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Chandler's Paths of Learning

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 December 2011

Paul J. Miranti
Affiliation:
PAUL MIRANTI is professor in the Department of Accounting, Business Ethics, and Information Systems at Rutgers Business School–Newark and New Brunswick, New Jersey.

Extract

In his last two major works, Inventing the Electronic Century and Shaping the Industrial Century, Alfred Chandler extended his well-known historical model put forth originally in Strategy and Structure, The Visible Hand, and Scale and Scope by drawing on insights from scholarship dealing with organizational learning and evolutionary economics. In the earlier works, he won high praise, as evinced by the awarding of the Bancroft and Pulitzer prizes for his contribution in advancing the understanding of history, economics, and sociology. His work presented a powerful alternative vision of businesspeople from the version usually communicated by the older Progressive school of history. Although practitioners of the latter brand of history generally acknowledged industrialization's material benefits, many worried that such change represented a Faustian bargain: they feared that concentrated economic power threatened the preservation of cherished democratic institutions and values.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The President and Fellows of Harvard College 2008

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References

1 Chandler, Alfred D. Jr, Inventing The Electronic Century: The Epic Story of Consumer Electronics and Computer Industries (New York, 2001)Google Scholar; Chandler, , Shaping the Industrial Century: The Remarkable Story of the Evolution of the Modern Chemical and Pharmaceutical Industries (Cambridge, Mass., 2005)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Chandler, , Strategy and Structure: Chapters in the History of the Industrial Enterprise (Cambridge, Mass, 1966)Google Scholar; Chandler, , The Visible Hand: The Managerial Revolution in American Business (Cambridge, Mass., 1977)Google Scholar; and Chandler, , Scale and Scope: The Dynamics of Industrial Capitalism (Cambridge, Mass., 1990).Google Scholar

2 Averitt, Robert T., The Dual Economy: The Dynamics of American Industry Structure (New York, 1968).Google Scholar

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5 Schumpeter, Joseph, History of Economic Analysis (New York, 1954).Google Scholar See also McCraw, Thomas K., Prophet of Innovation: Joseph Schumpeter and Creative Destruction (Cambridge, Mass., 2007).Google Scholar

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7 Miranti, Paul J., “Corporate Learning and Traffic Management at the Bell System, 1900–1929: Probability Theory and the Evolution of Organizational Capabilities,” Business History Review 76 (Winter 2002): 733–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and, by the same author, “Corporate Learning and Quality Control at the Bell System, 1877–1929,” 79 (Spring 2005): 39–72.

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