Manufacturing Consent revisited

The article briefly presents Manufacturing Consent, a 1979 publication directed by Allis Chalmer that deals with the way in which work discipline for manual labourers is organised through coercion and consent, based in particular on the establishment of production quota creating a kind of "game...

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Main Author: Michael Burawoy
Format: Article
Language:fra
Published: La Nouvelle Revue du Travail 2012-12-01
Series:La Nouvelle Revue du Travail
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.openedition.org/nrt/143
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author Michael Burawoy
author_facet Michael Burawoy
author_sort Michael Burawoy
collection DOAJ
description The article briefly presents Manufacturing Consent, a 1979 publication directed by Allis Chalmer that deals with the way in which work discipline for manual labourers is organised through coercion and consent, based in particular on the establishment of production quota creating a kind of "game of making out" between works. The author reviews the ethnographic method that had been used at the time. He criticises this approach and suggests a replacement based on an "extended case method" that incorporates the work context and includes actors' trajectories as well as transformations in markets and the role of the state - without forgetting spatial-temporal factors of change. This becomes an opportunity for the author to review recent publications that have expanded the object of research to include gender, domestic labour, migrant workers, services, trade unions, etc. The article suggests that issues pertaining to the battles witnessed in these domains range from exploitation to commodification and include consumerism. All of these bones of contention have inaugurated a new era of transnational mobilisation extending from Eastern Europe to Asia and inspiring the author to reproduce Polanyi’s Great Transformation thesis, after updating it to include the recent advent of a third, ultra-liberal wave that broadens commodification to include nature (earth, water and air) and knowledge. The first manifestation of this change is the Occupy movement.
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spelling doaj-art-b891f27359e2432dadb8c2f014d31f8e2025-08-20T01:54:45ZfraLa Nouvelle Revue du TravailLa Nouvelle Revue du Travail2263-89892012-12-01110.4000/nrt.143Manufacturing Consent revisitedMichael BurawoyThe article briefly presents Manufacturing Consent, a 1979 publication directed by Allis Chalmer that deals with the way in which work discipline for manual labourers is organised through coercion and consent, based in particular on the establishment of production quota creating a kind of "game of making out" between works. The author reviews the ethnographic method that had been used at the time. He criticises this approach and suggests a replacement based on an "extended case method" that incorporates the work context and includes actors' trajectories as well as transformations in markets and the role of the state - without forgetting spatial-temporal factors of change. This becomes an opportunity for the author to review recent publications that have expanded the object of research to include gender, domestic labour, migrant workers, services, trade unions, etc. The article suggests that issues pertaining to the battles witnessed in these domains range from exploitation to commodification and include consumerism. All of these bones of contention have inaugurated a new era of transnational mobilisation extending from Eastern Europe to Asia and inspiring the author to reproduce Polanyi’s Great Transformation thesis, after updating it to include the recent advent of a third, ultra-liberal wave that broadens commodification to include nature (earth, water and air) and knowledge. The first manifestation of this change is the Occupy movement.https://journals.openedition.org/nrt/143Consentcoercionmaking outworkers’ movementextended case studyhegemonic regime
spellingShingle Michael Burawoy
Manufacturing Consent revisited
La Nouvelle Revue du Travail
Consent
coercion
making out
workers’ movement
extended case study
hegemonic regime
title Manufacturing Consent revisited
title_full Manufacturing Consent revisited
title_fullStr Manufacturing Consent revisited
title_full_unstemmed Manufacturing Consent revisited
title_short Manufacturing Consent revisited
title_sort manufacturing consent revisited
topic Consent
coercion
making out
workers’ movement
extended case study
hegemonic regime
url https://journals.openedition.org/nrt/143
work_keys_str_mv AT michaelburawoy manufacturingconsentrevisited