Rhetoric and Reality in the Clothing Industry: The Case of Post-Fordism
Open Access
- 1 March 1992
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Journal of Sociology
- Vol. 28 (1) , 45-70
- https://doi.org/10.1177/144078339202800103
Abstract
The concept of post-Fordism has aroused controversy in recent theoretical debates within industrial sociology. However, there have been few attempts to examine the con cept empirically. This study applies Richard Badham and John Mathews's model of post-Fordism to the Australian clothing industry. Using 18 case studies, key indicators of post-Fordism (such as product innovation, process variability and worker responsibility) are examined. The results suggest that although significant changes are observable in organisa tional and operational strategies, the clothing industry is best characterised by 'neo-Fordist' rather than 'post-Fordist' prac tices. The paper also argues that the individual firm is often a misleading unit of analysis in examining industrial change, and greater attention needs to be paid to strategic interlink- ages between companies.Keywords
This publication has 7 references indexed in Scilit:
- Book ReviewsLabour and Industry, 2007
- The New Production Systems DebateLabour and Industry, 1989
- Technological Change and the Future of WorkJournal of Industrial Relations, 1988
- The Flexibility Debate: Industrial Relations and New Management Production PracticesLabour and Industry, 1988
- The crisis in fordism and the rise of a new technological paradigmFutures, 1987
- Labor and Monopoly CapitalMonthly Review, 1974
- Towards a political economy of the USSRCritique, 1973