1st Edition

Engineers and Industrial Growth Higher Technical Education and the Engineering Profession During the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries: France, Germany, Sweden and England

By Göran Ahlström Copyright 1982
    120 Pages
    by Routledge

    120 Pages
    by Routledge

    Using an economic-historical and comparative approach, this book, first published in 1982, studies the structure and development of the engineering profession in France, German, Sweden and England. Central issues include the number of engineers in a particular society, their education and fields of work after education, the social background of the engineer, their social standing, the role of the state in technical education, and the development and role of the engineering organisations in various respects. The study shows that in three of the four countries, engineers achieved professional status rapidly and became members of their country’s establishment. In the fourth, England, not only did properly qualified engineers enjoy a considerably lower social status, but in numbers they were far fewer than in other parts of Europe. The author discusses this inadequacy in terms of industrial output and development.

    1. Scope of the Study  2. France, Germany, Sweden  2.1. Higher Technical Education – The General Pattern  2.2. Number of Engineers  2.3. Demand For and Careers of the Engineers  2.4. Social Standing of the Engineer  3. England  3.1. Higher Technical Education – The Exception  3.2. Factors Explaining the English Development  4. Summary and Conclusions

    Biography

    Göran Ahlström