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Book Synopsis


Trade Review
Neil Fligstein has made a significant contribution to our understanding of the historical development of large American firms. The book fills what had been a vacuum in that understanding by incorporating an explicitly institutional perspective. This perspective sheds particular light on the rise of large conglomerates in the late 1960s and the corresponding finance-driven short term outlook of top managers that has been associated with America’s declining competitiveness. -- Peter Kreiner * Academy of Management Review *
Fligstein portrays managers as people acting in a social world, a world of reference groups, power conflict, world views, constraints, organizations, and institutions—in stark contrast to the prevailing work on corporations, in which managers are portrayed as inhabiting an economic or technological milieu, a world of profits and loss, efficiency, innovation, economic cycles, economies of scale, and transaction costs… This is an important and outstanding contribution to the analysis of the American corporation and the development of a truly social sociology of the economy. -- William G. Roy * Contemporary Sociology *
Fligstein gives proper recognition to the role of federal policy in creating the legal and regulatory setting within which business took and implemented their decisions about corporate growth and structure. And he emphasizes the ‘downside implications’ of a management culture and technique which have come to regard companies as simply bundles of measurable assets to be bought and sold, manipulated, squeezed, and stripped. Fligstein, therefore, has more to say about the current crises of American capitalism than Chandler can manage. -- Howell John Harris * Journal of American Studies *

The Transformation of Corporate Control

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A Paperback by Neil Fligstein

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    View other formats and editions of The Transformation of Corporate Control by Neil Fligstein

    Publisher: Harvard University Press
    Publication Date: 1/1/1993 12:00:00 AM
    ISBN13: 9780674903593, 978-0674903593
    ISBN10: 0674903595

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Trade Review
    Neil Fligstein has made a significant contribution to our understanding of the historical development of large American firms. The book fills what had been a vacuum in that understanding by incorporating an explicitly institutional perspective. This perspective sheds particular light on the rise of large conglomerates in the late 1960s and the corresponding finance-driven short term outlook of top managers that has been associated with America’s declining competitiveness. -- Peter Kreiner * Academy of Management Review *
    Fligstein portrays managers as people acting in a social world, a world of reference groups, power conflict, world views, constraints, organizations, and institutions—in stark contrast to the prevailing work on corporations, in which managers are portrayed as inhabiting an economic or technological milieu, a world of profits and loss, efficiency, innovation, economic cycles, economies of scale, and transaction costs… This is an important and outstanding contribution to the analysis of the American corporation and the development of a truly social sociology of the economy. -- William G. Roy * Contemporary Sociology *
    Fligstein gives proper recognition to the role of federal policy in creating the legal and regulatory setting within which business took and implemented their decisions about corporate growth and structure. And he emphasizes the ‘downside implications’ of a management culture and technique which have come to regard companies as simply bundles of measurable assets to be bought and sold, manipulated, squeezed, and stripped. Fligstein, therefore, has more to say about the current crises of American capitalism than Chandler can manage. -- Howell John Harris * Journal of American Studies *

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