Future of Industrial Man

Regular price €56.99
A01=Peter Drucker
A01=Peter F. Drucker
Author_Peter Drucker
Author_Peter F. Drucker
authority structures
Category=KCF
Category=KJ
Central Government
Conservative Counterrevolution
Constitutionally Limited Government
corporate governance models
Definite Social Status
Dictates Labor Policies
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
Formal Political Freedom
Free Industrial Society
Free Society
George III
German National Character
Germany's Eastern Border
Germany’s Eastern Border
Hereditary Farm Law
Industrial Peace Society
Industrial Reality
Irrational Absolute
legitimacy theory
Mercantile Society
Modern Mass Production Industry
Napoleon III
Nazi Creed
Nazi Organizations
Nineteenth Century Freedom
Opportunist Considerations
Peter F. Drucker
political power dynamics
postindustrial transformation
Rationalist Liberal
social theory industrial society analysis
society
sociology of organizations
Straw Boss
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781560006237
  • Weight: 380g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 1995
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The Future of Industrial Man is the only book by Peter Drucker in which he systematically develops a basic social theory. He presents the requirements for any society to be functioning and legitimate, and then applies these general concepts to the special case of the industrial society. In his new introduction, Drucker explains that his reference to mercantilism in The Future of Industrial Man can today be called neoconservatism, which, he asserts, denies rather than affirms the reality of industrial and postindustrial society.

Drucker outlines the major shifts of previous centuries. He describes the move from an agrarian to an industrial economy, illustrates the structure and dynamics of this new industrial order, and warns of the abuses inherent in the system if attempts are made to maintain it under anachronistic social conventions. He emphasizes the fact that the new industrial order must operate under a "legitimate" system of po-litical power supported by social authority. He discusses the particular roles of the owners, the workers, the managers—the corporation itself—as he pinpoints the problem that he considers the most central and the most critical: how to maintain the continuing freedom of the individual in an increasingly intricate, bureaucratized world.

Following the initial publication of this work, Jacques Barzun wrote in The New Republic, "Here is a book which is so perfectly planned and so transparently written as to read with almost indecent ease. . . . Each page is the fruit of much learning and long reflection. It should accordingly by studied, pondered over, ana-lyzed word by word." According to W. H. Chamberlain of The Atlantic Monthly, "[Drucker] possesses a fund of historical and economic knowledge." The Future of Industrial Man is a landmark study by a noted analyst of the modern corporation. It is of continuing importance to economists, industrial studies scholars, and profes-sionals in business.