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The End of Work: Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-market Era
 
 
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The End of Work: Decline of the Global Labor Force and the Dawn of the Post-market Era [Englisch] [Gebundene Ausgabe]

Jeremy Rifkin
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Produktinformation

  • Gebundene Ausgabe: 350 Seiten
  • Verlag: Tarcher; Auflage: 1st Edition (28. Dezember 1994)
  • Sprache: Englisch
  • ISBN-10: 0874777798
  • ISBN-13: 978-0874777796
  • Größe und/oder Gewicht: 22,9 x 15 x 3,3 cm
  • Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung: 3.5 von 5 Sternen  Alle Rezensionen anzeigen (11 Kundenrezensionen)
  • Amazon Bestseller-Rang: Nr. 358.833 in Englische Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Englische Bücher)
  • Komplettes Inhaltsverzeichnis ansehen

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Jeremy Rifkin
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Produktbeschreibungen

From Booklist

Rifkin is a social activist and environmentalist who has written a number of provocative books. He has most recently gained attention with his Beyond Beef: The Rise and Fall of the Cattle Culture (1992), an environmental argument against the cattle industry and eating beef. He now warns of global unemployment due to the technological and information revolutions but suggests that job retraining may be an ill-conceived panacea because the jobs being trained for no longer exist or will not exist in the near future. He describes a workerless "post-market" future and shows how the same technological revolution could be used to foster a new social order in which third sector and community-based organizations take up the tasks of providing basic services and meaningful activity. The alternative, he cautions, is a burgeoning criminal class made up of the marginalized idle. Look for Rifkin to attract attention again. David Rouse

From Library Journal

Global unemployment is now at its highest levels since the Great Depression. Rifkin (Biosphere Politics, LJ 5/15/91) argues that the Information Age is the third great Industrial Revolution. A consequence of these technological advances is the rapid decline in employment and purchasing power that could lead to a worldwide economic collapse. Rifkin foresees two possible outcomes: a near workerless world in which people are free, for the first time in history, to pursue a utopian life of leisure; or a world in which unemployment leads to an even further polarization of the economic classes and a decline in living conditions for millions of people. Rifkin presents a highly detailed analysis of the technological developments that have led to the current situation, as well as intriguing, yet alarming, theories of what is to come. Highly recommended for both general and business collections.
Gary W. White, Pennsylvania State Univ., Harrisburg
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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FROM THE BEGINNING, civilization has been structured, in large part, around the concept of work. Lesen Sie die erste Seite
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"We are entering a new age of global markets and automated production. The road to a near-workerless economy is within sight. Whether that road leads to a safe haven or a terrible abyss will depend on how well civilization prepares for the post-market era that will follow on the heels of the Third Industrial Revolution. The end of work could spell a death sentence for civilization as we have come to know it. The end of work could also signal the beginning of a great social transformation, a rebirth of the human spirit. The future lies in our hands."

Thus ends the book, leaving no neat little answers - negative OR positive, but urging us to open our eyes and look around us. I'd seen him on C-span and promptly ordered his book through Amazon. This was when it first came out in hardcover and my oldest son, assured of a future work using skills from his newly obtained Masters in Computer Science, was concerned I was reading such a book. "Isn't he one of those Luddites?" I think of myself as a wanna be Luddite, but I saw no signs of this in the book. Instead, Rifkin seems to be concerned with the coming affects of the Informational Revolution.

The book begins with a history of the Industrial Revolution. He gives us a nice tour of the birth of materialism as a concept created and promoted by economists and businessmen. "The term 'consumption," he tells us, "has both English and French roots. In its original form, to consume meant to destroy, to pillage, to subdue, to exhaust. It is a word steeped in violence and until the present century had only negative connotations."

The chapter, "Technology and the Afro-American Experience," addresses the effects of slavery, the supposed freedom of sharecropping, the loss of jobs as a consequence of the invention of the mechanical cotton picker, the rush to the cities and the subsequent loss of jobs as technology slowly progressed. There is a correlation to the success of whichever modern day technology we are experiencing, and the situation in the inner-cities. "Today, millions of African-Americans find themselves hopelesly trapped in a permanent underclass. Unskilled and unneeded, the commodity value of their labor has been rendered virtually useless by the automated technologies that have come to displace them in the new high-tech global economy."

One chapter is entitled "No More Farmers" and discusses the advances of robotizing replacing tasks such as harvesting and livestock management, as well as the end of outdoor agriculture. Other chapters deal with the future for retail, service, blue collar jobs, the declining middle class and the growing chasm between the haves and the have-nots.

In the chapter titled, "A More Dangerous World," he cites the Merva and Fowles study, saying that it "showed a striking correlation between growing wage inequality and increased criminal activity." "Rising unemployment and loss of hope for a better future are among the reasons that tens of thousands of young teenagers are turning to a life of crime and violence."

He does point out that the explosion of the Third Revolution is going to make the social wounds we've tried to heal seem like paper cuts, but does not claim that we should unhook our computers and resist the revolutionary explosion. His suggestion is that we work on 'empowering' the Third Sector' - the independent sector - and turn back to community, to helping each other before it is too late. " A new generation might transcend the narrow limits of nationalism and begin to think and act as common memebers of the human race, with shared commitments to each other, the community, and the larger biosphere." He does offer that since hi-tech advances may mean fewer jobs in the market economy, the only way to make sure those whose jobs are lost will be compensated is to have the government supply compensation. Naturally, this gives a flash-back to the welfare system, which I think has freaked out a few reviewers, paralyzing them into a sort of retro response. But Rifkin isn't just talking about the recipients of old - those stereotypical lower-income, under-educated inner city folks, he's talking about many more people. In my family, my middle son is a hands on kind of worker who in the past might have been a farmer. No matter how much education he gets, he isn't one of those who will sit well in the new techno age, and already he's feeling the pressures. The high paying jobs for him are life-threatening, so the kind of work he's hired for is low paying, not enough to support himself, let alone the family he has decided he can't afford to start. Rifkin isn't doing retro work - he suggests tying the subsidized income to service in the community, which he suggests migh help the "growth and development of the social economy and facilitate the long-term transition into a community-centered, service-oriented culture."

His answers are not clearly spelled out - he offers suggestions and insight into where we might be going as a race (the human race). The truth is, we all need to ask some questions and help find the answers. For those whose minds are set firmly in any direction, you'll get from this book very little - for those with open minds, regardless of your political view of the world, you may find this to be a door to the future.

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If you want a real dystopean nightmare try Slaughterhouse 5 by Kurt Vonnegut. This book is worth reading, and the storyline is supurb; there is suspence, pleasure and even horrer. It is slightly scary, when you think of how Communism did hit the nail on the head with this publication. What I found the most remarkable was how well thought out the whole system was truly amazing that he used such imagination to come up with all aspects of this book!

Todays technology is overwhelming us at an extraordinary rate, and will lead to a horrible world, where its occupants are monitored constantly by hidden cameras or concealed microphones. The entire population has been brainwashed by the controlling story in which your heart goes out to a cautionary tale to prevent such a thing from ever happening.

This is not only a book, but a journal for the future describing what the government could be doing behind our backs. This book will have a very big impact on you, and your life that many of the stroy's readers go through every day. Kudos!

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So now it is feared that computers will destroy everyone's job. This argument is certainly not a new one. Nearly 200 years ago many feared that steampower would create too much unemployment, (remember the song about John Henry?)

A french essayist, Bastiat, satired this view in the mid-1800's. With his tongue in his cheek he argued for the adoption of dull axes. Dull axes would require more strokes to cut a tree, hence creating more employment. Following this to its logical conclusion it seems that inefficiency is good.

The flaw in all this is that there is not a fixed amount of work to be done. Some people are employed giving piano lessons and decorating homes. A poor country cannot afford these luxuries, but a wealthy one can. And usually the reason why the wealthy country is wealthy, is because it is industrialized. So industrialization destroys some jobs, but creates others, but the important factor is not "job creation" but raising the standard of living. If people would take Rifkin seriously, his recommendations might lower the standard of living, so it seems he is somewhat of a menace.

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Die neuesten Kundenrezensionen
True!
At least from a German point of view, Rifkin was absolutely right with his prognosis. In a mainly and highly industrialized working society there is not enough work anymore. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 15. Februar 2005 veröffentlicht
"Automation will destroy all jobs" fallacy is still alive
So now it is feared that computers will destroy everyone's job. This argument is certainly not a new one. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 14. April 2000 veröffentlicht
Pessismistic view of the future - Interesting, but flawed.
Pessimistic view of the future, where technology has eliminated most jobs as we know them. He sees downsizing as a trend which will continue into the future. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 20. Januar 2000 von J Bucknoff, PMP
Trends are insightful, recommendations interesting.
As with many futurists, their analysis of trends are insightful and can provide a glimpse of the future; however, often their glimpses are of the extreme nature. Lesen Sie weiter...
Veröffentlicht am 13. Dezember 1999 von Michael P. Vimont
Repetitive, chicken little theories
Rifkin's book could have been referring to many instances throughout history whenever any new invention caused workers to be displaced in one job and retrained for another. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 26. Oktober 1999 veröffentlicht
Don't Judge This Book by it's Cover
Jeremy Rifkin has distilled much of what is brewing below the surface in our economy and weaved it into a compelling thesis that deserves serious attention from academia and the... Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 3. Oktober 1998 veröffentlicht
"All are punished."
In this riviting, well documented dissertation, Rifkin underscores the imbalances of society created by the assult of the super-technocrats against humanity's workers. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 8. Juni 1997 veröffentlicht
Valuable,insightful analysis but solutions are flawed
Rifkin convincingly analyzes the impact on the work force of computerization and automation. The statistics are thorough. Lesen Sie weiter...
Am 26. Mai 1996 veröffentlicht
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