Labor process theory is the research tradition that treats the specific organization of work — how tasks are divided, which skills are required, how control is exercised, what knowledge is centralized and what is distributed — as the primary analytical unit for understanding capitalism. It emerged from Braverman's 1974 Labor and Monopoly Capital and developed across three decades of empirical and theoretical work by scholars including Michael Burawoy, Paul Thompson, David Knights, Hugh Willmott, and Noble himself. Its distinctive contribution is the insistence that capital's interests are not merely expressed through ownership and wage rates but are encoded directly into the design of work itself.
The tradition's foundational claim is that work is not organized the way it is because of technical or efficiency requirements but because of capital's interest in controlling the labor process — in ensuring that workers can be monitored, replaced, and directed according to management's needs. The