Beyond the Fordist/Post-Fordist Dichotomy: Working Through The Second Industrial Divide
Bruce Pietrykowski
Review of Social Economy, 1999, vol. 57, issue 2, 177-198
Abstract:
The publication of The Second Industrial Dividehelped to initiate a sustained inquiry into the transformation of work under industrial capitalism in the late twentieth century. The argument that the breakdown of Fordist mass production ushered in a new production paradigm in the shape of flexible systems of work organization is reexamined. The dominant role of high-volume mass production and its craft-based counterpart can continue to coexist well into the future. Nevertheless, current income and employment trends appear to disadvantage the traditional blue-collar Fordist worker and industrial unions. The cause of these trends may not, however, be directly linked to skills associated with computer technology. Finally, the type of flexibility most closely associated with the work of Piore and Sabel—flexible specialization—is discussed. It is argued that flexible specialization within industrial districts that (a) foster the development of socially informed economic action and (b) constrain competitive behavior may form the basis for the creation of different employment opportunities that challenge the dominant logic of capitalist development through which flexible employment strategies are used in tandem with corporate downsizing and increased managerial control.
Keywords: Fordism; flexible specialization; industrial district; work organization; employment; skill (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1999
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DOI: 10.1080/00346769900000035
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