Labor Commitment and Social Change in Developing AreasWilbert Ellis Moore, Arnold S. Feldman Bloomsbury Academic, 1982 M07 2 - 396 pages This work examines the intended and unanticipated consequences of economic advancement in developing areas and the commitment of industrial labor. Both the short-term acceptance of the attitudes and beliefs appropriate to a modernized economy are discussed. |
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Page 20
... less affected by machine pacing and rhythm than at the middle . The least - skilled segments of the work force ( loaders , cleaners , etc. ) are to some extent removed from the machine and are correspond- ingly less affected . As the ...
... less affected by machine pacing and rhythm than at the middle . The least - skilled segments of the work force ( loaders , cleaners , etc. ) are to some extent removed from the machine and are correspond- ingly less affected . As the ...
Page 193
... less skilled seem capable only of defensive action and are less able to act collectively to improve their conditions , partly because they recognize the weak bargaining power they possess in a surplus labor market , and partly because ...
... less skilled seem capable only of defensive action and are less able to act collectively to improve their conditions , partly because they recognize the weak bargaining power they possess in a surplus labor market , and partly because ...
Page 206
... less than proportional to the increase in income ; history leads us to anticipate also a shift away from the cereals producing energy and toward the protective foods , such as meat , vegetables , fruit , and fish.11 Expenditure or ...
... less than proportional to the increase in income ; history leads us to anticipate also a shift away from the cereals producing energy and toward the protective foods , such as meat , vegetables , fruit , and fish.11 Expenditure or ...
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achievement African agricultural analysis associated authority Baganda become behavior capital consumers consumption contractual cultural demand differential East Africa economic development economic growth employers factory forms function goals groups important increase India individual indus industrial employment industrial labor force industrial labor market industrial societies institutions involved Jamshedpur Kampala Kingsley Davis kinship labor commitment labor force labor market labor unrest limited M. N. Srinivas machine managerial ment mobility modern Moore Mossi nationalists newly developing areas Niger nomic nonindustrial norms occupational operation opportunities orientation participation patterns percent political entrepreneurs population position preindustrial prestige problems process of commitment production organization Puerto Rico recruitment relations relatively rewards role rural sector situation skill social system specific status stratification Talcott Parsons technological tend tion town trade unions traditional transition tribal turnover types Uganda underdeveloped areas urban values wage labor workers Yatenga