The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry

Bibliography: pages 107-120. === This thesis explores the decline and transmutation of the apprenticeship system in South Africa, specifically as it occurred in the metal and engineering industry. It proceeds to analyse the most basic and influential imperatives which have driven this process. On th...

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Main Author: Lundall, Paul
Other Authors: Graaff, Johann
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16098
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-160982020-10-06T05:11:14Z The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry Lundall, Paul Graaff, Johann Gamble, Jeanne Sociology Apprenticeship programs - South Africa Employees - Training of - South Africa Bibliography: pages 107-120. This thesis explores the decline and transmutation of the apprenticeship system in South Africa, specifically as it occurred in the metal and engineering industry. It proceeds to analyse the most basic and influential imperatives which have driven this process. On the side of capital, these imperatives were the inexorable motive for a profit driven industrial organisation and on the side of organised labour, the imperatives to protect skills, jobs and wages. The existence of the one set of imperatives presupposed the need to redefine the existence of the other set. These contradictory imperatives have shaped the trajectory of the apprenticeship system in South Africa. They were contradictory because the one was an impediment on the untrammelled extension of the other. However, as the imperative of profit maximisation gradually became the predominant consideration in the relationship, it began to exert greater pressure on the character of the apprenticeship system. Within the apprenticeship training system, the imperative of profit maximization prioritised price calculation as the dominant consideration by which decisions and trajectories were chartered. Since the state mediated the relationship between the various economic interests in society, its interventions merely curtailed a more rapid consolidation of the effects of a profit driven industrial organisational imperative, within the apprenticeship training system. The triumph of the profit maximization imperative, systematically eroded the system of apprenticeship training in the metal and engineering industry of South Africa. An institutional inertia within the South African state resulted in the manifestation of erosive effects within institutions of the state empowered with governing and managing human resources development. This institutional inertia within the state was an accompaniment to the broader erosion of the apprenticeship training system at the workplace. 2016-01-02T04:21:07Z 2016-01-02T04:21:07Z 1997 Master Thesis Masters MA http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16098 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities Department of Sociology
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Sociology
Apprenticeship programs - South Africa
Employees - Training of - South Africa
spellingShingle Sociology
Apprenticeship programs - South Africa
Employees - Training of - South Africa
Lundall, Paul
The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry
description Bibliography: pages 107-120. === This thesis explores the decline and transmutation of the apprenticeship system in South Africa, specifically as it occurred in the metal and engineering industry. It proceeds to analyse the most basic and influential imperatives which have driven this process. On the side of capital, these imperatives were the inexorable motive for a profit driven industrial organisation and on the side of organised labour, the imperatives to protect skills, jobs and wages. The existence of the one set of imperatives presupposed the need to redefine the existence of the other set. These contradictory imperatives have shaped the trajectory of the apprenticeship system in South Africa. They were contradictory because the one was an impediment on the untrammelled extension of the other. However, as the imperative of profit maximisation gradually became the predominant consideration in the relationship, it began to exert greater pressure on the character of the apprenticeship system. Within the apprenticeship training system, the imperative of profit maximization prioritised price calculation as the dominant consideration by which decisions and trajectories were chartered. Since the state mediated the relationship between the various economic interests in society, its interventions merely curtailed a more rapid consolidation of the effects of a profit driven industrial organisational imperative, within the apprenticeship training system. The triumph of the profit maximization imperative, systematically eroded the system of apprenticeship training in the metal and engineering industry of South Africa. An institutional inertia within the South African state resulted in the manifestation of erosive effects within institutions of the state empowered with governing and managing human resources development. This institutional inertia within the state was an accompaniment to the broader erosion of the apprenticeship training system at the workplace.
author2 Graaff, Johann
author_facet Graaff, Johann
Lundall, Paul
author Lundall, Paul
author_sort Lundall, Paul
title The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry
title_short The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry
title_full The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry
title_fullStr The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry
title_full_unstemmed The erosion of apprenticeship training in South Africa's metal and engineering industry
title_sort erosion of apprenticeship training in south africa's metal and engineering industry
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/16098
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