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Technology and the Future of Work Paul S. Adler (Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Stanford University)

Technology and the Future of Work By Paul S. Adler (Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Stanford University)

Summary

This volume argues that automation in the workplace will require workers with greater skills, an assertion that contradicts the common assumption that automation will not only reduce the number of workers required to make a given product, but also require workers with fewer skills.

Technology and the Future of Work Summary

Technology and the Future of Work by Paul S. Adler (Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Stanford University)

The essays in this volume contradict the conventional assumption that automation will not only reduce the number of workers required to produce a given product but also require less skilled workers to produce it.

Technology and the Future of Work Reviews

`This important book fills a major gap. It shoots down the mistaken belief that factories of the future will be staffed by large numbers of `low-skilled button pushers'. Business executives, labor leaders, and employees will find this book a valuable guide for setting strategies to meet the challenges of rapid technological change and intense foreign competition.' Edward E. Masters, President, National Planning Association
`A major source of ideas that can be used by all who are concerned about the role technology and workers will play in our future.' Donald E. Paterson, Retired Chair And CEO, Ford Motor Company
`Must reading for anyone concerned about either effective organizations or new technology. After reading the book, they will be concerned with both!' Richard E. Walton, Harvard University
'the contributions to his edited volume are commendable in their thoroughness and cosmopolitan in both their focus and authorship ... As a sophisticated treatment of the subject, Adler's collection is to be welcomed.' Malcolm Warner, Journal of General Management, Vol. 19, No. 2, Winter 1993
`the book is well-presented, and provides a useful overview of this more positive generation of research on technology, work and the future' Ergonomics Abstracts
All the essays of his excellent collection show how skills are the outcome of a hybrid of socio-technical features, some related to the company, some embedded in outside relations and institutions. * Acta Sociologica *

Table of Contents

Contributors 1: Paul S. Adler: Introduction 2: Larry Hirshhorn and Joan Mokray: Automation and Competency Requirements in Manufacturing: A Case Study 3: Paul Attewell: Skill and Occupational Changes in U.S. Manufacturing 4: Peter J. Senker: Automation and Work in Britain 5: Horst Kern and Michael Schumann: New Concepts of Production and the Emergence of the Systems Controller 6: Institutions and Incentives for Developing Work-Related Knowledge and Skill 7: Robert E. Cole: Issues in Skill Formation in Japanese Approaches to Automation 8: Robert J. Thomas and Thomas A. Kochan: Technology, Industrial Relations, and the Problem of Organizational Transformation 9: Max Ogden: Union Initiatives to Restructure Industry in Australia 10: Claudio U. Ciborra and Leslie S. Schneider: Transforming the Routines and Contexts of Management, Work, and Technology 11: Thomas B. Lifson: Innovation and Institutions: Notes on the Japanese Paradigm Name Index Subject Index

Additional information

NPB9780195071719
9780195071719
0195071719
Technology and the Future of Work by Paul S. Adler (Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Assistant Professor, Industrial Engineering and Engineering Management, Stanford University)
New
Hardback
Oxford University Press Inc
1992-06-18
350
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
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Customer Reviews - Technology and the Future of Work