New Production Arrangements: The Totally Flexible Cage?
- 1 June 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Work, Employment & Society
- Vol. 3 (2) , 221-238
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0950017089003002006
Abstract
This paper examines the management of innovation and change in two different operating units on a single site of a UK Division of a high technology US-owned multinational corporation. The transformation of work in changing from `production for stock' to `production to order' is analysed, and the process of changing established patterns of work (as a brownfield operation), and designing new production arrangements from the outset (as a greenfield operation) are contrasted and compared. The key features of Just-in-Time and Total Quality Control principles are identified and the extent to which they represent real inovations in production is assessed. The paper concludes with a critical discussion of the flexible specialisation debate through reappraising the empirical evidence, and concludes by rejecting the view that modern production arrangements signal the general enhancement of working life through a reversal of the division of labour, increased worker autonomy and greater employee involvement in production.Keywords
This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Big Blue and the Unions: IBM, Individualism and Trade Union StrategyWork, Employment & Society, 1988
- The `Flexible Firm': Fixation or Fact?Work, Employment & Society, 1988
- Industrial Change in Europe: The Pursuit of Flexible Specialisation in Britain and West GermanyWork, Employment & Society, 1988
- New Production Concepts, Management Strategies and the Quality of WorkWork, Employment & Society, 1988
- The limits to‘Japanisation’—Just‐in‐Time, labour relations and the UK automotive industryNew Technology, Work and Employment, 1988
- Flexible Futures? New Technology and the Contemporary Transformation of WorkWork, Employment & Society, 1987
- New developments in manufacturing: the just-in-time systemCapital & Class, 1986
- Technology, Economic Growth and the Labour ProcessPublished by Springer Nature ,1985