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Ackroyd, Stephen, Rosemary Batt, Paul Thompson, and Pamela S. Tolbert (eds.). The Oxford Handbook of Work and Organization. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004.
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- Work and the organization of work are of key importance in the social sciences
- Examines a period of extraordinary change in organizations and economies in
the developed world
- An authoritative work whose contributors are leading authorities in the their
respective fields
- Sections include: Work, Technology, and the Division of Labour; Managerial Regimes
and Employee Responses; Occupations and Organizations; and Organizations and Organized
Systems
- Features introductory overview, and introductions to each main section
The last twenty-five years of the twentieth century was a period of extraordinary
change in organizations and the economies of the developed world. This continues
today. Such has been the scale and momentum of events that, for some analysts, the
only comparable periods are the early part of the twentieth century in which the
shift to mass production and large-scale organization was accomplished, or the industrial
revolution itself a hundred years earlier.
Researchers in Europe and the USA in particular have been studying change in work
and organizations, but there has been little attempt to systematize and draw together
the results of their work. So far, the emphasis amongst writers on organizations
considering the problem of contemporary change has been on ways of conceptualizing
events, rather than also considering evidence. But what has actually happened? How
much of the flux of events is real change, and how much mere change in emphasis in
which apparent change is overlaying organizational continuity? How far are changes
in particular events and sectors connected, and is an overall understanding of complex
processes possible?
The Oxford Handbook of Work and Organization aims to bring together, present
and discuss what is currently known about work and organizations and their connection
to broader economic change in Europe and America. Issues of conceptualization are
not neglected but, in contrast to other comparable volumes, the emphasis is firmly
on what is known what and has been observed by researchers. The volume contains a
range of theoretically informed essays, written by leading authorities in their respective
fields, giving comprehensive coverage of changes in work, occupations, and organizations.
It constitutes an invaluable overview of the accumulated understanding of research
into work, occupations and organizations in recent decades. It shows that in almost
every aspect of economic institutions, change has been considerable.
The subject area of work, occupations and organizations is considered in four
major sections of the volume: I, Work, Technology, and the Division of Labor; II,
Managerial Regimes and Employee Actions; III, Occupations and Organizations; and
IV, Organizing and Organizations. In this way the contemporary situation in work
and organizations is considered extensively in its different dimensions and interconnections.
The contributors have been selected for their expertise and include many leading
authors in organizational analysis and substantive research. The handbook is thus
an authoritative statement, and offers a valuable account of organizations at this
time.
Readership: Academics and graduate students in Management, Organization
Studies, Industrial Relations, and Human Resource Management; Social Scientists with
an interest in work, employment, and industrial relations.
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