THE POLITICS OF FLEXIBILITY

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THE POLITICS OF FLEXIBILITY

Restructuring State and Industry in Britain, Germany and Scandinavia

9781852785482 Edward Elgar Publishing
Edited by Bob Jessop, Emeritus Professor of Sociology, Lancaster University, UK, Hans Kastendiek, Professor of British and American Studies, Chemnitz University of Technology, Germany, Klaus Nielsen, Professor of Institutional Economics, Birkbeck University of London, UK and Ove Kai Pedersen, International Centre for Business and Politics, Copenhagen Business School, Denmark
Publication Date: 1991 ISBN: 978 1 85278 548 2 Extent: 400 pp
This important book presents theoretical and empirical studies of the current reorganization of economic, political and social relations in Britain, West Germany and Scandinavia.

An international list of distinguished contributors provide critical and well-informed commentaries on issues such as the transition from ‘Fordism’ to ‘Post-Fordism’, discourses and strategies of flexibility, the recomposition of labour markets and labour processes, the changing functions of the welfare state, and the transformation of the state. The arguments are illustrated using cases drawn equally from these three significant and distinct patterns of political economy. In particular, the book assesses how the need for increased ‘flexibility’ influenced the intellectual and organizational responses of these countries to the crises of the late 1970s.

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This important book presents theoretical and empirical studies of the current reorganization of economic, political and social relations in Britain, West Germany and Scandinavia.

An international list of distinguished contributors provide critical and well-informed commentaries on issues such as the transition from ‘Fordism’ to ‘Post-Fordism’, discourses and strategies of flexibility, the recomposition of labour markets and labour processes, the changing functions of the welfare state, and the transformation of the state. The arguments are illustrated using cases drawn equally from these three significant and distinct patterns of political economy. In particular, the book assesses how the need for increased ‘flexibility’ influenced the intellectual and organizational responses of these countries to the crises of the late 1970s.
Contributors
Contributors: M. Börjeson, R. Boyer, N. Burgi, M. Elam, J. Hirsch, K. Hübner, R. Hyman, O. Jacobi, B. Jessop, H.J. Schabedoth, B. Johnson, U. Jürgens, H. Kastendieck, P. Kosonen, N. Lewis, B.-Å Lundvall, K. Nielsen, O.K. Pederson
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