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The Company's Role in Society — A Second Look at First Principles

Christopher F. Molander (Lecturer in Organizational Sociology, University of Bradford)

Personnel Review

ISSN: 0048-3486

Article publication date: 1 March 1975

107

Abstract

‘The business of America’, said Calvin Coolidge in 1925, ‘is business’. Such a view, uncompromising and perhaps a trifle complacent, has been consistently reiterated in the West by many others. Such a proposition provided the basis for the protective managerial ideology with which the early English entrepreneurs sought to defend themselves against the Establishment in the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. The activities of those industrial pioneers irrevocably changed the society in which they lived. They ushered in not only a new technology upon which we are unalterably dependent, but a new hierarchical ordering of society and a new morality of utilitarianism to go with it. They institutionalized a new form of social conflict and provided the arena in which that conflict could take place.

Citation

Molander, C.F. (1975), "The Company's Role in Society — A Second Look at First Principles", Personnel Review, Vol. 4 No. 3, pp. 13-16. https://doi.org/10.1108/eb055285

Publisher

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MCB UP Ltd

Copyright © 1975, MCB UP Limited

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