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what are the negatives and positives of industrialisation? what were the negatives adn positive effects of indsutrialisation in the 1890s...?

2006-09-16 05:44:17 · 8 answers · asked by Anonymous in Arts & Humanities History

8 answers

whether an effect is negative or positive is a matter of opinion

different people would label the same effects differently

the obvious effects of industrialization include:

* less expensive products available
* new types of products available
* more jobs available
* many people leave farming areas for industrial areas changing the demographic of the communities
* increased over-all prosperity
* new kinds of pollution
* more specialized jobs
* more crowded cities
* creation of the "factory worker" class
* acceleration of applied technology

there are many more effects, but that is a start

2006-09-16 05:58:26 · answer #1 · answered by enginerd 6 · 0 0

Effects Of Industrialisation

2016-11-14 12:46:42 · answer #2 · answered by weatherby 4 · 0 0

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Without industrialization women would have stayed mostly bare foot and pregnant in the kitchen. Industrialization moved families off the farm and into cities. Woman had to get jobs to help support the families. Mills gave woman the ability to work in none food Industries. although they were underpaid they had a taste of what it could be. World war two put them in factories, and ship building and plane building plants and opened up many opportunities for them. When the men came home from the war, society tried to put them back in the kitchen but many of the men didn't come back. Women needed to stay employed. It led them to mid mid management jobs and eventually to small business and then heads on industry. Men had to take a more active role in the families and in society. Soccer moms became soccer parents, and the PTA became a real PARENTS teacher association. It changed the dynamics of women in both society and the family. With it has come the bad habit's of the men so the life expectancy that used to be much shorter for men has now more equalized for both. Hope this helps..Good Luck!

2016-04-08 22:54:12 · answer #3 · answered by Louise 4 · 0 0

depends on the theorist and researcher you choose for example Scott and Tilley, who introduced the concept of the changing form of the family economy and its effect on women s power, argue that the family changed with indiustrialisation into the nuclear family in which the woman had little economic control and ws more firmly fixed into the polticAlly powerless domestic sphere tHEY summaris this change as the family moving from athe pre imdustrial, family labour economy in which wives and children contributed thier labour to the family eg spinnng or weaving at home, or working in the fields with the men to b) the family wage economy in which the men and the children earnt wges in the Factories c_the family consumer economy in which( until the 1950s.) both the children and the mother become economically dependent on the wage of the father nb there were exceptions to this historical pattern but this describes the general form of family life in the developemtn of different stages of industrialisation.

2016-03-17 02:27:23 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

The whole of industrialization relies upon ignoring the fact that resources are limited and that nasty byproducts don't disappear. The positive effects are that we have seen what a mistake it was and how we should not attempt this again after the world is destroyed by reckless greed and insane middle eastern value systems.

2006-09-17 02:06:23 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 2

Positive: better quality of life for more people, womens rights, civil rights, accessible education for the masses, technological advancements that lead to cures for previously incurable diseases, more awareness of other cultures because of the ease of traveling, establishment of social security nets, easy and effective transport of goods means people in Alaska can eat fresh veggies in winter and people in arizona can eat fresh salmon. I could go on and on.
Negatives: pollution, deforestation, endangering wildlife and their habitats, more wars over resources, and social freeloaders.

In the 1890's I think the pros outweighed the cons and there was more of a social impact on women than men.

2006-09-16 05:58:48 · answer #6 · answered by Hans B 5 · 0 2

stress, very negative. TV, cars, internet, fridge, good medicines, very positive. the worst: death of values/meaning of life.

2006-09-16 05:47:51 · answer #7 · answered by jacek s 3 · 0 1

the us right now compared to it 100 years ago.

2006-09-16 05:52:01 · answer #8 · answered by oh wow 2 · 0 1

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