- Eric Trist
Eric Trist (Sept, 1909 –
June 4 ,1993 ) was an British scientist and leading figure in the field ofOrganizational development (OD). He was one of the founders of theTavistock Institute for Social Research in London.Biography
Trist was born in September 1909 (according to his autobiography), of a Cornish father and a Scottish mother. He grew up in
Dover , England, where he experienced dramatic air raids in the first world war. He went to Cambridge University - Pembroke College in 1928, where he read English Literature, graduating with first-class honours. Influenced heavily by his donI. A. Richards he became interested inPsychology ,Gestalt psychology , andPsychoanalysis , and went on to read psychology under professor Bartlett. At that time (1932/3) Trist has said he was very interested in articles byKurt Lewin . When Kurt Lewin (who wasJewish ) leftGermany asAdolf Hitler came to power, he travelled to Israel via the USA, stopping off in England, where Trist briefly met him and showed him around Cambridge.Trist graduated in Psychology in 1933, with a distinction, and went to
Yale University in the USA and again met Lewin, who was atCornell University and then Iowa. He visitedB. F. Skinner , a key figure inBehaviourism in Boston. After witnessing some disturbing experiences during the Depression, he became politically interested for the first time, and readKarl Marx .Returning to England in 1935, Trist met
Oscar Oeser , who headed the psychology department at theUniversity of St Andrews ,Scotland , and went on to study unemployment inDundee .At the outbreak of the second world war Trist became a clinical
psychologist at theMaudsley Hospital , London, treating war casualties fromDunkirk . He recalls how, in 1940, in theLondon blitz , "some very frightened people came out of their rooms, ran all over the grounds and we had to go and find them." The Maudsley, at Mill Hill, was a teaching hospital, and Trist attended seminars and met people from the Tavistock Clinic, whom he was keen to join. Opposed by his boss,Sir Aubrey Lewis , who wouldn't let him go, he joined the Tavistock group in the army, as a way of getting free, and was replaced byHans Eysenck . Trist went toEdinburgh and worked on the war office selection boards (WOSB , withJock Sutherland andWilfred Bion . For the last two years of the war, Trist was chief psychologist to the civil resettlements units (CRUs ) for repatriated prisoners of war, working to schemes devised byTommy Wilson and Wilfred Bion. He described this as "probably the most exciting single experience of my professional life".In July 1966, following the death of his first wife, and marriage to Beulah, Trist moved to America as Professor of Organizational Behavior and Social Ecology in the Graduate School of Business Administration at
UCLA . Then he moved toCanada and back to England, where Sir Hugh Beaver, the Chairman of the Tavistock Council, wanted the Institute to take a public position on social science issues with involvement of theOECD andUNESCO .In the 1990s Trist wrote a three-volume account of the Tavistock, along with Hugh Murray and Fred Emery, "The Social Engagement of Social Science". He died on 4 June 1993.
Work
Influences of Kurt Lewin
Trist was heavily influenced by
Kurt Lewin , a member of theFrankfurt School whom he met first in Cambridge England in 1933. Kurt Lewin had moved from studying behaviour to engineering its change, particularly in relation to racial and religious conflicts, inventingsensitivity training , a technique for making people more aware of the effect they have on others, which some claim as the beginning ofpolitical correctness .This would later influence the direction of much of work at the
Tavistock Institute , in the direction of management and, some would say, manipulation, rather than fundamental research into human behaviour and the psyche. It was a partnership between Trist's group at the Tavistock, and Lewin's atMIT that launched the Journal 'Human Relations ' just before Lewin's death in 1947.The Tavistock group
It was the wartime experiences of Trist and his various associates that created what became known as 'the Tavistock group', which formed a planning committee to meet and plan the future of the Tavistock after the war. The Tavistock Institute was formed, with Trist as deputy chairman, and
Tommy Wilson as chairman, with a grant from theRockefeller Foundation in February 1946, and a newTavistock Clinic became part of the newly formedNational Health Service . Many of the group went into formal Psychoanalytic training.Trist was much influenced by
Melanie Klein , who visited the Tavistock, as well as by his colleaguesJohn Bowlby ,Donald Winnicott ,Wilfred Bion andJock Sutherland . Though close to Wilfred Bion during the war, Trist later wrote that he was glad he did not join Bion at this point, because "he left groups in the 1950s – which flummoxed everybody – and got completely absorbed in psychoanalysis", adding, "that was when the cult of Bion – a wrong cult in my view – became established."Trist and the Tavistock became involved in industrial projects until 1951, and was given the Lewin Award in 1951. The family discussion group was formed, and John Bowlby did his world-famous studies on mother-child separation and the establishment of family systems therapy. With cooperation and contributions from Kurt Lewin in the USA, the publication of "Human Relations", the Tavistock Journal began, and Trist commented that this gave the Tavistock credibility in the USA, saying, "its articles wouldn't have been accepted by any of the other British psychological journals".
Organizational research
In 1949, his organizational research work, studying work crews in a coal mine, with Ken Bamsforth, resulted in the famous article, "Some Social and Psychological Consequences of the Longwall Method of Coal Getting."
Socio-Technical Systems
Trist also collaborated with
Fred Emery on developing theSocio-Technical Systems approach towork design .Publications
* Trist, E., and Bamforth, W., "Some Social and Psychological Consequences of the Long Wall Method of Coal-Getting", ín: Human Relations, Vol. 4, 3-38, 1951.
* Trist, E., and Sofer, C., "Exploration in Group Relations", Leicester, Leicester University Press, 1959.
* Emery F. and Trist E., "The Causal Texture of Organizational Environments", in: Human Relations, Vol 18, 1965.
* Emery F. and Trist E., "Toward a Social Ecology", 1972.
* Trist, Eric L. et al., "The Social Engagement of Social Science: A Tavistock Anthology : The Socio-Ecological Perspective (Tavistock Anthology)", University of Pennsylvania, May 1997. ISBN 0-8122-8194-2References
External links
* [http://www.tavinstitute.org/index.php Tavistock] homepage.
* [http://www.moderntimesworkplace.com/archives/ericbio/ericbiobody/ericbiobody.html Eric Trist] Biographycal page.
* [http://www.moderntimesworkplace.com/archives/ericsess/tavis1/tavis1.html The Foundation and Development of the Tavistock Institute to 1989] by Eric Trist andHugh Murray .
* [http://www.moderntimesworkplace.com/archives/ericsess/sessvol1/sessvol1.html Eric Trist] works.
* [http://www.cpn.org/topics/work/index.html Eric Trist] Papers.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.