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Enterprise content management systems and the application of Taylorism and Fordism to intellectual labour

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TLDR
In this paper, a content analysis of ECM system technical white papers reveals that such systems are potentially disastrous to intellectual workers, by subdividing intellectual tasks into the smallest possible constituent parts and automating as many tasks as possible.
Abstract
Enterprise Content Management (ECM) Systems confer numerous advantages to corporations including superior data management, streamlining of office workflows and potential costs savings. However, a content analysis of ECM system technical white papers reveals that such systems are potentially disastrous to intellectual workers. The trends of increasing management control, routinization and deskilling observed and critiqued by Harry Braverman in the 20th century in industrial labour are fully realized in intellectual labour by such systems. In addition to the detailed surveillance capabilities of content management systems (CMS), the employer captures and retains the entire iterative history of the documents produced by its workers. Content management systems deskill workers by subdividing intellectual tasks into the smallest possible constituent parts and automating as many tasks as possible. Content management systems provide some potential opportunities for the reskilling of workers, but a critical examination of the effects of these systems is necessary to determine their exact influence on digital work

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Book Chapter

The political economy of work

Craig Calhoun
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Enterprise Content Management - A Literature Review

TL;DR: After approximately one decade of ECM research, this paper provides an in-depth review of the body of academic research: the ECM domain, its evolution, and main topics are characterized.
Journal ArticleDOI

Upskilling, Deskilling or Polarisation? Evidence on Change in Skills in Europe:

TL;DR: In this paper, three prominent strands of literature suggest conflicting expectations about the direction of change in the complexity of work and the required skill levels of the labour force in Europe, and they suggest conflicting expectation about job complexity and skill levels.
References
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Proceedings ArticleDOI

Experiences with workflow management: issues for the next generation

TL;DR: The experiences with the InConcert workflow management system are used as a basis for outlining several issues that will need to be addressed in meeting the challenge of reconciliation of workflow process models and software with the rich variety of activities and behaviors that comprise “real work.
Journal Article

THE MAKING OF A CYBERTARIAT: Virtual Work in a Real World

TL;DR: The Making of a Cybertariat: Virtual Work in a Real World by Ursula Huws as mentioned in this paper examines the specific practices inside information work through a feminist political economy lens which challenges dominant economic arguments from both right and left.
Journal Article

The MAking of a Cybertariat: Virtual Work in a Real World

Ursula Huws, +1 more
- 01 Jun 2003 - 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors take as their starting point a conception of capitalism as a dynamic force whose engine proceeds by the interrelated processes of commodification and accumulation, and the inevitable impetus is towards a complete industrialization of the globe, with the entire population involved on the one hand in contributing towards the production or circulation of commodities and the capital accumulation process in some capacity, and on the other in an ever greater dependence on the purchase of these commodities for their survival.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Future of Critical Management Studies: A Paleo-Marxist Critique of Labour Process Theory

TL;DR: The authors argue that LPT ignores the fundamental contradiction Marx saw between the progressive socialization of the labour process and the persistence of capitalist valorization constraints, and use this framework to develop a modified conception of skill, one that reveals how capitalist development drives a p...
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