管理学研究中奴隶制的否认

The Denial of Slavery in Management Studies

JOURNAL OF MANAGEMENT STUDIES · 2003
被引 299
人大 AFT50ABS 4

中文导读

指出美国奴隶制被错误地排除在管理史之外,论证其符合资本主义和科学管理原则,并强调奴隶制对管理实践和思想的持续影响,呼吁管理史纳入反非裔美国人种族主义视角。

Abstract

abstract American slavery has been wrongfully excluded from histories of management. By 1860, when the historical orthodoxy has modern management emerging on the railroads, 38,000 managers were managing the 4 million slaves working in the US economy. Given slaves’ worth, slaveholders could literally claim ‘our people are our greatest asset.’ Yet a review of histories of management shows ante‐bellum slavery excluded from managerial modernity as pre‐capitalist, unsophisticated in practice, and without non‐owner managers identified as such. These grounds for exclusion are challenged. First, it is shown slavery is included within capitalism by many historians, who also see plantations as a site of the emergence of industrial discipline. Second, ante‐bellum slavery is demonstrated to have been managed according to classical management and Taylorian principles. Third, those doing the managing are shown to have been employed at the time as ‘managers’. In the idea of the manager, and of scientific and classical management slavery has therefore left an ongoing imprint in management practice and thought. A strong argument is made for not just for postcolonialist accounts of management, but for management histories in which anti‐African‐American racism is a continuing strand. The fundamental significance of the article however is its identification of slavery as of intrinsic, but hitherto denied, relevance to management studies.

管理学历史资本主义种族主义奴隶制