Ford V Fordism : The Beginning of Mass production

Williams, Karel, Haslam, Colin and Williams, John (2006) Ford V Fordism : The Beginning of Mass production. Edward Elgar Publishing.
Copy

This article questions the stereotypes of Fordism and mass production. It does so by demonstrating that there is a contradiction between the stereotypes and the reality of Henry Ford's manufacturing practice in production of the Model T at the Highland Park factory between 1909 and 1919. Highland Park was not an inflexible factory which combined dedicated equipment, Taylorised semi-skilled workers and a standardised product. More positively, the article quantifies Ford's heroic achievement in taking two-thirds of the labour hours out of the product at the same time as he built more of each car. Ford used productive intervention to realise manufacturing flow through proto-Japanese manufacturing techniques which involved a commitment to continuous improvement.

Full text not available from this repository.

EndNote BibTeX Reference Manager Refer Atom Dublin Core RIOXX2 XML OpenURL ContextObject in Span MODS METS Data Cite XML MPEG-21 DIDL OpenURL ContextObject HTML Citation ASCII Citation
Export

Downloads