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Perhaps no other aspect of business ethics is today more germane to
Christian belief and practice than the quality of relationship
between management and employees. Here the raw forces of the global
market and the more subtle currents of power relations within
corporations have tangible impacts upon millions of lives. How can
managers and employees work together toward an atmosphere of mutual
trust and fairness? For people of faith, what does it mean to
covenant under conditions of recurrent labor conflict? What moral
claims are evident in the long struggle by management to run their
enterprises as they see fit, as opposed by the efforts of employees
to achieve a collective voice through unions? By melding the
biblical account of covenant with a social-scientific understanding
of organizations, Stewart W. Herman presents a groundbreaking
theory. Herman examines the strategies and tactics which management
and employees have used to control each other. He explores the deep
historical roots and complexities of the management-employee
relationship in the US, taking into account the initiatives and
responses of both sides during the past two hundred years. As this
narrative unfolds, the rudiments of a covenant become evident, not
in a steady evolution, but in a turbulent intertwining of
achievement with failure. The author tracks the development of two
enduring goods which have emerged tentatively in this history: the
enlarged freedom both management and employees have gained by
seeking cooperation from each other, and the respect they have
internalized for the moral principles central to the action of each
other. Genuine cooperation requires that the moral claims of both
sides must receive impartial consideration. To achieve such
fairness, this book sets aside both the easy optimism of managerial
ideology and the pessimism of disillusioned employees and takes an
unsparing look at labor-management history in light of the long
covenanting experience narrated in the Bible. In both histories,
genuine cooperation emerges from a passionate dialectic between
ideal possibilities and realistic human limitations. This shared
struggle engages the will and spirit-and the creativity and
insight-of both managers and employees. In Durable Goods, the
disciplines of biblical theology, organization theory and labor
history cross-fertilize to produce a rich harvest of insight about
the nature and costs of genuine cooperation between management and
employees. Those who teach in the fields of business and Christian
ethics as well as business and labor leaders will find here a lucid
guide for discerning the possibilities and limits upon covenantal
cooperation in the employment relation.
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