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Making Sense of Construction Improvement Stuart D. Green

Making Sense of Construction Improvement par Stuart D. Green

Making Sense of Construction Improvement Stuart D. Green


€58.00
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Résumé

The book sets out deliberately to challenge the current construction improvement debate and the way in which it is conducted. It confronts the supposedly neutral nature of construction 'best practice' and demonstrates that that the advocated recipes seldom stand up to critical scrutiny.

Making Sense of Construction Improvement Résumé

Making Sense of Construction Improvement Stuart D. Green

The book sets out deliberately to challenge the current construction improvement debate and the way in which it is conducted. It confronts the supposedly neutral nature of construction 'best practice' and demonstrates that that the advocated recipes seldom stand up to critical scrutiny. It further argues that commonly accepted components of best practice such as lean construction, partnering and collaborative working rarely live up to the claims made on their behalf. Such recipes invariably suffer from definitional vagueness, and are constantly reinterpreted to suit the needs the different audiences. Making Sense of Construction Improvement argues that construction sector improvement techniques cannot be understood in terms of their substantive content, and are best understood in terms of the rhetoric within which they are presented. The author also contends that the persuasiveness of such recipes depends upon the extent to which practitioners can adopt them for the purposes of making sense of the changes they observe happening around them. To be accepted as 'best practice' construction improvement techniques must also resonate with broader agendas of socio-technological change. The author charts how the best practice debate has developed from the aftermath of the Second World War through to the election of David Cameron's coalition government in 2010. Attention is given to the way in which the improvement debate throughout the 1960s and 70s was shaped by the broader aspirations of the post-war social consensus and the associated desire for a centrally planned economy. Attention thereafter is given to the way the construction sector was radically re-shaped by the advent of the enterprise culture. The privatisation of the sector's client base, coupled with the withdrawal of the state as a provider of mass housing, caused a significant and long-lasting shift in the construction landscape. Private sector clients similarly experienced extensive downsizing while outsourcing their procurement capabilities. Such strategies were frequently justified by mobilising the rhetoric of business process re-engineering (BPR). Contracting firms simultaneously faced unpredictable workloads and increasing market competition. In response, the sector at large chose to base their competitive advantage on leanness and agility. Hence the emergence of the hollowed-out firm as the dominant form of organising. These structural trends combined to provide the backcloth to the industry improvement agenda throughout the 1980s and 1990s. Making Sense of Construction Improvement argues that the popularity of improvement recipes such as partnering, collaborative working and integrated teams can be understood as strategies for overcoming the loss of control associated with downsizing and outsourcing. In contrast to other textbooks, Making Sense of Construction Improvement does not offer advice on how to manage construction projects more effectively; the aim is rather to understand the forces which have shaped the construction sector improvement agenda over time.

Making Sense of Construction Improvement Avis

As academics in construction management, we are participants debate and construction improvement practice. The book provides insights and inspiration to engage in this debate more mindfully. (Construction Management and Economics, 1 September 2012)

À propos de Stuart D. Green

Professor Stuart Green is Director of the Innovative Research Centre, School of Construction and Engineering, University of Reading, UK

Sommaire

Preface xii 1 Construction in the Age of the Planned Economy 1 1.1 Introduction 1 1.2 An inherited legacy 2 1.3 Improving construction 9 1.4 Planning for stability and predictability 15 1.5 Trouble and strife 19 1.6 Summary 24 2 The Dawn of Enterprise 27 2.1 Introduction 27 2.2 Uncertain beginnings 28 2.3 Enterprise in formation 35 2.4 Enterprise unleashed 40 2.5 The enterprise culture 46 2.6 Summary 55 3 Leanness and Agility in Construction 59 3.1 Introduction 59 3.2 Towards the hollowed-out fi rm 60 3.3 Intensifying labour casualisation 69 3.4 Re-structuring in the client base 78 3.5 Summary 87 4 The Improvement Agenda Takes Shape 91 4.1 Introduction 91 4.2 The rise of management procurement methods 92 4.3 Bridging between eras 99 4.4 Constructing the Team 108 4.5 Progress through Partnership 116 4.6 Summary 122 5 Rethinking Construction 126 5.1 Introduction 126 5.2 Background 127 5.3 The Egan report 131 5.4 Eganites on the march 147 5.5 Summary 159 6 Understanding Clients: Beyond the Machine Metaphor 163 6.1 Introduction 163 6.2 Metaphorical perspectives on organisation 164 6.3 Metaphors as a process 180 6.4 Practical implications 183 6.5 Summary 190 7 From Business Process Re-Engineering to Partnering 195 7.1 Introduction 195 7.2 Business process re-engineering in construction 196 7.3 The persuasive appeal of re-engineering 203 7.4 Information technology and process improvement 206 7.5 Partnering 213 7.6 Summary 232 8 Lean Construction 238 8.1 Introduction 238 8.2 Lean production in critical perspective 239 8.3 Understanding diffusion 245 8.4 Lean thinking in the construction context 251 8.5 The meaning of leanness 256 8.6 Summary 267 9 From Enterprise to Social Partnership 274 9.1 Introduction 274 9.2 Building Britain with New Labour 275 9.3 Modernising Construction 287 9.4 Accelerating change 295 9.5 Summary 314 10 A Legacy of Dilemmas 318 10.1 Introduction 318 10.2 The changing infrastructure of construction improvement 319 10.3 The disconnected agendas of construction improvement 328 10.4 Health and safety 340 10.5 Never Waste a Good Crisis 346 10.6 A final word 353 Postscript 354 Index 359

Informations supplémentaires

GOR010120581
9781405130462
1405130466
Making Sense of Construction Improvement Stuart D. Green
Occasion - Très bon état
Broché
John Wiley and Sons Ltd
20110527
392
N/A
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