8248 - COMPARATIVE BUSINESS HISTORY
GM-LS - MM-LS - OSI-LS - AFC-LS - CLAPI-LS - CLEFIN-LS - CLELI-LS - CLEACC-LS - DES-LS - CLEMIT-LS - CLG-LS
Department of Social and Political Sciences
Course taught in English
FRANCO AMATORI
Course Objectives
The course focuses on the origins and evolution of the modern industrial corporation from the last decades of the 19th century until today, in a long term perspective, stressing continuities and changes, technological evolution and socio-institutional transformations - all elements which effect corporations' strategies and structures. The modern industrial corporation is studied in a comparative framework, considering the three macro-regions at the head of the world economy: the United States, Europe and Japan. A part of the course features monographic lectures, which analyse and compare in detail the different organizational models adopted by companies active in the increasingly more globalized economy.
Course Content Summary
- The firm between the First and Second Industrial Revolution
- The Second Industrial Revolution and the birth of the modern industrial corporation
- Managerial capitalism: the USA
- The "European relative": Great Britain
- Cooperative capitalism: Germany
- The country of the "noyeaux durs": France
- Squaring the circle: Japan
- Between State and families: Italian corporations
Detailed Description of Assessment Methods
Student evaluation consists of an oral exam covering the course contents and also a paper that can be the result of individual effort or group work (maximum 4 people).
Textbooks
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J. MICKLETHWAIT, A. WOOLRIDGE, The company. A short history of a revolutionary idea, London, Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 2003.
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Additional readings will be indicated during the course.