Engineers and Management: International Comparisons
Originally published in 1992. In an increasingly competitive climate, well-trained, experienced management is vital for establishing the long term future of industry. In response to this need, the number of management training courses have been growing in recent years. However, there is a group of highly skilled professionals who are not always recognized for their management potential. Engineers, often viewed as nothing more than technicians, are a valuable but neglected human resource. Their expertise has helped to generate the recent organizational restructuring throughout the manufacturing industry. This study compares the situation of engineers in Britain with those in other countries. It analyzes the industrial cultures of countries that have developed along very different traditions such as Japan, Germany and Hungary as well as countries like Canada and the US where British traditions have prevailed but where the outcomes are different. Bringing together leading writers on management who have specialist knowledge of the engineering profession, it covers such issues as education, employment and labour relations to show how far engineers are undervalued in British culture. This book should be of interest to undergraduates, MBA students, academics and researchers in management, engineering, new technology, industrial sociology and organizational behaviour.

1127883660
Engineers and Management: International Comparisons
Originally published in 1992. In an increasingly competitive climate, well-trained, experienced management is vital for establishing the long term future of industry. In response to this need, the number of management training courses have been growing in recent years. However, there is a group of highly skilled professionals who are not always recognized for their management potential. Engineers, often viewed as nothing more than technicians, are a valuable but neglected human resource. Their expertise has helped to generate the recent organizational restructuring throughout the manufacturing industry. This study compares the situation of engineers in Britain with those in other countries. It analyzes the industrial cultures of countries that have developed along very different traditions such as Japan, Germany and Hungary as well as countries like Canada and the US where British traditions have prevailed but where the outcomes are different. Bringing together leading writers on management who have specialist knowledge of the engineering profession, it covers such issues as education, employment and labour relations to show how far engineers are undervalued in British culture. This book should be of interest to undergraduates, MBA students, academics and researchers in management, engineering, new technology, industrial sociology and organizational behaviour.

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Engineers and Management: International Comparisons

Engineers and Management: International Comparisons

Engineers and Management: International Comparisons

Engineers and Management: International Comparisons

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$160.00 
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Overview

Originally published in 1992. In an increasingly competitive climate, well-trained, experienced management is vital for establishing the long term future of industry. In response to this need, the number of management training courses have been growing in recent years. However, there is a group of highly skilled professionals who are not always recognized for their management potential. Engineers, often viewed as nothing more than technicians, are a valuable but neglected human resource. Their expertise has helped to generate the recent organizational restructuring throughout the manufacturing industry. This study compares the situation of engineers in Britain with those in other countries. It analyzes the industrial cultures of countries that have developed along very different traditions such as Japan, Germany and Hungary as well as countries like Canada and the US where British traditions have prevailed but where the outcomes are different. Bringing together leading writers on management who have specialist knowledge of the engineering profession, it covers such issues as education, employment and labour relations to show how far engineers are undervalued in British culture. This book should be of interest to undergraduates, MBA students, academics and researchers in management, engineering, new technology, industrial sociology and organizational behaviour.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780815365624
Publisher: Taylor & Francis
Publication date: 04/10/2018
Series: Routledge Library Editions: Management , #43
Pages: 236
Product dimensions: 5.44(w) x 8.50(h) x (d)

About the Author

Gloria L. Lee, Chris Smith

Table of Contents

List of Tables; Acknowledgements; 1. Engineers and Management in Comparative Perspectives Gloria L. Lee and Chris Smith 2. Wheels within Wheels: Predicting and Accounting for Fashionable Alternatives to Engineering Ian A. Glover 3. The Engineering Dimension and the Management Education Movement Peter Armstrong 4. Japanese Engineers and Management Cultures Kevin McCormick 5. Engineering and Management in West Germany: A Study in Consistency? Peter A. Lawrence 6. The Work of Engineers in Hungary and Their Place within Management Cultures and Hierarchies Gyula Fülöp 7. Symbolizing Professional Pride: The Case of Canadian Engineers Gloria L. Lee 8. Engineers and Trade Unions: The American and British Cases Compared Peter Meiksins and Chris Smith 9. Irish Engineers: Education for Emigration? James Wickham 10. British Engineers in Context Gloria L. Lee and Chris Smith; References; Index

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