Subject: Management Book Title: Americanization and Its Limits
Americanization and Its Limits
Reworking US Technology and Management in Post-war Europe and Japan
Zeitlin, Jonathan
(Editor), University of Wisconsin-Madison
Herrigel, Gary
(Editor), University of Chicago
Print publication date: 2004
Published to Oxford Scholarship Online: September 2007
Print ISBN-13: 978-0-19-926904-4
doi:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780199269044.001.0001
Abstract:
Throughout the evolution of the modern world economy, new models of productive efficiency and business organization have emerged — in Britain in the 19th century, in the US in the early (and perhaps late) 20th century, and in Japan in the 1980s and 1990s. At each point, foreign observers have looked for the secrets of success and best practice, and initiatives have been taken to transmit and diffuse. This book looks in detail at ‘Americanization’ in Europe and Japan in the post-war period. The processes, ideologies, and adaptations in a number of different countries (the UK, France, Italy, Japan, Sweden, Germany) and different sectors (engineering, telecommunications, motor vehicles, steel, and rubber) are explored. This book details theoretical analysis of the complexities of the diffusion of business organization and the powerful influences of Americanization in this century.
Chapter 2. Americanization: Ideology or Process? The Case of the United States Technical Assistance and Productivity Programme
Chapter 3. Transplanting the American Model? US Automobile Companies and the Transfer of Technology and Management to Britain, France, and Germany, 1928–1962
Chapter 4. Americanizing British Engineering? Strategic Debate, Selective Adaptation, and Hybrid Innovation in Post-War Reconstruction, 1945–1960
Chapter 5. Failure to Communicate: British Telecommunications and the American Model
Chapter 6. Creative Cross-Fertilization and Uneven Americanization of Swedish Industry: Sources of Innovation in Post-War Motor Vehicles and Electrical Manufacturing
Chapter 7. A Slow and Difficult Process: The Americanization of the French Steel-Producing and Using Industries after the Second World War
Chapter 8. Remodelling the Italian Steel Industry: Americanization, Modernization, and Mass Production
Chapter 9. Mass Production or ‘Organized Craftsmanship’? The Post-War Italian Automobile Industry
Chapter 10. The Long Shadow of Americanization: The German Rubber Industry and the Radial Tyre Revolution
Chapter 11. The Evolution of the ‘Japanese Production System’: Indigenous Influences and American Impact
Chapter 12. American Occupation, Market Order, and Democracy: Reconfiguring the Steel Industry in Japan and Germany after the Second World War