Quarter examines business owners who use their firms as
laboratories for social innovation. After providing an introduction
to this phenomenon in an historical perspective and discussing the
19th-century British industrialist Robert Owen, he provides ll case
studies of contemporary innovators from six countries-the UK, US,
the Netherlands, Germany, Canada, and New Zealand.
The case studies fall into two broad groups. The first involves
business people who promote innovative ownership and
decision-making strategies such as donating their shares to a trust
and thereby creating a company without shareholders so that
employees can assume greater control; creating a worker
co-operative; and transferring ownership to employees through an
employee stock ownership plan. The second group of case studies
involves innovative efforts at changing the relationship to the
surrounding community through creating socially and environmentally
responsible businesses. Quarter concludes by looking at the
potential and limitations of this phenomenon for building a social
movement. A provocative look at the social organization of work
that will be of interest to scholars and researchers of industrial
organization and to business leaders examining innovative ownership
arrangements.
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