Results 261 to 270 of about 8,254,671 (335)
Some of the next articles are maybe not open access.
The Mondragón Model as Post-Fordist Discourse: Considerations on the Production of Post-Fordism
Critique of Anthropology, 1999Sharryn Kasmir
exaly +2 more sources
Fordism, Post-Fordism and Economic Geography
International Journal For Multidisciplinary ResearchThis paper explores the evolution, concepts, and transformations within the field of Economic Geography, beginning with an overview of its origins, nature, and scope.
Diptansu Roy
semanticscholar +1 more source
Life without Father and Ford: The New Gender Order of Post-Fordism
The coincidence of a set of economic changes in new industrial areas in advanced capitalist societies has initiated a tremendous debate about the features of post-Fordism, flexible accumulation and new industrial spaces. While the distinguishing features
L. McDowell
semanticscholar +2 more sources
Rethinking Post-Fordism: The Meaning of Workplace Flexibility
Sociological theory, 1999Social scientists increasingly claim that work structures based on the mass production or “Fordist” paradigm have grown obsolete, giving way to a more flexible, “post-Fordist” structure of work.
S. Vallas
semanticscholar +1 more source
Fordism, Post-Fordism and Gender
Économie appliquée, 1995Cet article analyse la structure du fordisme et la situation des femmes en son sein ; il examine la période post-fordiste, les changements qu'elle implique pour les femmes et l’incapacité à la fois des écoles de la régulation et de la spécialisation flexible de traiter effectivement des différences des sexes.
Arestis, Philip, Paliginis, Eleni
openaire +2 more sources
New Zealand Geographer, 1994
ABSTRACTIndustrial geographers working from a labour process and organisation of production perspective argue that the production process is being transformed by post Fordism and flexible specialisation. An alternative interpretation is that a shift from just‐in‐case to Just‐in‐time systems is taking place.
openaire +1 more source
ABSTRACTIndustrial geographers working from a labour process and organisation of production perspective argue that the production process is being transformed by post Fordism and flexible specialisation. An alternative interpretation is that a shift from just‐in‐case to Just‐in‐time systems is taking place.
openaire +1 more source

