IMPACT OF INDUSTRIES ON THE LIFE AND CULTURE OF THE PEOPLE

Authors

  • Anant Singh Research Scholar, UIM, RDVV Jabalpur

Keywords:

Industrialization, education, mortality.

Abstract

Industrialization promoted movement from the country to the city. Family life was disrupted in the process. Workers found themselves packed into slums and subjected to harsh labor conditions. Workers responded to new conditions, in some cases with outright resistance, but failed to slow the pace of technological change. For the middle class, women retreated from the labor force to take up duties in the domestic household. Attitudes toward children involved greater concern for education and a sense of childhood. A source of social instability was the dramatic population increase that set in after 1730, a result of improved nutrition and a lower rate of infant mortality. This paper focus on the life of the people which is affected by industrialization.

References

: Charles Issawi (1980) The Economic History of Turkey: 1800-1914, The University of Chicago Press, pp. 311-312

" (J.E de Kay) (1833) Sketches of Turkey in 1831 and 1832, Harper

http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1844engels.html Business and the Environment, various issues,

Cutter Information Corporation. Changing Course: A Global Business Perspective on Development and the Environment, 1992, Business Council for Sustainable Development, The MIT Press Ltd.

Cleaner Production in the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation Region, 1994, UNEP IE. Cleaner Production Newsletter, various issues, UNEP IE. Cleaner Production Programme brochure, UNEP IE.

Cleaner Production Programmed: What is the Ultimate Goal?, report to Roundtable on Technology Transfer, Cooperation and Capacity Building for Sustainable Development, Vienna, 1995, UNEP IE and UNIDO.

Downloads

Published

2014-02-28

Issue

Section

Social Science & Humanities