There are very few well known social and political theorists who have engaged as extensively and over as long a period of time time in the analysis of industrial change in Germany and other leading economies as Gary Herrigel...At a time when much social scientific attention seems to be directed toward the emigration of industry from developed economies to emerging ones,this book's pragmatic theoretical argument and extensive historical analysis of the continual recomposition of traditional industries and regions has a very high value...In general, the book is a great resource for anyone who believes that manufacturing in developed economies has a future.

Martina Fromhold-Eisebith, Zeitschrift fur Wirtschaftsgeographie

Herrigel is not just concerned with technological and organization change in manufacturing industry, but also with how new possibilities are being manufactured all the time in response to constantly changing global socio-economic and political conditions.

Volker Berghahn, Vierteljahreschrift für Sozial und Wirtschaftsgeschichte

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Neil Coe, Journal of Economic Geography

Manufacturing Possibilities examines adjustment dynamics in the steel, automobile and machinery industries in Germany, the U.S., and Japan since World War II. As national industrial actors in each sector try to compete in global markets, the book argues that they recompose firm and industry boundaries, stakeholder identities and interests, and governance mechanisms at all levels of their political economies. Micro level study of industrial transformation in this way provides a significant window on macro level processes of political economic change in the three societies. Theoretically, the book marks a departure from both neoliberal economic and historical institutionalist perspectives on change in advanced political economies. It characterizes industrial change as a creative, bottom-up process driven by reflective social actors. This alternative view consists of two distinctive claims. The first is that action is social, reflective, and ultimately creative. When their interactive habits are disrupted, industrial actors seek to repair their relations by reconceiving them. Such imaginative interaction redefines interest and causes unforeseen possibilities for action to emerge, enabling actors to trump existing rules and constraints. Second, industrial change driven by creative action is recompositional. In the social process of reflection, actors rearrange, modify, reconceive, and reposition inherited organizational forms and governance mechanisms as they experiment with solutions to the challenges that they face. Continuity in relations is interwoven with continuous reform and change. Most remarkably, creativity in the recomposition process makes the introduction of entirely new practices and relations possible. Ultimately, the message of Manufacturing Possibilities is that social study of change in advanced political economies should devote itself to the discovery of possibility. Preoccupation with constraint and failure to appreciate the capaciousness of reflective social action has led much of contemporary debate to misrecognize the dynamics of change. As a result, discussion of the range of adjustment possibilities in advanced political economies has been unnecessarily limited.
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Manufacturing Possibilities examines adjustment dynamics in the steel, automobile, and machinery industries in Germany, the U.S., and Japan since World War II. Using detailed historical and interview based contemporary analysis, the book looks at how national industrial actors in each sector try to compete in global markets.
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Introduction: Manufacturing Possibilities, Creative Action, and Industrial Recomposition ; PART I: INDUSTRIAL RECOMPOSITION: THE STEEL INDUSTRY IN POST-WORLD WAR II UNITED STATES, GERMANY, AND JAPAN ; 1. American Occupation, Market Order, and Democracy: Restructuring the steel industry in Japan and Germany after World War II ; 2. Contrasting Forms of Coordination in the Steel Industry: Germany, Japan, and the US 1950-1974 ; 3. Left for Dead? Recombinant Steel Industries in Germany, Japan, and the US since 1974 ; PART II: CONTEMPORARY RECOMPOSITION IN THE US AND GERMANY: COPING WITH VERTICAL DISINTEGRATION ON A GLOBAL SCALE ; 4. Coping with Vertical Disintegration: Customer-Supplier Relations and Producer Strategies in Complex Manufacturing Supply Chains ; 5. Inter-Firm Relations in Global Manufacturing: Disintegrated Production and its Globalization ; 6. Vertical Disintegration in National Context: Germany and the US Compared ; 7. Roles and Rules: Ambiguity, Experimentation, and New Forms of Stakeholderism in Germany ; Conclusion: Changing Business Systems, Power, and the Science of Manufacturing Possibilities
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`Review from previous edition In Manufacturing Possibilities, Gary Herrigel...offers a lucid and compelling contribution to the literature on industrial and institutional change in developed economies... This is an impressive book, and one that will strike chords with economic geographers in several ways... This thoughtful and thought-provoking monograph deserves to find a broad research-level audience across several social and management science disciplines. Clearly those with specific interests in the case study sectors and countries will want to engage extensively with the book and will benefit greatly from doing so.' Neil M. Coe, Journal of Economic Geography 11
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Defends the continued importance of manufacturing in advanced political economies Presents creative social action as a theoretical solution to the problem of industrial change Detailed historical case study of the steel industry in the US, Germany, and Japan
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Gary Herrigel is a professor in the Political Science department at the University of Chicago. He received his PhD from MIT in the Program of Science, Technology, and Society and the Political Science Department. He has published widely on topics related to industrial development, regional industrial policy, corporate governance, comparative political economy, social theory, and business and economic history in Germany, the United States, and Japan. In particular he is the author of Industrial Constructions: The Sources of German Industrial Power (Cambridge University Press, 1996) which analyzed regional differentiation and alternative governance forms in German industrialization. Herrigel also co-edited with Jonathan Zeitlin, Americanization and its Limits : Reworking US Technology and Management in Post-war Europe and Japan (Oxford University Press, 2000).
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Defends the continued importance of manufacturing in advanced political economies Presents creative social action as a theoretical solution to the problem of industrial change Detailed historical case study of the steel industry in the US, Germany, and Japan
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780199665983
Publisert
2012
Utgiver
Vendor
Oxford University Press
Vekt
468 gr
Høyde
233 mm
Bredde
164 mm
Dybde
16 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
292

Forfatter

Biografisk notat

Gary Herrigel is a professor in the Political Science department at the University of Chicago. He received his PhD from MIT in the Program of Science, Technology, and Society and the Political Science Department. He has published widely on topics related to industrial development, regional industrial policy, corporate governance, comparative political economy, social theory, and business and economic history in Germany, the United States, and Japan. In particular he is the author of Industrial Constructions: The Sources of German Industrial Power (Cambridge University Press, 1996) which analyzed regional differentiation and alternative governance forms in German industrialization. Herrigel also co-edited with Jonathan Zeitlin, Americanization and its Limits : Reworking US Technology and Management in Post-war Europe and Japan (Oxford University Press, 2000).