000 01861nam a2200265 a 4500
001 001066642
003 AM-YeNLA
005 20190508151404.0
008 150317s2010 mnu r 000 0 eng d
020 _a9780816674510
040 _aAM-YeNLA
041 0 _aeng
100 1 _aAronowitz, Stanley
245 1 0 _aThe jobless future /
_cby Stanley Aronowitz and William DiFazio.
260 _aMinneapolis, MN :
_bUniversity of Minnesota Press,
_c2010.
300 _axxxv, 410 p. ;
_c23 cm.
500 _aWith softcover
504 _aNotes: pp. 377-394; Index: 395-410
505 0 _aTechnoscience and joblessness -- The new knowledge work -- Technoculture and the future of work -- The end of skill? -- The computerized engineer and architect -- The professionalized scientist -- Contours of a new world -- Contradictions of the knowledge class : power, proletarianization, and intellectuals -- Unions and the future of professional work -- A taxonomy of teacher work -- Beyond the catastrophe -- The cultural construction of class : knowledge and the labor process -- Quantum measures: capital investment and job reduction -- The jobless future? -- Afterword : going beyond the current crisis.
520 _aHigh technology will destroy more jobs than it creates . This grim prediction was first published in the 1994 edition of The Jobless Future, an eerily accurate title that could have been written for today's dismal economic climate. Fully updated and with a new introduction by Stanley Aronowitz and William DiFazio, The Jobless Future warns that jobs as we know them-long-term, with benefits-are an endangered species.
650 1 4 _aTechnological unemployment
_zUnited States
650 1 4 _aLabor supply
_xEffect of technological innovations on
_zUnited States
651 4 _aUnited States
_xBusiness and economy
700 1 _aDiFazio, William
_4aut
999 _c947420
_d947420