The triumph of the flexible society : the connectivity revolution and resistance to change / Manuel Hinds
Tipo de material: TextoIdioma: Inglés Detalles de publicación: Westport: Praeger, 2003.Descripción: xxi, 197 p. ; 24 cmISBN:- 0275981282
- 303.48 H662
Tipo de ítem | Biblioteca actual | Colección | Signatura | Copia número | Estado | Fecha de vencimiento | Código de barras | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Libro 3 días | Biblioteca Rafael Meza Ayau | Colección Roberto Murray Meza | 303.48 H662 2003 (Navegar estantería(Abre debajo)) | 01 | En proceso físico | 71833 |
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303.34 R839 1993 Leadership for the twenty-first century / | 303.34 S798 2017 The leader's bookshelf / | 303.34 W741 1994 Certain trumpets : the call of leaders / | 303.48 H662 2003 The triumph of the flexible society : the connectivity revolution and resistance to change / | 303.483 C116 2000 El reto de México : tecnología y fronteras en el siglo XXI : una propuesta radical / | 303.49 H466 1995 Visions of the future : the distant past, yesterday, today, tomorrow / | 304 N218 2010 Las migraciones de España a Iberoamérica desde la Independencia / |
Includes bibliographical references (p. [183]-192) and index.
Hinds takes offers a fresh perspective on the social, political, and economic disturbances now affecting our world. This book looks at those disturbances not as separate problems, but rather as the coherent symptoms of a deep technological revolution that is changing the shape of society on the scale of the Industrial Revolution: the Connectivity Revolution, the basis of the New Economy. Analyzing the resistance to change that erupted violently in response to that last major economic upheaval, Hinds shows how Communism, Nazism, and fundamentalism owe their triumphs not to the prevalence of poverty or oppression but to the rigidity of societies threatened by profound social changes prompted by rapid technological progress. Demonstrating that their rigidity was caused by the same kind of state intervention in the economy that is now being proposed to stop globalization, he argues persuasively that only a horizontal, flexible society can smoothly manage change in such a way that the pain of transformation―and therefore, the risk of giving birth to new varieties of destructive regimes―is minimized.
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