Bibliographic Information

Workers' attitudes and technology

by Dorothy Wedderburn and Rosemary Crompton

(Cambridge papers in sociology, no. 2)

Cambridge University Press, 1972

  • : pbk

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Note

Bibliography: p. 171-173

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

First published in 1922, this volume aimed to contribute to our understanding of the complexities which shape attitudes and behaviour at work. Based on material obtained from a survey of workers employed by a single firm - who operate production systems as widely as different as continuous-flow chemical production and yarn spinning - this book highlights features of the production system which are crucial in influencing attitudes and behaviour within the work setting. Through a comparison of craftsmen and semi-skilled workers, it also illustrates the influence of differences of expectations upon work attitudes and behaviour. The authors reject any approach which could be called technologically determinist but nonetheless seek to show that a comparative approach to the study of behaviour in organizations may still fruitfully take as its starting-point technology and the systems of control which are devised for the planning and execution of the task.

Table of Contents

  • List of tables
  • Acknowledgements
  • 1. Technology and the study of organisations
  • 2. the company and the technology
  • 3. A comparison of attitudes and behaviour
  • 4. Work tasks and attitudes
  • 5. The workers' backgrounds
  • 6. The environment of the works
  • 7. The control system and social relationships between supervisor and supervised
  • 8. Conclusions
  • Bibliography
  • Index.

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