Fred Emery
Frederick Edmund Emery (27 August 1925 – 10 April 1997) was an Australian psychologist. He was a prominent early figure in the field of organizational development, particularly in the development of the theory around participative work design structures such as self-managing teams.[1] BiographyEmery was born in Narrogin, Western Australia, as the son of a drover. He left school as the Dux of Freemantle Boys' High in Western Australia at age 14. He gained his honors degree in science from the University of Western Australia in 1946 and joined the teaching staff of the department in 1947.[2] He subsequently spent nine years on the staff of the Department of Psychology, University of Melbourne, where he obtained his PhD in 1953. During 1951-52, he held a UNESCO Fellowship in social sciences and was attached to the Tavistock Institute of Human Relations in the UK.[3] As a staff member at the University of Melbourne, he made contributions to rural sociology, CPA, and the effects of film and television viewing.[4] In 1957, Emery left Australia for London to join the staff of the Tavistock Institute.[5] He worked with Eric Trist on the concept of sociotechnical systems in 1951–52 as a UNESCO Research Fellow, subsequently publishing "The Characteristics of Socio-technical Systems" in 1959.[6] He, Eric Trist, one of his closest intellectual collaborators, and other colleagues, established "open socio-technical systems theory" as an alternative paradigm for organizational design – field-tested on a national scale in Norway, in partnership with Einar Thorsrud.[7] After his return to Australia, he set about developing a new method to bring in jointly optimized Socio-technical Systems, designed for the diffusion of the concept rather than proof of an alternative to autocracy in the workplace. That method, called the Participative Design Workshop, has been used in Australia and many other countries since 1971, and replaced the older 9 step method used in Norway.[8] Socio-technical systems are part of a comprehensive theoretical framework called Open Systems Theory (OST). Two of Emery's and Trist's key publications were: "The Causal Texture of Organisational Environments" (1965)[9] and "Towards a Social Ecology" (1972). These publications are the groundwork on which Fred Emery developed OST.[10] Emery returned to Australia in 1969 and went to the Australian National University (ANU). He was a senior research fellow there until November 1979, initially in the Department of Sociology, RSSS, and then from 1974 at the Centre for Continuing Education. He had also been visiting professor in Social Systems Science at Wharton's Department of Social Systems Sciences, spending 1967–68 at the Center for Advanced Studies in the Behavioral Sciences at Stanford University.[3] Emery was awarded the first Elton Mayo award in 1988 by the Australian Psychological Society and received a DSc from Macquarie University in 1992.[3] At the ANU, Emery continued his action research in industry and the public sector, developing new tools for the diffusion of democracy in organizations and communities.[3] In 1979, his CCE Fellowship expired. He later worked as a consultant. In the final two years of his life, he co-edited the third and final volume of the "Tavistock anthology", published by the University of Pennsylvania Press: The Social Engagement of Social Science.[11] Emery died at his home on 10 April 1997, at the age of 71 in Canberra, Australia.[1] Publications
References
External linksWikiquote has quotations related to Fred Emery.
|