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020 _a9781119721307
041 _aeng.
082 _a600
100 1 _aCoron, Clotilde.
_eauthor
245 _aTechnological change /
_cClotilde Coron, Patrick Gibert.
264 1 _aHoboken :
_b ISTE Ltd / John Wiley and Sons,
_c2020.
300 _aonline resource (259 pages)
336 _atext
_btxt
_2rdacontent
337 _acomputer
_bc
_2rdamedia
338 _aonline resource
_bcr
_2rdacarrier
500 _aABOUT THE AUTHOR Clotilde Coron is an Associate Professor at the IAE Paris – Sorbonne Business School, France, where she co-directs the Human Resources and Corporate Social Responsibility Master’s degree. Her research focuses on the use of figures and data in Human Resources. Patrick Gibert is Emeritus Professor at the IAE Paris – Sorbonne Business School, Board Member of the AIPTLF (International Association of French Language Occupational Psychology) and the AGRH (French-speaking Association of the Management of Human Resources). His research focuses on the transformations of organizations.
505 _aCover -- Half-Title Page -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- Introduction -- I.1. First definitions -- I.1.1. Technical, technological and technical objects -- I.1.2. How can we address technological change? First elements -- I.2 Technology, a social science -- I.2.1. Three pillars -- I.2.2. Contributions of the human and social sciences (HSS) -- I.3. Structure of the book -- 1. The Human and Social Sciences in the Face of Technological Change -- 1.1. Approaches to technological change -- 1.1.1. Technological determinism -- 1.1.2. Social constructivism 1.1.3. Joint structuring of technical and social aspects -- 1.1.4. Limitation of established distinctions -- 1.2. A brief history of technological change -- 1.2.1. How can we tell the story? -- 1.2.2. At the origins of the Industrial Revolution (from the Middle Ages to the Renaissance) -- 1.2.3. The First Industrial Revolution (end of the 18th Century) -- 1.2.4. The Second Industrial Revolution (late 19th Century to the 1910s) -- 1.2.5. The Computer Revolution (from the late 1960s to the 1990s) -- 1.2.6. The Digital Revolution (early 21st Century) -- 2. Technological Change and Society 2.1. Powers, institutions and technological change -- 2.1.1. Fundamentals of political analysis and technology -- 2.1.2. The role of the State -- 2.1.3. Technological change in the age of globalization -- 2.1.4. The dark side of technology -- 2.2. Ethics in the face of technology -- 2.2.1. Ethical evaluation of technology -- 2.2.2. Three ethical issues under discussion -- 2.3. Technological change and diversity -- 2.3.1. Inclusive technology/exclusive technology -- 2.3.2. Technologies that reflect their designers -- 2.4. Technological change and ecology 2.4.1. Technology, an answer to ecological challenges? -- 2.4.2. Technology as a source of ecological degradation? -- 3. Technological Change and Organization -- 3.1. Omnipresence of the technical object in work activities -- 3.1.1. The R & D function in the lead1 -- 3.1.2. Marketing challenged by digital transformation -- 3.1.3. Factory 4.0 -- 3.1.4. e-HR -- 3.2. The interaction of technological and organizational systems -- 3.2.1. Technological change and organizational structure -- 3.2.2. Technological change, and financial and human resources for innovation 3.3. Technology as a liberator and control agent -- 3.3.1. Prescriptive and assistive technologies -- 3.3.2. Technological ambivalence: the same technology for empowerment and control purposes -- 3.4. Technological change as a social process -- 3.4.1. Changes in the social entity and management methods -- 3.4.2. Support for employees whose activities are threatened by technological change -- 3.4.3. The actors of technological change in organizations -- 4. Technological Change and the Individual -- 4.1. Activity and technical object -- 4.1.1. The technical object in the activity system
520 _aTechnological change is exciting as much as it is daunting. The arrival of new digital tools affects consumption patterns, types of employment and working conditions, and can pose challenges to organizations and individuals alike. Indeed, although technological change is a factor for economic growth, it can also be an amplifier, or even a catalyst, of inequality. It is also a social change and interacts in complex ways: technology is both the source and the consequence of social transformation. To understand technological change and to harness its effects, this book studies transformations at different levels (societal, organizational and individual). In its analysis of the subject, it also draws on a number of disciplines of the human and social sciences, such as anthropology, sociology and psychology.
650 0 _aTechnological innovations.
655 0 _aElectronic books.
856 _yFull text available at Wiley Online Library Click here to view
_uhttps://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781119721307
942 _2ddc
_cER