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Synopsis
The advanced capitalist nations are currently undergoing an enormous economic, social, and political transformation. At the heart of this transformation is the transition between large scale, standardized production (Fordism) and new, more flexible approaches to manufacturing (flexibility), and a concomitant extension of manufacturing to include products both concrete (goods) and ephemeral (services). This volume explores the consequences of this transition from the standpoints of technology, labor relations, firm strategy, education, government programs, and geography.
The book is a collection of papers by well-known scholars investigating the current global transition from mass consumption and production to flexible production for niche markets. The book is unique in that it not only discusses standard economic concerns, but also investigates the social and political implications of this transition. Each chapter is concerned with a different aspect of the same restructuring process.
Booknews
Explores the shift from the large-scale, standardized production now known as Fordism to more flexible approaches to manufacturing goods and providing services that are part of the current economic transition engulfing the capitalist world. The topics include labor and capitalist accumulation in the late 20th century, preparing workers and students for the new workplace, spatial patterns of production as part of large firm strategies, inter-firm collaboration and industrial competitiveness, government responses, and the changing demand for office and industrial infrastructure. The 11 papers were presented at a conference in Bloomington, Indiana, in June 1994. No index. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.