1st Edition

The Internet, Organizational Change and Labor The Challenge of Virtualization

By David C. D. Jacobs, Joel Yudken Copyright 2003
    192 Pages
    by Routledge

    186 Pages
    by Routledge

    As we devote increasing amounts of time time at work and at home to the Internet and computer networks, our daily lives are dramatically being reshaped. We are better informed and can work more efficiently, yet there is anxiety about the security of our jobs. Examining what is happening to work, organizations and unions in the age of the Internet, this fascinating book reveals both the opportunities and dangers for workers in the digital age.

    Exploring the Internet's impact on organizations and labor from complementary perspectives, Jacobs and Yudken consider how new digital technologies shape cultural change. They look at the culmination of the development of the Internet, its impact upon jobs and the current prospects for unions, and conclude that the Internet ultimately reduces transaction costs thereby aiding profit making, and also assists workers, consumers and citizens in challenging business practices.

    Ideal for students of management, e-business and human resource management, this informative text is a balanced analysis of the Internet aided workplace. Unlike many enthusiasts of e-commerce, it identifies dangers in the Internet-driven enterprise such as contingent employment, employee monitoring and job loss, and also explores the potential benefits for employees, proposing possible strategies for reforming the economy.

    1. Introduction: Goals and Methodology 2. Technology and Dystopia 3. Industrial Revolutions 4. Economizing, Sociologizing and Praxis 5. Technology, Social Choice and History 6. Labor Problems 7. Industry Stories 8. Open Source and 'Social Intelligence' 9. Internet Unionism 10. Desktop Enterprise and the Revival of Craft 11. Conclusions

    Biography

    David C. D. Jacobs, Joel Yudken