[en] Is the 'Better Job' Still Possible Today?
Type de document
Auteur(s)
Est une partie de
Mots clés en
Humanities and Social Sciences
Humanities and Social Sciences/Sociology
swedish model
Volvo
Kalmar
Udevalla
car industry
japanese model
better job
autonomy
sociotechnical changee
tightened flow
work conditions
automobile workers
Date de publication
Langue du document
Anglais
Editeur
SAGE Publications
Résumé
[en] The term 'better job' refers to work that permits employees to flourish, that is, situations where employees, and in particular operators, have increased autonomy, more responsibility and greater control over their time and space : in brief, firm control over the organization of their work. The 'better job' appears to be a real possibility, a compromise in our societies (despite the contradictions inherent in capitalist relations of production) in which capital might leave the workers, and employees in general, to organize their own work, in capital's own interest, in other words to increase labour productivity and productivity in general. This explains why the 'better job' has, historically, been initially developed by capital during periods of labour market tension and labour shortage, during the 1960s and 19705, prior to becoming a demand made by the unions in the late 19708 and 1980s. Today, the partial resolution of the capital accumulation cri sis through the widespread adoption of 'tightened flow' production methods runs counter to the emergence of the 'better job', inciuding in those work sectors which otherwise seem most favourable to it.
Nom de la revue
Economic and Industrial Democracy
Collection
Source
HAL
Type de ressource
Texte intégral
Est une version de
Licence
Distributed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License
Citation bibliographique
Jean-Pierre Durand. Is the 'Better Job' Still Possible Today?. Economic and Industrial Democracy, 1998, 19, pp.185-198. [hal-04177428]
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[en] Is the 'Better Job' Still Possible Today?,
dans Études nordiques,
consulté le 9 Avril 2025, https://etudes-nordiques.cnrs.fr/s/numenord/item/18106