In 2014, Daniel Schneider, a demographer and sociology professor at the University of California, Berkeley, and his colleague Kristen Harknett, a sociologist at the University of California, San Francisco, were studying how the 2008 recession had affected families. … [T]hey found an enormous and enormously debilitating sense of everyday uncertainty. Many workers reported that they didn’t know when or how much they would work, if they’d be asked to stay late, or if they’d be called in at all. Despite the scope of the problem, Schneider and Harknett quickly realized that there was no data about what was going on. …
In 2016, what began as Schneider and Harknett’s informal interviews with hourly retail and service-sector workers in the San Francisco Bay area grew into The Shift Project, which is now the largest source of data on work scheduling for hourly service workers, with reports from 84,000 workers in the retail and fast-food sectors from across the country. The data includes worker schedules, economic security, and the health and well-being of workers and families.