Avoiding Dictatorship
Now I think we can begin to see before us two possible forms of development-at any rate, we can see one of them in operation, that of Russia and Germany, where the worker is required to do his job and keep his mouth shut and in which he has no say whatsoever in the conduct of industry or State policy. The other course, which is surely the one we ought to follow, is the extension of political democracy by increasing the responsibility and share in production of the wage worker until he realises that the administration and discipline and forward planning of production is his own personal affair as well as that of the employer, The University can give valuable assistance, if it will, by research and investigation of the lines of industrial development here and throughout the world to show clearly what is happening in the world and what steps we must’ take if we are both to run industry efficiently and avoid industrial and political dictatorship.(W. N, Pharazyn, "Industrial Relations — A New Zealand Research,’ 2YA, June 10).
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New Zealand Listener, Volume 3, Issue 53, 28 June 1940, Page 10
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181Avoiding Dictatorship New Zealand Listener, Volume 3, Issue 53, 28 June 1940, Page 10
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Copyright in the work University Entrance by Janet Frame (credited as J.F., 22 March 1946, page 18), is owned by the Janet Frame Literary Trust. The National Library has been granted permission to digitise this article and make it available online as part of this digitised version of the New Zealand Listener. You can search, browse, and print this article for research and personal study only. Permission must be obtained from the Janet Frame Literary Trust for any other use.
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