Technology, management & society / Peter Ferdinand Drucker

By: Drucker, Peter Ferdinand [author]Material type: TextTextPublication details: London : Pan Books LTD, c1970Description: 191 pages ; 18 cmISBN: 0330232487Subject(s): MANAGEMENT | MANAGEMENT -- SOCIETY | MANAGEMENT -- TECHNOLOGYLOC classification: HD 38 .D78 1970
Contents:
1. Information, Communications, and understanding -- 2. Management's New Role -- 3. Work and Tools -- 4. Technological Trends in the Twentieth Century -- 5. Technology and Society in the Twentieth Century -- 6. The Once and Future Manager -- 7. The First Technological Revolution and its Lessons -- 8. Long-ranger Planning -- 9. Business Objectives and Survival Needs -- 10. The Manager and The Moron -- 11. The Technological Revolution: Notes on the Relationship of Technology, Science, and Culture -- 12. Can Management Ever Be a Science?.
Summary: There should be underlying unity to a collection of essays. There should be a point of view, a central theme, an organ point around which the whole volume composes itself. And there is, I believe, such fundamental unity to this volume of essays, even though they date from more than a dozen years ago and discuss a variety of topics.
Item type: Books
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Item type Current library Home library Collection Shelving location Call number Copy number Status Date due Barcode
Books Books LRC - Annex
National University - Manila
Gen. Ed. - CBA Relegation Room GC HD 38 .D78 1970 (Browse shelf (Opens below)) c.1 Deselected NULIB000002683

Includes index.

1. Information, Communications, and understanding -- 2. Management's New Role -- 3. Work and Tools -- 4. Technological Trends in the Twentieth Century -- 5. Technology and Society in the Twentieth Century -- 6. The Once and Future Manager -- 7. The First Technological Revolution and its Lessons -- 8. Long-ranger Planning -- 9. Business Objectives and Survival Needs -- 10. The Manager and The Moron -- 11. The Technological Revolution: Notes on the Relationship of Technology, Science, and Culture -- 12. Can Management Ever Be a Science?.

There should be underlying unity to a collection of essays. There should be a point of view, a central theme, an organ point around which the whole volume composes itself. And there is, I believe, such fundamental unity to this volume of essays, even though they date from more than a dozen years ago and discuss a variety of topics.

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