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Chapter 12. Work And The Workplace. The Importance of Work. Source of income Source of pride and accomplishment Source of identity and self esteem Provides meaning to life and and is a major part of our adult identity. The Industrial Revolution.
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Chapter 12 Work And The Workplace
The Importance of Work • Source of income • Source of pride and accomplishment • Source of identity and self esteem • Provides meaning to life and and is a major part of our adult identity
The Industrial Revolution • The first transformation at the beginning of the nineteenth century • Rural and small towns • Most were employed in the primary sector producing raw materials • Farming • Fishing • Forestry • Mining
The Industrial Revolution • The Industrial revolution shifted jobs from the primary sector of the economy to the secondary sector • Transforming raw goods into products • Automobiles • Sewing machines • Furniture
The Industrial Revolution • Impact of the industrial revolution • Shift to factory work • Shift of jobs from rural to urban • Immigrants and factory work • Industrialization and prosperity
The Information Revolution • The 1950 and the emergence of the tertiary sector • From factory to service work • Not all workers benefited from this shift • Invention of the microchip and the computer • White collar jobs
Deindustrialzation • Deindustrialization-decline of industrial production( after1950 ) • Plant closings • Decline in factory jobs • Job displacement • Decline in pay and benefits
Globalization • Globalization of the economy-expansion of economic activity around the world with little regard for national borders • Multinational corporations • Shifting jobs to low wage countries
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • The Dual Labor Market • Two separate labor markets • 1.Primary labor market-occupations that provide good pay and extensive benefits to workers
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • The Dual Labor Market • Primary labor market jobs tend to be • Challenging • Good pay and benefits • More secure • Room for advancement in one’s career
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • The Dual Labor Market • Examples of primary labor market job categories • Professionals • Managers and executives • Some high skilled jobs in factories
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • The Dual Labor Market • Two separate labor markets • 2. Secondary labor market-jobs • Boring and routine • Low pay and few benefits • Less secure
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • The Dual Labor Market • Examples of secondary labor market job categories • Retail sales • Telemarketing • Building maintenance • Laborers
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • Dangers to workers • In 1970 the federal government established OSHA, Occupational Safety and Health Administration • National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health • Conducts research on workplace hazards
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • Dangers to workers • Toxic Substances control Act (1976) • Guidelines for handling chemicals in the workplace • Test for harmful chemicals
Problems of the U.S. Workplace • Dangers to workers • Jobs and injuries • Jobs that have the highest risk of death • Mining • Agriculture • Construction • Jobs and health • Job related violence
Workplace Alienation • Alienation: Marx’s View • Alienation-experience of isolation and misery from powerlessness in the workplace • Marx • Work a natural act • Alienation stems from the social nature of work under capitalism • Capitalism distorts the social nature of work
Workplace Alienation • Alienation: Weber’s View • Alienation-depersonalization of the workplace and of society in general due to modern society’s rational focus on efficiency • Weber the cause of alienation is the rational nature of the organization of work • Individuals have become detached from the social and creative aspect of work • Work has become highly impersonal
Workplace Alienation • Alienation: Weber’s View • Rationalization of society led to the industrial revolution • Rational modes of action replaced tradition and custom
MacDonaldization and the Rise of “McJobs” • George Ritzer and MacDonaldization • MacDonaldization- defining work in four principles • 1.Efficiency • 2.Predictability • 3.Uniformity • 4.Controlling workers through automation
MacDonaldization and the Rise of “McJobs” • Characteristics of the McJobs (Jobs) • 1.Work that involves simple tasks • 2.Work that provides little satisfaction • 3.Work that is predicable and repetitive • 4.Work that has become machine driven • 5.Work that is dehumanizing to the worker • Workers become automatons
The “Temping”of the Workplace • Deindustrialization and the growth in part-time workers • Low pay • No benefits • Little control over their work
Unemployment • Reasons for Unemployment • About four to five percent unemployment may be normal • New to the work force entering for the first time • In between jobs • Economic downturn
Who is at Risk for Unemployment? • Less educated • Racial and ethnic minorities • Young
Race, Ethnicity, and Gender • Just entered into better jobs • Las hired first fired • Institutional discrimination – bias built into the operation of the economy, education and other social institutions • Secondary labor market • Under representation of women and minorities in higher education
Race, Ethnicity, and Gender • The Glass Ceiling- barriers ( often invisible) that prevent minorities from moving up in an organization
Workplace Segregation • Workplace is segregated by race and gender • Minorities concentrated in the least desirable jobs • Labor Unions • Labor unions-worker organizations that seek to improve wages and working conditions through various strategies, including collective bargaining and strikes
Labor Unions • Labor unions are a recent development • U.S. Government and the labor movement of the 1930’s • Railway Labor Act • Norris-La Guardia Act • National Labor Relations Act
Labor Unions • Union membership grew from 1930 and peaked in the 1970’s • Since 1970’s decline in union membership until just recently • Function of structural change a shift from factory jobs to the non union service sector
Telecommuting • Telecommuting- linking employees to the office using information technology, including telephones,fax machines, and e-mail • Function of the information revolution • Telecommuting blurs the distinction between home and work • Telecommuting and gender discrimination and work • Worker isolation
Workplace Isolation • Computer technology reduces the need for face to face interaction • Workers are connect by information networks • Social and physical separation and isolation of workers and clients from one another
Controlling Employees • Computer technology and controlling the behavior of workers • Keeping an eye on the employee • “Deskilling” Work • Technology and the loss of skills necessary to perform one’s job • Machines replace human skill
Structural-Functional Analysis: Finding a New Equilibrium • Structural- functional paradigm-interrelatedness of social institutions • Impact of technology on established social patterns • How information technology is shaping the nature of work and other social institutions
Symbolic-Interaction Analysis: The Meaning of Work • Symbolic –Interaction paradigm- the social construction of work • Meanings that people attach to work and work relationships
Social-Conflict Analysis: Work and Inequality • Social-conflict – focus is on how inequality impacts work in society • How work reflects the interest of the upper-class
Conservatives: The Virtues of the Market • Free-market with a minimum of government regulation • Downturns are temporary and people will be allocated to where the jobs are • Individuals should take responsibility for their economic and job well-being
Liberals: The Need for Government • Free- market with government regulation to insure all interests are taken care of • Government aid for education and job training
Radicals: The Need for Fundamental Change • The free-market is the source of economic and worker related problems • The end of capitalism and the emergence of socialism as the answer to economic and worker related woes