cover image: Industry 4.0, - Building Collective - the Future of - Resources for the Canadian

20.500.12592/r8gsbn

Industry 4.0, - Building Collective - the Future of - Resources for the Canadian

21 Apr 2021

The research activities of the Interuniversity Research Centre on Globalization and Work (CRIMT) focus on the theoretical and practical challenges of institutional and organizational renewal in the areas of The CRIMT Institutional Experimentation for Better Work Partnership Project work and employment in the global era. [...] Our report seeks configurations in both Montréal and Toronto to contribute to this literature by examining and describes the current dynamics and the how regional institutions in the two provinces resources produced by these institutions can enhance the creation of collective to meet the challenges of I4.0 and future resources to meet the challenges of I4.0 and skills. [...] In Ontario, the contribution of the overall number of suppliers, has resulted the aerospace industry is less pronounced in a declining number of aerospace firms in because of the importance of the Canada overall (see Figure 4 on page 13). [...] 14 Looking ahead Second, the acquisition of the C Series by Airbus—and, consequently, the withdrawal The Canadian aerospace industry is still in a of Bombardier from the market of regional relatively good position, even in the context aircraft—has not only weakened the only of the pandemic and other economic and Canadian anchor firm present in both financial hardships. [...] the absence of a strong collective and —SHOPFLOOR DELEGATE, SME, individual worker voice—with influence in the MONTRÉAL implementation of technological change— undermines the logic of the manufacturing The picture that emerges from these process, and results in decisions that are narratives is that under I4.0, work is being not adapted to the reality of the shopfloor.
Pages
91
Published in
Canada