Investigages some of the ways in which scientific management ideas
and practices were implemented in Britain during the First World War.
Concentrates on the combination of Taylorism, scientific management and
industrial psychology in the work of the British public agency, the
Health of Munitions Workers′ Committee (HMWC), in the years 1915‐1920.
Analyses the memoranda and reports of the HMWC in order to demonstrate
that: Taylorism and scientific management are not synonymous; the
British government was interested in scientific management; and that
British scientific management led in directions similar to developments
in the United States. Asks historians to move beyond the Taylor paradigm
in order to grasp fully the differential acceptance of scientific
management, especially in regard to implementation outside the USA.
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