Long‐term vision depends upon history. Without a knowledge of history, both scholars and scholarship are incomplete. In a companion paper (Singhal & Singhal, 2022), we reviewed the history of technology, knowledge, and manufacturing before the Industrial Revolution, which began around 1760. Here, we continue this history from 1760 on.
BabbageC. (1832). On the economy of machinery and manufactures. Charles Knight.
2.
BaberZ. (1996). The science of empire. State University of New York Press.
3.
BairochP. (1982). International industrialization levels from 1750 to 1980. Journal of European Economic History, 11, 269–333.
4.
BirgeJ. R. (2021). George Bernard Dantzig: The pioneer of linear optimization. Management and Business Review, 1(1), 161–163. https://mbrjournal.com/2021/01/26/george‐bernard‐dantzig‐the‐pioneer‐of‐linear‐optimization/
5.
BorthC. (1945). Master of mass production. Bobbs‐Merrill.
6.
BuffaE. S. (1961). Modern production management. Wiley.
7.
BuffaE. S.SarinR. K. (1987). Modern production/operations management. Wiley.
8.
CachonG.TerwieschC. (2013). Matching supply with demand (3rd ed.). McGraw‐Hill Publishing.
9.
ChandlerA. D.Jr. (1877). The visible hand: The managerial revolution in American business. Harvard University Press.
10.
CharnesA.CooperW. W.MellonB. (1952). Blending aviation gasoline—A study in programming interdependent activities. Econometrica, 20(2), 135–151.
11.
ChaseR. B.AquilanoN. J. (1973). Production and operations management. Richard D. Irwin.
12.
ChenR. R.KumarS.SinghalJ.SinghalK. (2021). Note: The value and cost of the customer's waiting time. Manufacturing and Service Operations Management, 23(6), 1539–1542.
13.
CoaseR. H. (1937). The nature of the firm. Economica, 4, 386–405.
14.
CoaseR. H. (1992). The institutional structure of production. The American Economic Review, 82(4), 713–719.
15.
CullitonJ. W. (1942). Make or buy. Harvard Business School.
16.
DantzigG. B. (1951). Maximization of a linear function of variable subject to linear inequalities. In KoopmansT. C. (Ed.), Activity Analysis of Production and Allocation, Cowles Commission Monograph, No. 13. Wiley.
17.
KoopmansT. C. (Ed.). (1951). Activity analysis of production and allocation. Wiley.
18.
DodgeH. F. (1928). A method of rating manufactured product. Bell System Technical Journal, 7, 350–368.
19.
DodgeH. F.RomigH. G. (1929). A method for sampling inspection. Bell System Technical Journal, 8, 613–631.
20.
DuttR. (1960a). The economic history of India: Under early British rule 1757–1837. Government of India, New Delhi and Routledge and Keegan.
21.
DuttR. (1960b). The economic history of India: In the Victorian age 1837–1900. Government of India, New Delhi and Routledge and Keegan.
22.
ErlangA. K. (1909). Principal work of A. K. Erlang. Wayback Machine. www.archive.org
23.
FordH.CrowtherS. (1922). My life and work. William Heinemann.
24.
HalacyD. S. (1970). Charles Babbage: Father of the computer. Crowell‐Collier Press.
25.
HarrisF. W. (1913). How many parts to make at once. Factory, The Magazine of Management, 10(135–136), 152.
26.
HarrisF. W. (1915). What quantity to make at once. In The library of factory management, Vol. V operations and costs (pp. 47–52). A. W. Shaw Company.
27.
HayesR. H.WheelwrightS. C.ClarkK. B. (1988). Dynamic manufacturing: Creating the learning organization. The Free Press.
28.
HobsbawmE. J. (1999). Industry and empire. The New Press.
29.
HydeG. G. (1946). Fundamentals of successful manufacturing. McGraw‐Hill.
30.
JacobsF. R.ChaseR. B. (2014). Operations and supply chain management. McGraw‐Hill/Irwin.
31.
JungkR. (1958). Brighter than a thousand suns. Harcourt.
32.
KantorovichL. V. (1960/1939). Mathematical methods of organizing and planning production. Management Science, 6(4), 366–422.
33.
KoopmansT. C. (1951). Analysis of production as an efficient combination of activities. In KoopmansT. C. (Ed.), Activity analysis of production and allocation. Wiley.
34.
KennedyP. (1987). The rise and fall of the great powers.Random House.
35.
KleinrockL. (2002). Creating a mathematical theory of computer networks. Operations Research, 50(1), 125–131.
36.
LandesD. (1998). The wealth and poverty of nations. Norton.
37.
LewisM. A. (2007). Charles Babbage: Reclaiming an operations management pioneer. Journal of Operations Management, 25, 249–259.
38.
LittererJ. A. (1961a). Systematic management: The search for an order and integration. Business History Review, 35, 461–476.
39.
LittererJ. A. (1961b). Alexander Hamilton Church and the development of modern management. Business History Review, 35, 211–225.
40.
LittererJ. A. (1963). Systematic management: Design for organizational decoupling in American manufacturing firms. Business History Review, 37, 369–386.
41.
LittererJ. A. (1986). The emergence of systematic management as shown by the literature of management from 1870–1900. Garland.
42.
NelsonD. (1946). Arsenal of democracy: The story of American war production. Harcourt.
43.
RothA.SinghalJ.SinghalK.Christopher TangC. S. (2016). Knowledge creation and dissemination in operations and supply chain management. Production and Operations Management, 25(9), 1473–1488.
44.
ShenhavY. (1995). From chaos to systems: The engineering foundations of organization theory, 1879–1932. Administrative Science Quarterly, 40(4), 557–585.
45.
ShewhartW. A. (1931). Economic control of quality of manufactured product. Van Nostrand.
46.
SinghalK. (2021). Deindustrialization of India: 1760–1947. (Working paper), Merrick School of Business, University of Baltimore.
47.
SinghalK.SinghalJ. (2019). Technology and manufacturing in China before the Industrial Revolution and glimpses of the future. Production and Operations Management, 20(3), 505–515.
48.
SinghalK.SinghalJ. (2022). Technology, knowledge, and manufacturing before the Industrial Revolution. Production and Operations Management, Advance online publication. https://doi.org/10.1111/poms.13855
49.
SinghalK.SinghalJ.KumarS. (2019). The value of the customer's waiting time for general queues. Decision Sciences, 50(3), 567–581.
50.
SinghalK.SinghalJ.StarrM. K. (2007). The domain of production and operations management and the role of Elwood Buffa in its delineation. Journal of Operations Management, 25, 310327.
51.
SmithA. (1937 [1776]). The wealth of nations. Random House.
52.
StracheyP. (1911). India: Its administration and progress. McMillan.
53.
SunderlandJ. T. (1929). India in bondage: Her right to freedom and a place among the great nations. Lewis Copeland.
54.
TaylorF. W. (1885). A piece rate system: A step toward partial solution to the labor problem. Transactions of the ASME, 16, 856–893.
55.
TaylorF. W. (1903). Shop management. Harper.
56.
TaylorF. W. (1911). The principles of scientific management. Harper.
57.
TharoorS. (2017). Inglorious empire: What the British did to India. Penguin Random House.
58.
ThomasP. J. (1926). Mercantilism and the East Indian trade.King and Son.
59.
YatesJ. (1989). Control through communication: The rise of SYSTEM in American management. Johns Hopkins University Press.