The story of socio‐technical design: reflections on its successes, failures and potential

Abstract.  This paper traces the history of socio‐technical design, emphasizing the set of values it embraces, the people espousing its theory and the organizations that practise it. Its role in the implementation of computer systems and its impact in a number of different countries are stressed. It also shows its relationship with action research, as a humanistic set of principles aimed at increasing human knowledge while improving practice in work situations. Its evolution in the 1960s and 1970s evidencing improved working practices and joint agreements between workers and management are contrasted with the much harsher economic climate of the 1980s and 1990s when such principled practices, with one or two notable exceptions, gave way to lean production, downsizing and cost cutting in a global economy, partly reflecting the impact of information and communications technology. Different future scenarios are discussed where socio‐technical principles might return in a different guise to humanize the potential impact of technology in a world of work where consistent organizational and economic change are the norm.

[1]  G. Soros The Crisis of Global Capitalism , 1998 .

[2]  Wolfgang G. Weber,et al.  The "Three Waves" of Industrial Group Work: Historical Reflections on Current Research on Group Work , 1998 .

[3]  Valerie Bayliss Work in the Knowledge-Driven Economy , 2001 .

[4]  M. Duffy,et al.  The organization man. , 1994, Time.

[5]  van Fm Frans Eijnatten,et al.  The Dutch IOR Approach to Organizational Design: An Alternative to Business Process Re-engineering?: , 1998 .

[6]  A. K. Rice Productivity and Social Organization in an Indian Weaving Shed , 1953 .

[7]  Frank Heller Influence at Work: A 25-Year Program of Research , 1998 .

[8]  Albert B. Cherns,et al.  The Principles of Sociotechnical Design , 1976 .

[9]  Andrew Bartlett,et al.  Tools for change and progress , 1996, CSOC.

[10]  J. F. Clark,et al.  The Changing Culture of a Factory , 1951, Mental Health.

[11]  Duane Elgin,et al.  Voluntary Simplicity: Toward a Way of Life That is Outwardly Simple, Inwardly Rich , 1981 .

[12]  Allen J. Scott,et al.  Regional motors of the global economy , 1996 .

[13]  Enid Mumford,et al.  Risky ideas in the risk society , 1996, J. Inf. Technol..

[14]  Rolf Lindholm,et al.  The Volvo report , 1975 .

[15]  Fred Emery,et al.  The emergence of a new paradigm of work , 1978 .

[16]  Niclas Adler,et al.  Bringing Business into Sociotechnical Theory and Practice , 1998 .

[17]  John Kenneth Galbraith The World Economy Since the Wars: A Personal View , 1994 .

[18]  Cary L. Cooper,et al.  The Quality of Working Life in Western and Eastern Europe , 1979 .

[19]  Louis E. Davis The Design of Jobs , 1966 .

[20]  Ivan Svetlik,et al.  Quality of working life , 1996 .

[21]  Fred Emery,et al.  Toward a New Philosophy of Management , 1993 .

[22]  M. Castells The rise of the network society , 1996 .

[23]  Enid Mumford,et al.  Effective Systems Design and Requirements Analysis , 1995 .

[24]  L. Lugiato Theory of open systems I , 1975 .

[25]  L. von Bertalanffy,et al.  The theory of open systems in physics and biology. , 1950, Science.

[26]  E. Molleman,et al.  Work Design Issues in Lean Production from a Sociotechnical Systems Perspective: Neo-Taylorism or the Next Step in Sociotechnical Design? , 1998 .

[27]  Eric Trist,et al.  The Social Engagement of Social Science, Volume 2: A Tavistock Anthology--The Socio-Technical Perspective , 1993 .

[28]  E. Trist,et al.  A Socio-Technical Perspective , 1993 .

[29]  David Herbst,et al.  Designing with Minimal Critical Specifications , 1993 .

[30]  D. Stace,et al.  Dominant Ideologies, Strategic Change, and Sustained Performance , 1996 .

[31]  William A. Pasmore,et al.  Social Science Transformed: The Socio-Technical Perspective , 1995 .

[32]  A. Cherns Principles of Socio-Technical Design , 1993 .