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999 _c27536
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020 _a9221056112
082 _a331.137042 Kap
100 _a"Kaplinsky, Raphael"
245 0 _aMicro - electronics and employment revisited
260 _aGeneva
260 _bInternational Labour Office
260 _c1987
300 _a181p.
520 _aTechnological developments in the micro-electronics industry have not passed unnoticed by multinational enterprises, governments, trade unions, consumer unions and international agencies. Many researchers have made dire predictions concerning the effect of the new technology on employment. Often these predictions have ignored the more indirect, and sometimes positive, effects of the technology. In this new ILO study, based on an extensive review of the literature in this field, Raphael Kaplinsky looks at both the direct and the indirect effects of micro-electronics, and attempts to show how various aspects of the micro-electronic revolution are linked with patterns of employment. The author focuses on the effect of the new technology on employment and on the quality of working life in industrialised countries and in the Third World. He also examines the prospects and problems of Third World economies in developing their own electronics sectors and applying the new technology to their productive sectors.
650 _aMicro - electronics industry employees effect of technol
942 _cB
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