Powell's academic interest in sweatshops dates back to at least 2004, when he wrote a working paper along with David Skarbek for the Independent Institute looking at how sweatshop jobs compared with the other jobs available to people who took them. The working paper was later published as an article for the Journal of Labor Research.[9] Powell also wrote an article for Human Rights Quarterly, responding to the argument by Arnold and Hartman (2006) that activists should encourage sweatshop employers to voluntarily work toward improving the conditions of sweatshop workers.[10] Powell has since written journal articles on sweatshops for the Journal of Business Ethics[11] and Comparative Economic Studies[12] and has also written about sweatshops based on his research in other venues, such as Forbes,[13]The Christian Science Monitor,[14] and Dallas Morning News.[15] He has also summarized his arguments in a 3-minute video for LearnLiberty.[16]
Powell was the editor of the 2007 volume Making Poor Nations Rich: Entrepreneurship and the Process of Economic Development published by the Independent Institute in collaboration with Stanford University Press as part of the Stanford Economics and Finance series.[19] He also edited The Economics of Immigration: Market-based Approaches, Social Science, and Public Policy (Oxford University Press, 2015).
He is the author of Out of Poverty: Sweatshops in the Global Economy (Cambridge University Press, 2014).[20]
With Robert Lawson, he is the co-author of Socialism Sucks: Two Economists Drink Their Way Through the Unfree World (Regnery Press, 2019).
References
^"curriculum-vitae"(PDF). www.benjaminpowell.com. Retrieved 4 February 2019.