Download Free Le Facteur Humain Dans Les Entreprises Americaines Book in PDF and EPUB Free Download. You can read online Le Facteur Humain Dans Les Entreprises Americaines and write the review.

The strategies for managing the human factor are in a state of flux: there are many labels but no clear boundaries. The paper seeks to describe some of the interrelated, overlapping firm-level strategies and practices, to look at evidence of their uptake and performance, and to stimulate discussion about possible roles for governments and about future research needs. In short, it is designed to be a scene-setting exercise, a starting point for policy research and development on innovative workplaces.
Le " facteur humain " est l'expression par laquelle les spécialistes de la sécurité des personnes et de la sûreté des installations désignent le comportement des hommes au travail. Il est fréquemment invoqué dans l'analyse des catastrophes industrielles, des accidents du travail, et dans les procès ou les commissions d'enquête. On lui associe l'idée de faute commise. Paradoxalement, cette conception négative de l'intervention humaine repose sur une confiance sans faille dans la technique, et sur une méconnaissance des sciences humaines. Cet ouvrage récapitule les progrès réalisés dans les sciences de l'homme au travail, afin de formuler une doctrine plus nuancée que celle de l'école des " human factors ", dans les années 50.
"This book is the outcome of the conference held in Caen (France) in September 1997, in preparation for the International Economic History Congress in Madrid (August 1998). This collection of essays provides, for the first time, a systematic overview of the productivity missions organised in the years following the Second World War, to investigate in situ the production and management techniques adduced to account for the American lead. Bringing together research workers from many countries (Canada, Denmark, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, the Netherlands, Norway, Switzerland, the United Kingdom, the United States), the volume addresses four successive themes. The first one concerns the part played by the United States and that country's action on the international scene. This, in turn, leads to the subsequent query: Did the productivity missions constitute tools for modernisation, or were they devices of domination? The second part considers three national experiences: the United Kingdom, France, and Japan. The third part examines a number of branches: iron and steel, electrical engineering, petrochemicals, and the tyre industry. The final part seeks to assess the impact of the missions. Ultimately, one needs must make a distinction between the rhetoric of productivity, on the one hand, and actual achievements, on the other; the missions were part of a wider process of Americanisation, wherein lies one of the keys to the economic miracles of the post-war era."--Page 4 of cover.
Includes entries for maps and atlases.