Synopses & Reviews
There is a renewed interest in scientific management and the works of F.W. Taylor. This book adds to our understanding of scientific management, which is under radical review because of the changes sweeping the world's industrial activities. It shows that the disciplined engineering approach to manufacturing which underpins scientific management was not uniquely American. Scientific management, as developed by Taylor, spread from America to the rest of the world. Sometimes it was taken up eagerly, sometimes it converged with local initiatives, but in no industrial nation was it ignored. Scientific Management comprises three parts. The opening chapter focuses on the insights and flaws in Taylor's theory of industrial organization. The nature of Taylor's contributions to engineering and to factory management and some of their effects are explored in the next three chapters. The third part of the book deals with the spread of scientific management throughout the world. The industrial world is in the midst of profound socio-economic changes which have severely shaken our intellectual grasp of its nature and behavior. Today's managers and management educators cannot move on to the creation of a new post-industrial society without a better appreciation of the influence of scientific management, and of the person who was its principal architect.
Synopsis
Many of those interested in the effect of industry on contemporary life are also interested in Frederick W. Taylor and his work. He was a true character, the stuff of legends, enormously influential and quintessentially American, an award-winning sportsman and mechanical tinkerer as well as a moralizing rationalist and early scientist. But he was also intensely modem, one of the long line of American social reformers exploiting the freedom to present an idiosyncratic version of American democracy, in this case one that began in the industrial workplace. Such as wide net captures an amazing range of critics and questioners as well as supporters. So much is puzzling, ambiguous, unexplained and even secret about Taylor's life that there will be plenty of scope for re-examination, re-interpretation and disagreement for years to come. But there is a surge of fresh interest and new analyses have appeared in recent years (e. g. Wrege, C. & R. Greenwood, 1991 "F. W. Taylor: The father of scientific management", Business One Irwin, Homewood IL; Nelson, D. (Ed. ) 1992 "The mental revolution: Scientific management since Taylor", Ohio State University Press, Columbus OH). We know other books are under way. As is customary, we offer this additional volume respectfully to our academic and managerial colleagues, from whatever point of view they approach scientific management, in the hope that it will provoke fresh thought and discussion. But we have a more aggressive agenda.
Table of Contents
Preface. Introduction to the Essays; H.J. Kijne, J.-C. Spender. 1. Villain, Victim or Visionary?: The Insights and Flaws in F.W. Taylor's Ideas; J.-C. Spender. 2. Machine-Shop Engineering Roots of Taylorism: The Efficiency of Machine-Tools and Machinists, 1865-1884; G.W. Clark. 3. Time and Motion Study: Beyond the Taylor-Gilbreth Controversy; H.J. Kijne. 4. Standards and the Development of an Internal Labor Market; T. Korver. 5. The Movement for Scientific Management in Europe Between the Wars; E. Bloemen. 6. Scientific Management in Central Eastern Europe - Czechoslovakia, Hungary, and Poland; J. Mihalasky. 7. Scientific Management and Japanese Management, 1910-1945; S. Nakagawa. Index.