Work in the 21st Century
by Abraham Zaleznik, Daniel Yankelovich, John Immerwahr
Description
Change will prove beneficial only if tomorrow's leadership canameliorate the tensions / Abraham Zaleznik
The emergence of expressivism will revolutionize the contract between workers and employers / Daniel Yankelovich and John Immerwahr
Creativity will dominate our time after the concepts of work and fun have been blurred by technology / Isaac Asimov
Educators must advocate holism to prepare our human resources for the coming decentralization / George C. Lodge
Corporate pyramids will tumble when horizontal organizations become the new global standard / Gunther Klaus
Employers will follow workers south and west, away from cities and toward training programs / Pat Choate
Minority workers of tomorrow must tread a much different path than did today's middle class / Eleanor Holmes Norton
Basic industries won't die away; technology will strengthen them, despite socio-political problems / David M. Roderick
Lobbyists for special interests are employing the bureaucracy to twist tomorrow's job market / Orrin G. Hatch
Workers will have legal rights to jobs through state courts; affirmative action will expand / Herbert E. Gerson and Louis P. Britt III
Training and retraining workers will be an important challenge for unions in the 21st century / Glenn Watts
Tracking new career categories will become a preoccupation for job seekers and managers / S. Norman Feingold
Part-time work will increase, bringing change to social mores and standards of compensation / Nancy S. Barrett
International forces will prevail, but will unions be able to change with the new global work place? / Reginald Dale
Retirement will become obsolete in the improved work scheme of our 21st century economy / Caroline Bird
The emergence of expressivism will revolutionize the contract between workers and employers / Daniel Yankelovich and John Immerwahr
Creativity will dominate our time after the concepts of work and fun have been blurred by technology / Isaac Asimov
Educators must advocate holism to prepare our human resources for the coming decentralization / George C. Lodge
Corporate pyramids will tumble when horizontal organizations become the new global standard / Gunther Klaus
Employers will follow workers south and west, away from cities and toward training programs / Pat Choate
Minority workers of tomorrow must tread a much different path than did today's middle class / Eleanor Holmes Norton
Basic industries won't die away; technology will strengthen them, despite socio-political problems / David M. Roderick
Lobbyists for special interests are employing the bureaucracy to twist tomorrow's job market / Orrin G. Hatch
Workers will have legal rights to jobs through state courts; affirmative action will expand / Herbert E. Gerson and Louis P. Britt III
Training and retraining workers will be an important challenge for unions in the 21st century / Glenn Watts
Tracking new career categories will become a preoccupation for job seekers and managers / S. Norman Feingold
Part-time work will increase, bringing change to social mores and standards of compensation / Nancy S. Barrett
International forces will prevail, but will unions be able to change with the new global work place? / Reginald Dale
Retirement will become obsolete in the improved work scheme of our 21st century economy / Caroline Bird







