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In an important sense contemporary economies are predominantly
service economies. Critical social analysis, which has historically
developed in relation to manufacturing settings, is beginning to
address this central importance of service work. For instance,
authors such as George Ritzer and Alan Bryman have developed a
general approach to societies through root metaphors based in
service settings (McDonaldization and Disneyization respectively).
Other authors have applied particular traditions of critical social
theory to the specificities of service work. This is an area of
considerable and burgeoning intellectual energy and interest. At
present, however, there is no one volume which brings together
these different critical perspectives on services work. There is no
volume which brings together these different critical perspectives
and which reflects on their collective contribution, their
compatibilities and their differences.
Everyday, we are bombarded with advertising images of the
smiling service worker. The book is written with the aim of
focusing beneath the surface of these fairy tale images, to seek
out and understand the reality of service workersa (TM) experience.
Within the sociology of work and related literatures, there are an
increasing number of empirical studies of different types of
service work, but there has been little progress in attempts to
theorize the nature of service work, per se. This book fills this
gap by bringing together major scholars from the US and UK who use
a range of critical perspectives to explore key elements in the
organization and experience of contemporary service work. It will
make an invaluable secondary text for advanced undergraduates and
graduates studying courses/modules such as sociology of work,
industrial sociology, social theory and work, organization studies,
and organizational theory.
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Drew's War (Paperback)
Stacey MacDonald; Cameron MacDonald
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R337
Discovery Miles 3 370
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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This is a story about a kind crab who experiences an adventure when
trying to decorate his Christmas Coral under the sea. Crab learns a
very important lesson during the adventure.
In the labor market and workplace, anti-discrimination rules,
affirmative action policies, and pay equity procedures exercise a
direct effect on gender relations. But what can be done to
influence the ways that men and women allocate tasks and
responsibilities at home? In Gender Equality, Volume VI in the Real
Utopias series, social scientists Janet C. Gornick and Marcia K.
Meyers propose a set of policies--paid family leave provisions,
working time regulations, and early childhood education and
care--designed to foster more egalitarian family divisions of labor
by strengthening men's ties at home and women's attachment to paid
work. Their policy proposal is followed by a series of
commentaries--both critical and supportive--from a group of
distinguished scholars, and a concluding essay in which Gornick and
Meyers respond to a debate that is a timely and valuable
contribution to egalitarian politics.
Continued economic restructuring has brought service work to center
stage in labor and management studies, as well as in the sociology
of work, gender, race, and inequality. This work features essays
that explore questions of power and control, resistance and
empowerment, and innovation and organizing in the lives of
front-line service workers.
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