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405,00 kr

How are new forms of management received and adapted in Scandinavia? What are the consequences for workers and unions? And for productivity? And what are specific Scandinavian contributions to a decent and productive working life?Do the Swedish, Scandinavian and Nordic experiences discussed here show that another world of work is possible?



This book has grown out of research based in a long Swedish and Scandinavian experience of and belief in welfare, qualifications, dialogue, equality and democracy at work, both as goals in themselves and as means to economic development. It gives critical Scandinavian perspectives, Nordic lights, on management and the new working life, in Scandinavia and elsewhere.



This volume is about work, organisation, management and welfare in Scandinavia, in the Nordic countries: management fashions, New Public Management (NPM), Business Process Reengineering (BPR), Lean Production, challenges for trade unions, Volvos work and management meeting Ford and Toyota, work environment management, worker resistance, gender and management, the flexible firm, boundaryless work, the media and journalists work, interactive media and the new economy are among the themes discussed. All this happens in a world where companies and their management as well as financial markets are globalised to a much greater degree than are politics and trade unions.



Many jobs are under threat and increasing numbers of jobs are of a temporary and precarious nature. Inequalities are growing fast, not least in the Scandinavian countries that used to be among the most equal countries in the world: The Northern lights are perhaps not that bright any longer. A book most suitable for scholars, practitioners and general readers. 'The Nordic countries have long been beacons for people around the world eager to see workplaces transformed into spaces where working people could express their humanity and aspirations. Readers will find empirical accounts and equally rich theoretical perspectives on the team-work alternatives to the Taylorist and Fordist models and on the broader context in politics, the economy and the labour market that made such alternatives possible.'



From the Foreword by Paul S. Adler, Professor of Management and Organization, University of Southern California
'This remarkable book explains the Scandinavian model of economic justice. It shows how information technologies can be put at the service of people, improving both efficiency and well-being. Scholars, business executives, and trade unions alike should read this thorough account of solidarity economics in practice.'



Manuel Castells, Professor Emeritus of Sociology and Planning, University of California, Berkeley
'This superb book shines a penetrating light on contemporary Nordic developments in the fields of innovation in work, organisation and management. Åke Sandberg has produc