Contents
Volume I
Acknowledgements
Introduction Huw Beynon and Theo Nichols
PART I THE FORDISM OF FORD
1. Christian Palloix (1976), ‘The Labour Process: From Fordism to
Neo-Fordism’, [Translated by John Mepham and Mike Sonenscher]
2. Carl H.A. Dassbach (1991), ‘The Origins of Fordism: The
Introduction of Mass Production and the Five-Dollar Wage’
3. David Roediger (1988), ‘Americanism and Fordism – American
Style: Kate Richards O’Hare’s “Has Henry Ford Made Good?”’
4. James M. Wilson (1995), ‘Henry Ford’s Just-in-Time System’
5. Glen Norcliffe (1997), ‘Popeism and Fordism: Examining the Roots
of Mass Production’
6. Karel Williams, Colin Haslam and John Williams (1992), ‘Ford
versus “Fordism”: The Beginning of Mass Production?’
7. John Bellamy Foster (1989), ‘The Fetish of Fordism’
8. R. Hudson (1989), ‘Labour-Market Changes and New Forms of Work
in Old Industrial Regions: Maybe Flexibility for Some but Not
Flexible Accumulation’
9. Robin Murray (1988), ‘Life after Henry (Ford)’
10. Ian McIntosh (1995), ‘“It Was Worse Than Alcatraz”: Working for
Ford at Trafford Park’
PART II JAPANISATION AND TOYOTAISM
11. Knuth Dohse, Ulrich Jürgens and Thomas Malsch (1985), ‘From
“Fordism” to “Toyotism”? The Social Organization of Labor Process
in the Japanese Automobile Industry’
12. Stephen Wood (1993), ‘The Japanization of Fordism’
13. Roland Springer (1999), ‘The End of New Production Concepts?
Rationalization and Labour Policy in the German Auto Industry’
14. Adrian Wilkinson, Graham Godfrey and Mick Marchington (1997),
‘Bouquets, Brickbats and Blinkers: Total Quality Management and
Employee Involvement in Practice’
15. Theo Nichols, Nadir Sugur and Erol Demir (2002), ‘Globalised
Management and Local Labour: The Case of the White-Goods Industry
in Turkey’
16. Rick Delbridge (1995), ‘Surviving JIT: Control and Resistance
in a Japanese Transplant’
17. Paul E. Rossler and Mario G. Beruvides (1994), ‘Management
Theory Déjà Vu? Scientific and Total Quality Management’
18. David M. Boje and Robert D. Winsor (1993), ‘The Resurrection of
Taylorism: Total Quality Management’s Hidden Agenda’
19. Andrew Sayer (1989), ‘Postfordism in Question’
20. Valeria Pulignano (2001), ‘Just-in-Time and Social Relations in
the Auto-Component Industry’
21. Peter Turnbull, Nick Oliver and Barry Wilkinson (1989), ‘Recent
Developments in the UK Automotive Industry: JIT/TQC and Information
Systems’
22. Terry L. Besser (1993), ‘The Commitment of Japanese Workers and
U.S. Workers: A Reassessment of the Literature’
23. Robert E. Cole, Arne L. Kalleberg and James R. Lincoln (1993),
‘Assessing Commitment in the United States and Japan: A Comment on
Besser’
24. Egil Skorstad (1994), ‘Lean Production, Conditions of Work and
Worker Commitment’
25. Paul S. Adler, Barbara Goldoftas and David I. Levine (1997),
‘Ergonomics, Employee Involvement, and the Toyota Production
System: A Case Study of NUMMI’s 1993 Model Introduction’
26. Katsuo Nishiyama and Jeffrey V. Johnson (1997), ‘Karoshi –
Death from Overwork: Occupational Health Consequences of Japanese
Production Management’
Name Index
Volume II
Acknowledgements
An introduction by the editors to both volumes appears in Volume
I
PART I FLEXIBLE SPECIALISATION, THE THIRD ITALY AND THE WIDER
DEBATE
1. Fergus Murray (1983), ‘The Decentralisation of Production – the
Decline of the Mass-Collective Worker?’
2. Fergus Murray (1987), ‘Flexible Specialisation in the “Third
Italy”’
3. Ash Amin (1989), ‘Flexible Specialisation and Small Firms in
Italy: Myths and Realities’
4. Chris Smith (1989), ‘Flexible Specialisation: Automation and
Mass Production’
5. John Tomaney (1990), ‘The Reality of Workplace Flexibility’
6. Harley Shaiken, Stephen Herzenberg and Sarah Kuhn (1986), ‘The
Work Process Under More Flexible Production’
7. Bruce Pietrykowski (1999), ‘Beyond the Fordist/Post-Fordist
Dichotomy: Working through The Second Industrial Divide’
8. Steven P. Vallas and John P. Beck (1996), ‘The Transformation of
Work Revisited: The Limits of Flexibility in American
Manufacturing’
9. Steven P. Vallas (1999), ‘Rethinking Post-Fordism: The Meaning
of Workplace Flexibility’
10. Anna Pollert (1988), ‘Dismantling Flexibility’
11. Thomas Bramble (1988), ‘The Flexibility Debate: Industrial
Relations and New Management Production Practices’
12. Paul Hirst and Johnathan Zeitlin (1991), ‘Flexible
Specialization versus post-Fordism: Theory, Evidence and Policy
Implications’
13. Karel Williams, Tony Cutler, John Williams and Colin Haslam
(1987), ‘The End of Mass Production?’
PART II LEAN PRODUCTION
14. Christian Berggren (1993), ‘Lean Production – The End of
History?’
15. Ian Hampson (1999), ‘Lean Production and the Toyota Production
System – Or, the Case of the Forgotten Production Concepts’
16. Michael A. Cusumano (1994), ‘The Limits of “Lean”’
17. Mike Parker and Jane Slaughter (1990), ‘Management-by-Stress:
The Team Concept in the US Auto Industry’
18. James P. Womack (1996), ‘The Psychology of Lean Production’
19. James Rinehart (1999), ‘The International Motor Vehicle
Program’s Lean Production Benchmark: A Critique’
20. Ben Dankbaar (1997), ‘Lean Production: Denial, Confirmation or
Extension of Sociotechnical Systems Design?’
21. Andy Danford (2003), ‘Workers, Unions and the High Performance
Workplace’
PART III McDONALDISATION
22. George Ritzer (1996), ‘The McDonaldization Thesis: Is Expansion
Inevitable?’
Name Index
Edited by Huw Beynon, Director, School of Social Sciences and Theo Nichols, Distinguished Research Professor, School of Social Sciences, Cardiff University, UK
'The Fordism of Ford and Modern Management is a much needed
publication in terms of providing the scholars of work and
organizations with an authoritative collection of references which
critically revisit the phenomenon of Fordism and post-Fordism. In
two volumes, the book brings together 48 previously published works
which have made an important contribution to the debate on Fordism.
. . As a desk reference, this two-volume collection is one of the
most useful and inspiring books that is presently available in the
field.'
*Ahu Tatli, Work, Employment and Society*
'The Fordism of Ford and Modern Management is an excellently
collated double volume collection, as you would expect from such
distinguished editors. It contains many of the most influential
articles on the transformations that have taken place in the world
of work. . . it has wide appeal to those with an interest in
management/business studies, organizational behaviour, labour
history, the sociology of work and sociology more generally.'
*Andrew Smith, Sociology*
'The world of work has changed dramatically over the past 50 - or
even 30 - years, and it is fashionable to speak of a transformation
from Fordism to post-Fordism. But what exactly is new, and what
remains the same? With their comprehensive selection of readings
and their own sensitive overview of the issues, Huw Beynon and Theo
Nichols provide the foundation for a nuanced answer - and show that
the brave new world of work is no utopia.'
*Richard Hyman, London School of Economics, UK*
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