Manufacturing Possibilities: Creative Action and Industrial Recomposition in the United States, Germany, and Japan
Manufacturing Possibilities: Creative Action and Industrial Recomposition in the United States, Germany, and Japan
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Abstract
Manufacturing Possibilities examines adjustment dynamics in the steel, automobile and machinery industries in Germany, the U.S., and Japan since World War II. Using detailed historical and interview based contemporary analysis, the book shows that as national industrial actors in each sector try to compete in global markets, they recompose firm and industry boundaries, producer strategies, stakeholder interests and governance mechanisms at all levels of their political economies. Theoretically, the book marks a departure from both neoliberal economic and historical institutionalist perspectives on change in advanced political economies. It characterizes industrial change as a creative, bottom up, process driven by reflective social actors. The alternative view consists of two distinctive claims. The first is that action is social, reflective and ultimately creative. When their interactive habits are disrupted, industrial actors seek to repair their relations by reconceiving them. Such imaginative interaction redefines interest and causes unforeseen possibilities for action to emerge, enabling actors to trump existing rules and constraints. Second, industrial change driven by creative action is recompositional. In the social process of reflection, actors rearrange, modify, reconceive and reposition inherited organizational forms and governance mechanisms as they experiment with solutions to the challenges that they face. Continuity in relations is interwoven with continuous reform and change. Most remarkably, creativity in the recomposition process makes the introduction of entirely new practices and relations possible. Ultimately, the message of Manufacturing Possibilities is that social study of change in advanced political economies should devote itself to the discovery of possibility. Preoccupation with constraint and failure to appreciate the capaciousness of reflective social action has led much of contemporary debate to misrecognize the dynamics of change. As a result, discussion of the range of adjustment possibilities has been unnecessarily limited.
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Front Matter
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Introduction: Manufacturing Possibilities, Creative Action, and Industrial Recomposition
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Part I
- Introduction: Industrial Recomposition: The Steel Industry in Post‐World War II United States, Germany, and Japan
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1
1 American Occupation, Market Order, and Democracy: Recomposing the Steel Industry in Japan and Germany After World War II
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2 Contrasting Forms of Coordination in the Steel Industry: Germany, Japan, and the United States (1950–74)
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3 Left for Dead? The Recomposition of the Steel Industries in Germany, Japan, and the United States Since 1974
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Part II
- Introduction: Contemporary Recomposition in the United States and Germany: Coping with Vertical Disintegration on a Global Scale
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4 Coping with Vertical Disintegration: Customer–Supplier Relations and Producer Strategies in Complex Manufacturing Supply Chains
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5 Interfirm Relations in Global Manufacturing: Disintegrated Production and Its Globalization
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6 Vertical Disintegration in National Context: Germany and the United States Compared
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7 Roles and Rules: Ambiguity, Experimentation, and New Forms of Stakeholderism in Germany
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Conclusion: Changing Business Systems, Power, and the Science of Manufacturing Possibilities
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End Matter
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