Research
My research program is driven by a singular mission: To design a future of work that works for ALL workers.
In an era of rapid technological shifts and evolving labor structures, I explore how human dignity is both constrained and reclaimed across the modern geography of work. Grounded in a humanistic management perspective, which prioritizes human well-being as the ultimate end of organizational life, my work uses an interdisciplinary lens to investigate how modern work environments and evolving modalities influence individual flourishing, long-term organizational retention, and social sustainability. More specifically, I employ Management, Sociology, Organizational Psychology, Communication, and Education frameworks to unpack these complex dynamics.
My current agenda focuses heavily on Evolving Work Modalities and Human Flourishing. I investigate how alternative work structures, geographic mobility, and inclusive leadership behaviors can be leveraged to build sustainable human capital and design restorative labor environments.
Research in Progress
Dissertation: Work from Anywhere as a Pathway to Subjective Well-Being
My dissertation investigates the potential of location-independent work as a strategic practice for employee well-being. By exploring the lived experiences of American workers residing entirely outside the geographic footprint of their organizations, this study examines whether and how Work from Anywhere enhances workers’ subjective well-being. Further, it explores the specific mechanisms and processes that operate within Work from Anywhere contexts to support or constrain well-being.
Current Status: Data Analysis
The Influence of Workplace and other Social Factors on the Global Mobility of Black American Workers
This study centers the voices of those often left at the margins of traditional management theory by examining the self-initiated expatriation of 27 Black American professionals. By integrating organizational and migration theories, the findings reveal that workplace threats and localized systemic frictions act as primary “push” factors that outweigh traditional “pull” factors like career advancement. The work emphasizes that organizations must address internal racial and structural equity if they hope to retain minoritized talent.
Current status: Writing
Research Under Review
Low-Income Black Mothers Navigating Work and Caregiving During COVID-19
(1st Round R&R) Jason, K., Wilson, M., & Catoe, J. Journal Title Omitted for Peer Review
Abstract: The COVID-19 pandemic greatly increased the employment, housing, and childcare insecurity in Black households. Low-wage Black mothers were arguably hit the worst, already overrepresented in low-wage essential work, and now facing greater difficulties sustaining employment and affordable housing. In this study, we interviewed eleven Black mothers receiving services from a transitional housing shelter to explore their work experiences and coping strategies during the pandemic. Applying an intersectionality frame, we found the mothers precarious working conditions were exacerbated by the pandemic, leading to increased uncertainties that impacted their work and ability to care for their families. However, transitional housing support and the consequences of the pandemic introduced new opportunities such as encouraging mothers to create their own employment, more time with their children, and prompting mothers to think differently about their work-life balance. We offer policy challenges. recommendations promoting a living wage, community support systems, and family and finance planning in early education. We contribute to understandings of how vulnerable populations navigate structural racism and racial capitalism by centering the narratives and agency of Black home-insecure mothers within the broader context of structural inequities and systemic
Publications
“Digital Nomad(ism)”
(Forthcoming, 2026) The Elgar Encyclopedia of Organizational Sociology
Overview: This encyclopedia entry provides a comprehensive overview of “digital nomadism” as an emerging sociological phenomenon and labor practice. It conceptualizes how advancements in digital infrastructure have decoupled work from fixed geographic localities, giving rise to a highly mobile class of knowledge workers. The article provides a brief synthesis of literature on the subject. Specifically, it explores how digital nomads navigate issues of legal and tax precarity, the stratification of global passport privilege, the commodification of local economies, and the profound blurring of boundaries between labor and leisure.
The Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Black and Hispanic Americans’ Work Outcomes: a Scoping Review
Jason, K., Wilson, M., Catoe, J., Brown, C., & Gonzalez, M. (2024). Journal of Racial and Ethnic Health Disparities
Abstract: In early 2020, it was hypothesized that COVID-19 would lead to disproportionately negative health and work outcomes for Black and Hispanic adults, but sufficient data had yet been collected to fully support this claim. Now, we have empirical evidence, but little has been done to aggregate this information to fully understand its impact on these communities. Utilizing 44 articles from a scoping review of three databases (PubMed, Web of Science, and Business Source Complete), this study seeks to identify the primary work-related risks that help explain Black and Hispanic adults’ disparate COVID-19-related work outcomes (e.g., loss of hours, job disruption, stress). Findings illuminate four primary risks faced by Black and Hispanic workers: (1) being an essential worker, (2) type of work performed, (3) workplace factors; and (4) community and geographic factors. We conclude with policy recommendations that will help inform policy and practice for economic recovery from the pandemic for other marginalized populations.
Black and Abroad: An Autoethnography on Navigating Mexico as a Digital Nomad
(2024) Proceedings of the International Symposium of Autoethnography and Narrative
Abstract: During my ten days in Monterrey and Mexico City as a Black American man and digital nomad, I conducted an autoethnographic study to explore the dynamics of race and identity. Surprisingly, my physical characteristics, more so than my race, influenced my experiences in Mexico, leading to complex feelings – both welcomed and excluded. Additionally, I discovered that being a digital nomad demands greater discipline than I had anticipated. This experience highlights the need for deeper inquiry into the intersections of race, identity, and bodily experiences across borders.
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