News Corporation, Technology and the Workplace
Global Strategies, Local Change
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
This book examines technological innovation and workplace restructuring undertaken by News Corporation.
This book reveals that existing social relations in a particular location have a major impact on workplace reforms within News Corporation. It includes interview material and primary research and examines technological innovation and workplace restructuring by News Corporation in its newspaper holdings in Britain, the United States and Australia.This book, which includes extensive interview material and primary research, examines technological innovation and workplace restructuring carried out by News Corporation in its newspaper holdings in Britain, the United States and Australia. Timothy Marjoribanks finds that while some outcomes at various local sites were similar, many were dramatically different. His study reveals that the nature of existing social relations in a particular location has a major impact on workplace reforms. The book finds that the prevailing balance of power between trade unions and workers, management and employers, and the role of the state in these relationships are the most influential factors in determining the course of events. Significantly, it emphasises the importance of analysing the connections between events occurring locally, nationally and globally if we are to understand the growing influence of corporate actors such as News Corporation.
'… the study provides a valuable contribution to the discussion of one of the major technological changes in the late twentieth century. It also sets the case studies well in their political and industrial relations context and illuminates how technological change strategies in News Corporation evolved differently at the workplace level.' International Journal of Employment Studies
ISBN: 9780521775359
Dimensions: 229mm x 152mm x 12mm
Weight: 320g
232 pages