|
|
Showing 1 - 8 of
8 matches in All Departments
Taken from a series of conferences, this collection of papers by
leading labour experts from the United States and the former Soviet
Union examines the profound changes in industrial systems and work
organisation currently affecting both societies. The authors focus
on the emergence of new labour market institutions, the evolution
of managerial philosophy, changes in workers' values and attitudes
toward economic security, economic inequality, and the legitimacy
of worker participation in management and ownership. Comparison
reveals both striking differences and similarities in the
transformation of the two systems in the post-industrial age, and
helps demystify some simplistic notions about the workings of
market systems.
Nowhere is the tension attending simultaneous political
democratization and economic liberalization more sharply felt than
in the realm of labour relations. What is happening in Soviet trade
unions today? How will the emerging independent unions respond to
anticipated rises in unemployment? What kind of social regulation
of the labour market will be appropriate in the future? These
papers from a pathbreaking US-Soviet conference on labour issues
reveal a considerable diversity of views on questions whose
resolution will be essential to social peace in this period of
transition. Among the noted contributors are Joseph Berliner, Sam
Bowles, Richard Freeman, Leonid Gordon, V.L.Kosmarskii, Alla
Nazimova, Michael Piore, Boris Rakitskii, Iurii Volkov, Ben Ward
and Tatiana Zaslavskaia.
Nowhere is the tension attending simultaneous political
democratization and economic liberalization more sharply felt than
in the realm of labour relations. What is happening in Soviet trade
unions today? How will the emerging independent unions respond to
anticipated rises in unemployment? What kind of social regulation
of the labour market will be appropriate in the future? These
papers from a pathbreaking US-Soviet conference on labour issues
reveal a considerable diversity of views on questions whose
resolution will be essential to social peace in this period of
transition. Among the noted contributors are Joseph Berliner, Sam
Bowles, Richard Freeman, Leonid Gordon, V.L.Kosmarskii, Alla
Nazimova, Michael Piore, Boris Rakitskii, Iurii Volkov, Ben Ward
and Tatiana Zaslavskaia.
Taken from a series of conferences, this collection of papers by
leading labour experts from the United States and the former Soviet
Union examines the profound changes in industrial systems and work
organisation currently affecting both societies. The authors focus
on the emergence of new labour market institutions, the evolution
of managerial philosophy, changes in workers' values and attitudes
toward economic security, economic inequality, and the legitimacy
of worker participation in management and ownership. Comparison
reveals both striking differences and similarities in the
transformation of the two systems in the post-industrial age, and
helps demystify some simplistic notions about the workings of
market systems.
|
|