has long preoccupied scholars, politicians, and everyday citizens: economic inequality. While income and wealth inequality across all populations is the primary focus, the contributions to this book pay special attention to the middle class, a segment often not addressed in inequality literature.
Luxembourg Income Study – Response
J.C. Gornick, M. Jäntti, T. Munzi, and T. Kruten. The Journal of Economic Inequality. vol. 13, no. 4. pp. 549-556. 2015.
Income Inequality in the United States in Cross-National Perspective: Redistribution Revisited
J.C. Gornick and B. Milanovic. LIS Center Series. 2015.
Parental Leave and Fathers: Extending and Deepening the Knowledge Base
J.C. Gornick. In Fatherhood in the Nordic Welfare States: Comparing Care Policies and Practice. G.B. Eydal and T. Rostgaard (eds). pp. 373-384. Chicago: Bristol University Press. 2015.
Leave Policies in Challenging Times: What Have We learned? What Lies Ahead?
J.C. Gornick. Community, Work & Family. vol. 18, no. 2. pp. 236-243. 2015.
Gender, Employment and Parenthood: The Consequences of Work-Family Policies
J.C. Gornick and A. Hegewisch. In Lessons from Europe? What Americans Can Learn from European Public Policies. R.D. Keleman (ed). pp. 17-41. Washington, DC: Congressional Quarterly Press. 2014.
Women’s Employment, Unpaid Work, and Economic Inequality
N. Folbre, J.C. Gornick, H. Connolly, and T. Munzi. In Income Inequality: Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries. J.C. Gornick and Markus Jäntti (eds). pp. 234-260. Palo Alto: Stanford University Press. 2013.
Cross-National Data Center in Luxembourg, LIS
J.C. Gornick, B.H. Ragnarsdottir, and S. Kostecki. In Understanding Research Infrastructures in the Social Sciences. B. Kleiner, I. Renschler, B. Wernli, P. Farago, and D. Joye (eds). pp. 89-99. Zurich: Seismo. 2013.
Promoting Work-Family Balance
D. Bakst, S. Leiwant, and J.C. Gornick. In Toward a 21st Century for All: Progressive Policies for New York City in 2013 and Beyond. J. Mollenkopf (ed). pp. 246-288. New York: CUNY. 2013.
Income Inequality: Economic Disparities and the Middle Class in Affluent Countries
J.C. Gornick and M. Jäntti (eds). Palo Alto: Stanford University Press. 2013.
The Time Divide in Cross-National Perspective: The Work Week, Education, and Institutions That Matter
P. Frase and J.C. Gornick. Social Forces. vol. 91, no. 3. pp. 697–724. 2013.
Searching for the Roots of U.S. Inequality Exceptionalism: Janet Gornick and Branko Milanovic
In this post, Janet Gornick and Branko Milanovic discuss the results of their study, "In Search of the Roots of American Inequality Exceptionalism: An Analysis Based on Luxembourg Income Study (LIS) Data,” an examination of what underlies the high level of income inequality in the U.S.
Geographic Disparities in the U.S. Social Safety Net: An Underexamined Dimension of Inequality
In this post, Stone Center research assistant Joseph van der Naald discusses the chapter of the recently published "Measuring Distribution and Mobility of Income and Wealth" that he co-authored with Sarah Bruch and Janet Gornick.
From Measuring the Top 1 Percent to Studying the Effects of Covid-19 on Poverty and Inequality: Nishant Yonzan
In this interview, Nishant Yonzan, who earned his Ph.D. from the Graduate Center in 2022, talks about his study, coauthored with Stone Center Scholars Branko Milanovic, Salvatore Morelli, and Janet Gornick, that was recently published in The Journal of Economic Inequality.
The Stone Center Announces Its Fourth Cohort of Postdoctoral Scholars
Tina Law and Manuel Schechtl will join the Stone Center as postdoctoral scholars in September 2022.
Mind the Gap: Disparities in Measured Income Between Survey and Tax Data
In this commentary, originally posted on VoxEU, Nishant Yonzan, Branko Milanovic, Salvatore Morelli, and Janet Gornick analyze when and why household survey data and tax data diverge at the top of the income distribution.
Janet Gornick on the Gift from Jim and Cathy Stone: Looking Forward to the Next 5 Years
Janet Gornick, director of the Stone Center, discusses the recent gift from the Stone Foundation and how it will help support the center's postdoctoral scholars, graduate students, and research.
CUNY TV: Janet Gornick on Pandemic Economics
Janet Gornick talks about economics and poverty in a time of COVID-19 on CUNY TV.
The U.S. Middle Class Isn’t Shrinking, But It Is Getting Squeezed as Inequality Rises
In this interview, Janet Gornick discusses how the size of the middle class in the United States and other rich countries has shifted in recent decades, and the implications for inequality.
Thoughts from the Stone Center on the Pandemic and Its Impact
In this commentary, Stone Center faculty — Miles Corak, Janet Gornick, Paul Krugman, Leslie McCall, Branko Milanovic, and Salvatore Morelli — each with unique expertise in the study of inequality, offer insights on the COVID-19 crisis.
How Strong Is the Safety Net in the United States? It Depends on Where You Live
In this research spotlight, a study by Janet Gornick and colleagues focuses attention on a seldom-discussed axis of inequality in the US: variation in social safety net policies across states.
Virtual Workshop 2020: LIS: A Resource for Inequality Research
In this presentation, Janet Gornick presents an overview of resources available through LIS, the cross-national data archive.
Panel: Reducing Inequality Now
Leading economic experts discuss the gaping disparities by race and class that have driven so many Americans into the streets, and examine the prospects for policy and institutional changes that could create a more equal society.
Panel: The Triumph of Injustice
In this video, Emmanuel Saez and Gabriel Zucman discuss their recent book and why the United States needs to increase wealth taxes to combat inequality.
UNDP Panel: Measuring Inequality in the 21st Century
In this video, Paul Krugman, Janet Gornick, Achim Steiner, and other experts discuss the challenges of addressing global inequality.
Panel: Discussing a ‘Maximum Wage’
Janet Gornick, Chuck Collins, and Sam Pizzigati engage in a discussion on addressing income inequality.
Panel: Where Are We Now on U.S. Tax Reform?
As a sweeping overhaul of the U.S. tax code goes into effect, experts with different points of view discuss its implications and ways of redesigning our current system to benefit all.
Panel: Dream Hoarders — Is the Upper Middle Class Leaving Everyone Else Behind?
In this video, Stone Center scholars take a critical look at Richard V. Reeves' book, Dream Hoarders.
ISLG Conference Keynote: Equality Indicators
Watch Paul Krugman in conversation with Janet Gornick about inequality with a focus on New York City.
Panel: Globalization and Inequality
Is globalization responsible for increased income inequality? Watch three experts and Graduate Center professors explore the complex relationship between these large-scale economic trends.
The Economics of Work-Life Conflict
In this video, Heather Boushey and Janet Gornick discuss why resolving work-life conflicts is as vital for individuals and families as it is for our country’s productivity.