41 research outputs found
Re-imagining management education in post-WWII Britain: Views from government and business
This paper explores the role of government and business in establishing two business schools in Britain in the 1960s. Partly in response to the Robbins Report of 1963, business leaders and politicians re-imagined management education and formed a new type of management education institution to operate alongside and ultimately compete a variety of other methods of management preparation. These two groups collaborated to create the London Graduate School of Business and Manchester Business School as national centers of excellence for management education. Using both archival and published sources, the paper’s contribution is to analyze perspectives expressed by businesspeople and political advocates involved with the business school project. It concludes that these advocates sought to create a body of educated, productive, yet socially-minded managers to lead Britain forward into the next phase of its economic development
Liberal conservatism, ‘boardization’ and the government of civil servants
Drawing inspiration from the loosely coupled genre of studies of governmentality, this article explores the emergence in Britain during the early years of the millennium of a distinctive liberal conservative scheme for the government of civil servants. The term ‘boardization’ has been used to characterize the trend to reproduce the technology of the board of directors in central government. Conservatives currently assign a distinctive role to the work of departmental ‘boards’ in the effective management of the Civil Service. Intimating the costs and risks of the Conservatives’ programme, we explore the role of diverse governmental forces in the emergence of the boards of the Civil Service as an object for action and intervention during the early years of the new millennium. We explore a mutation in the application of practices and techniques drawn from the domain of the business enterprise to the organization of the Civil Service. </jats:p
Coventry's ribbon trade in the mid-Victorian period Some social and economic responses to industrial development
SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:D34940/81 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo
British policies on productivity 1951-64 A preliminary study
Period of Award - 1 Apr 1994 to 14 Oct 1994SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre-DSC:3739.0605F(ESRC-R--000/22/1183)fiche / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo