Notes from Toyota-land: An American Engineer in Japan

Author:   Darius Mehri ,  Robert Perrucci
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
ISBN:  

9780801442896


Pages:   256
Publication Date:   29 August 2005
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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Notes from Toyota-land: An American Engineer in Japan


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Overview

Mehri also describes a surprisingly unhealthy work environment, a high rate of injuries due to inadequate training, fast line speeds, crowded factories, racism, and lack of team support. And in conversations with his colleagues, he uncovered a culture of intimidation, subservience, and vexed relationships with many aspects of their work and surroundings. As both an engaging memoir of cross-cultural misunderstanding and a primer on Japanese business and industrial practices, Notes from Toyota-land will be a revelation to everyone who believes that Japanese business practices are an ideal against which to measure success.

Full Product Details

Author:   Darius Mehri ,  Robert Perrucci
Publisher:   Cornell University Press
Imprint:   ILR Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.40cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.907kg
ISBN:  

9780801442896


ISBN 10:   0801442893
Pages:   256
Publication Date:   29 August 2005
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.

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Reviews

""By the end of his stint in Japan, Mehri has matured into an intrepid amateur reporter, exposing the dangers on the assembly line and investigating the sham of the company unions""-Far Eastern Economic Review ""Notes from Toyota-Land offers interesting glimpses into a work setting-and a world-most Westerners know only at a distance... It is an attention-grabbing look at the dark side of a company that many experts predict will soon be the world's number-one automaker.""-Matt Rusling, The Christian Science Monitor, 3 January 2006 ""Send an intelligent, spirited, and slightly bolshie young American into a research and design department in the Japanese manufacturing heartland just as the firm faces its biggest crisis in twenty years. Give him a keenly observant eye, unbounded curiosity about what makes his fellow human beings tick, and a passion for recording his observations, and you have all the ingredients for a fascinating and sensitive ethnography of a system growing harsher by the day as it strives to meet American standards of profitability.""-Ronald Dore, Research Associate, London School of Economics ""Darius Mehri offers something quite unique: an engineer's inside view of the Toyota Production System, based on an extended work experience in the engineering office of the company's homeland keiretsu. Given the special prominence of the Toyota Production System in debates over the appropriate template for restructuring the auto industry in particular and manufacturing in general, Mehri's book will interest practitioners. Mehri also has a great deal of insight into Japan's contemporary culture and politics.""-Steve Babson, Wayne State University Labor Studies Center ""Notes from Toyota-land is a wonderfully rich firsthand report, sure to be welcomed by anyone interested in the organization of work in Japan. This compelling memoir shows the author's transformation from a naive young engineer to a journalist, social critic, and activist.""-Paul Adler, University of Southern California ""Japan seems to have gone through a mutation in the last decade, as most visibly manifested by multiple races appearing on streets, in shops, schools, and factories. Is Japan becoming global? Darius Mehri represents a remarkable testimony to the internationalization of Japan: an Iranian American employed by Toyota as a computer simulation engineer. This made him a precious top-elite employee in this huge multiplex of the industrial kingdom. Instead of being content with his privileged status, while he was proving a productive engineer, he took every opportunity to learn what was going on under the surface, exploring the company upward and downward and across sections by listening to what workers as well as executives had to say about company life. The information he collected resulted in this book. All these disclosures may sound like a shocking reversal of what we know about successful, industrial Japan. But the corporate survival strategy, often at the cost of individual employee's welfare, sounds familiar.""-Takie Sugiyama Lebra, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, University of Hawai'i


"""By the end of his stint in Japan, Mehri has matured into an intrepid amateur reporter, exposing the dangers on the assembly line and investigating the sham of the company unions""-Far Eastern Economic Review ""Notes from Toyota-Land offers interesting glimpses into a work setting-and a world-most Westerners know only at a distance... It is an attention-grabbing look at the dark side of a company that many experts predict will soon be the world's number-one automaker.""-Matt Rusling, The Christian Science Monitor, 3 January 2006 ""Send an intelligent, spirited, and slightly bolshie young American into a research and design department in the Japanese manufacturing heartland just as the firm faces its biggest crisis in twenty years. Give him a keenly observant eye, unbounded curiosity about what makes his fellow human beings tick, and a passion for recording his observations, and you have all the ingredients for a fascinating and sensitive ethnography of a system growing harsher by the day as it strives to meet American standards of profitability.""-Ronald Dore, Research Associate, London School of Economics ""Darius Mehri offers something quite unique: an engineer's inside view of the Toyota Production System, based on an extended work experience in the engineering office of the company's homeland keiretsu. Given the special prominence of the Toyota Production System in debates over the appropriate template for restructuring the auto industry in particular and manufacturing in general, Mehri's book will interest practitioners. Mehri also has a great deal of insight into Japan's contemporary culture and politics.""-Steve Babson, Wayne State University Labor Studies Center ""Notes from Toyota-land is a wonderfully rich firsthand report, sure to be welcomed by anyone interested in the organization of work in Japan. This compelling memoir shows the author's transformation from a naive young engineer to a journalist, social critic, and activist.""-Paul Adler, University of Southern California ""Japan seems to have gone through a mutation in the last decade, as most visibly manifested by multiple races appearing on streets, in shops, schools, and factories. Is Japan becoming global? Darius Mehri represents a remarkable testimony to the internationalization of Japan: an Iranian American employed by Toyota as a computer simulation engineer. This made him a precious top-elite employee in this huge multiplex of the industrial kingdom. Instead of being content with his privileged status, while he was proving a productive engineer, he took every opportunity to learn what was going on under the surface, exploring the company upward and downward and across sections by listening to what workers as well as executives had to say about company life. The information he collected resulted in this book. All these disclosures may sound like a shocking reversal of what we know about successful, industrial Japan. But the corporate survival strategy, often at the cost of individual employee's welfare, sounds familiar.""-Takie Sugiyama Lebra, Professor Emeritus of Anthropology, University of Hawai'i"


Notes from Toyota-Land offers interesting glimpses into a work setting-and a world-most Westerners know only at a distance. . . . It is an attention-grabbing look at the dark side of a company that many experts predict will soon be the world's number-one automaker. -Matt Rusling, The Christian Science Monitor, 3 January 2006


Author Information

Darius Mehri lives in Jersey City, New Jersey. Robert Perrucci is Professor of Sociology at Purdue University.

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