The Myth of Empowerment: Work Organisation, Hierarchy and Employee Autonomy in Contemporary Australian Workplaces
- 1 March 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Work, Employment & Society
- Vol. 13 (1) , 41-66
- https://doi.org/10.1177/09500179922117782
Abstract
The aim of this paper is to assess the validity of the `empowerment thesis': the belief that new forms of work organisation are overturning traditional managerial structures and returning control to employees. Specifically, the project seeks to explore the role of `empowering' forms of work organisation (in particular Total Quality Management, team-based work and consultative committees) and of occupational hierarchies, respectively, in influencing levels of employee autonomy. Data from the 1995 Australian Workplace Industrial Relations Survey (AWIRS95) are used to construct quantitative indicators of `empowering' forms of work organisation, hierarchy and employee autonomy. Associations between the variables are measured. The analysis shows no association between `empowerment' and employee autonomy. There are, however, clear relationships between employees' positions within occupational hierarchies and their levels of control over their work. Therefore, the empowerment thesis is rejected. A provisional explanation for the failure of empowerment to enhance employee autonomy can be found in the fact that organisational power resides primarily in organisational structures. Contrary to claims of the emergence of the `post-bureaucratic organisation', hierarchical structures remain central to the majority of contemporary organisations, and the impact of other changes to work organisation must be understood in this context.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Power Behind Empowerment: Implications for Research and PracticeHuman Relations, 1998
- Empowerment: the power to do what?Industrial Relations Journal, 1996
- Recent Developments in US Industrial RelationsBritish Journal of Industrial Relations, 1994
- Post-Fordist Theory, Labour Process and Flexibility and Autonomy in Australian WorkplacesLabour and Industry, 1994
- How Common is Workplace Transformation and Who Adopts it?ILR Review, 1994
- The Myth of Post‐Fordist Management: Work Organization and Employee Discretion in Seven CountriesEmployee Relations, 1992
- Patterns of Skill Change: Upskilling, Deskilling or the Polarization of Skills?Work, Employment & Society, 1991
- Phantom participation: patterns of power and conflict*Industrial Relations Journal, 1980
- Cycles of Control: Worker Participation in Sociological and Historical PerspectiveSociology, 1977
- Industry and LabourPublished by Springer Nature ,1977