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Automotive Production Systems and Standardisation: From Ford to the Case of Mercedes-Benz 2005 Edition
Contributor(s): Clarke, Constanze (Author)
ISBN: 3790815780     ISBN-13: 9783790815788
Publisher: Physica-Verlag
OUR PRICE:   $104.49  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: April 2005
Qty:
Annotation: The introduction of the Mercedes-Benz Production System (MPS) is exemplary of a trend within the automotive industry: the creation and introduction of company-specific standardised production systems. This book contributes to the debate about production systems by examining the social and economic implications of the role of standardisation in production systems. In this context it addresses three core issues: First, the driving forces behind the changing forms and functions of standardisation and the role of institutions therein. Second, the impact of standardisation on the evolution of automotive production systems. Third, based on the author's own empirical research conducted over a three year period at the Mercedes-Benz plant Stuttgart-Untert??rkheim/Germany, the book examines the influence of standardisation on the work of actors on the shop floor in terms of organisational learning processes and the regulation of work.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Business & Economics | Management Science
- Business & Economics | Human Resources & Personnel Management
- Business & Economics | Management - General
Dewey: 629.234
LCCN: 2005922568
Series: Contributions to Management Science
Physical Information: 0.57" H x 6.12" W x 9.2" (0.79 lbs) 238 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
In January 2000, Mercedes-Benz started to implement the Mercedes-Benz Prod- tion System (MPS) throughout its world-wide passenger car plants. This event is exemplary of a trend within the automotive industry: the creation and introduction of company-specific standardised production systems. It gradually emerged with the introduction of the Chrysler Operating System (COS) in the mid-1990s and represents a distinct step in the process towards implementing the universal pr- ciples of lean thinking as propagated by the MIT-study. For the academic field of industrial sociology and labour policy, the emergence of this trend seems to mark a new stage in the evolution of the debate about production systems in the auto- tive industry (J rgens 2002:2), particularly as it seems to undermine the stand of the critics of the one-best way model (Boyer and Freyssenet 1995). The introduction of company-level standardised production systems marks the starting point of the present study. At the core of it is a case study about the M- cedes Benz Production System (MPS).