
(1921, p. 10); Diemer quotes the ASCM committee
Factory organization and administration, 1910
Source: Dynamic administration, 1942, p. xx
(1921, p. 10); Diemer quotes the ASCM committee
Factory organization and administration, 1910
“The Methods of Industrial Management.”
A committee of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers made an extensive canvass in the fall of 1912 to determine what were the new elements in modern management as well as what the committee designated as the regulative principles of industrial management. The committee confirmed Adam Smith's statement made in 1776 in his Wealth of Nations, in which he held that the application of the principle of division of labor was the basis of manufacture. The committee also agreed with Charles Babbage, who in his work entitled Economy of Machinery and Manufacture written in 1832, added another principle, namely the transference of skill.
1921, p. 10
Factory organization and administration, 1910
Source: The Social Problems of an Industrial Civilisation, 1945, p. 81-82
Source: Adventures of a White-Collar Man. 1941, p. 144
The Labour Party in Perspective (Left Book Club, 1937), p. 153.
Leader of the Opposition
Source: From Serfdom to Socialism (1907), p. 11
Source: Women, Men, and the International Division of Labor, 1983, p. x