Saint-Louis University - Bruxelles
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ECGE1326 - Humans and organization



Credits : 3

Lecturer :
Mode of delivery :
Face-to-face , first term, 30 hours of theory.

Timetable :
First term
Wednesday from 11:00 to 13:00 at 43 Botanique 4

Language of instruction :
Dutch; English (passive knowledge).


Learning outcomes :
The aim of this course is to provide the students with a sociological introduction to the fields of work and organisation, management. Work - and more specifically wage work - is a social regular and standardised activity, which has to be performed according to specific rules. In this course, we will study the social conditions under which the labour exchange between employee and employer is established and the question of who determines these conditions. The individual conclusion of an employment contract and the ensuing exchange of services and performance takes place in a system of collective labour and regulations by the government. Conditions, rules of the institutions are related to the process of allocation and remuneration (who goes where?), the process of exploitation (how to deploy manpower?) and the regulatory process (under what conditions of pay and working hours?). The course will be based on some empirical developments in each of these fields: growing tensions on the labour market, more women on the labour market, elderly people have to work longer, work should cope with more performance-requirements, work relations become more flexible, social dialogue model is under pressure... These developments will be studied scientifically and based on recent empirical research.

Prerequisites :
For the Bachelor in Law :

For the Bachelor in Information and Communication :

For the Bachelor : Business Engineering :

For the Bachelor in Economics and Management :

For the Bachelor in Political Sciences: General :

For the Bachelor in Sociology and Anthropology :


Co-requisites :
None

Course contents :
As an introduction to the subject, we will study notions as "work", the different forms of work, the place of the individual relationship in management and in work, and the development in the long term. Then, the course will study the different social fields in which employment relationships are established:
(1) the development in the labour market, such as employment opportunities, unemployment, inactivity and labour participation;
(2) the work organization (management), from Taylor and Ford to the rise and further development of the modern management principles;
(3) the system of collective relations in work, intended to conclude collective agreements and the impact of the Government thereto.
Each time, we will wonder about what is the importance of the international context, especially the E.U., in each of these fields.
The course is based on several chapters of the following work: Van Ruysseveldt & van Hoof (2006), Arbeid in verandering (Kluwer).

Planned learning activities and teaching methods :
In each course, a specific subject will be studied. Each of the studied subjects is very important in our society and politics; therefore, examples out of the practice and recent researches will illustrate the theory. The students will be asked to follow the news and to give examples by themselves. For one or two subjects, a guest lecturer will be invited. During the course, the professor will clarify the objective to be reached for each subject (what the students should know). He will also mention the texts (chapters in the reference work or other texts) that belong to the subject matter. Finally, some assignments will be given as a preparation for the examination. The slides used in class and assignments also belong to the subject matter.

Assessment methods and criteria :
The assessment is an oral examination including a written preparation, which will have to be handed in to the professor.


Recommended or required reading :
Van Ruysseveldt & van Hoof (2006). More texts will be referred to during the lecture.


Other information :
As textbook, a syllabus is made available to the students, based on chapters from Van Ruysseveldt & van Hoof (2006), Arbeid in verandering (Kluwer). Some further texts will be made available during the lectures.