Blum, Fred H.,
Work and community. The Scott Bader Commonwealth and the quest for a new social order. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul, 1968. XVIII, 392 Seiten mit Register. Leinen mit Schutzumschlag. 223 x 144 mm. 648 g
* Bleistiftanstreichungen in der Einführung und auf den ersten 10 Seiten. Schutzumschlag mit Gebrauchsspuren.
Bestell-Nr.160136
Blum |
Oekonomie |
Soziologie |
Scott Bader Commonwealth |
Selbstverwaltung
Can people participate in the decisions
affecting their daily work and develop
their potentialities for true growth
under conditions of a cybernated
technology? Can work again become
a meaningful part of life? To answer
these questions, the author has
examined one of the most significant
attempts to find a new way in
industry the Scott Bader Commonwealth in Wollaston, a resin
manufacturing company owned by
those working in it. The work
describes how the Commonwealth,
inspired by a Christian witness and
developing in a highly competitive
situation, has built various channels of
participation based on the principle
of common ownership and the
division of tasks according to
legislative, executive, judicial and
trustee functions.
The book is the result of several
years of intensive research based on
intensive interview-conversations,
group work and participant
observation. The critical exploration
of the significance of the Commonwealth is related to a careful analysis
of basic problems of work and its
organization. These problems are seen
in the perspective of daily life and in
terms of such fundamental concepts
underlying every organization of work
as time, balance and the nature of
man. The changes in attitudes and
awareness necessary to move from the
present towards the realization of
Commonwealth ideals in a genuinely
human organization of work are
indicated.