Manufacturing Managerial Compliance: How Firms Align Managers with Corporate Interest

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Titel: Manufacturing Managerial Compliance: How Firms Align Managers with Corporate Interest
Autoren: Narayan, Devika
Quelle: Work, Employment and Society. 37:1443-1461
Verlagsinformationen: SAGE Publications, 2022.
Publikationsjahr: 2022
Schlagwörter: 0502 economics and business, 05 social sciences, 8. Economic growth
Beschreibung: Although the domain of labour process research is vast, few studies analyse compliance among managers. This article advances a neglected strand of analysis, focusing on how firms shape managerial actions. Organizational goals, such as downsizing, intensification, and reskilling, demand that professional managers cooperate and act in accordance with firm objectives, at times even at personal cost to themselves. To theorize this, I use the case of information technology (IT) firms in India that recently shed a large number of managerial jobs, fostering an environment of insecurity. Those who lost their jobs were positioned between lower-level employees and top management. Drawing on qualitative fieldwork, I contribute a two-part framing that theorizes the dualities of the managerial subject position and how it is instrumentalized. The article foregrounds the intersection of managerial insecurity and managerial hierarchy, emphasizing how firms utilize these to meet organizational goals.
Publikationsart: Article
Sprache: English
ISSN: 1469-8722
0950-0170
DOI: 10.1177/09500170221083109
Rights: URL: https://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license
Dokumentencode: edsair.doi.dedup.....ea1d3067004cbd9c85c20e80c3922c00
Datenbank: OpenAIRE
Beschreibung
Abstract:Although the domain of labour process research is vast, few studies analyse compliance among managers. This article advances a neglected strand of analysis, focusing on how firms shape managerial actions. Organizational goals, such as downsizing, intensification, and reskilling, demand that professional managers cooperate and act in accordance with firm objectives, at times even at personal cost to themselves. To theorize this, I use the case of information technology (IT) firms in India that recently shed a large number of managerial jobs, fostering an environment of insecurity. Those who lost their jobs were positioned between lower-level employees and top management. Drawing on qualitative fieldwork, I contribute a two-part framing that theorizes the dualities of the managerial subject position and how it is instrumentalized. The article foregrounds the intersection of managerial insecurity and managerial hierarchy, emphasizing how firms utilize these to meet organizational goals.
ISSN:14698722
09500170
DOI:10.1177/09500170221083109