living conditions during the industrial revolution

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1.520 documents for living conditions during the industrial revolution
  • ..., made possible by the information revolution. (2) While elements of this problem have been know...Consumption and living patterns evolved gradually and were stable for mil... the huge population increases experienced during the 20th century. Human populations evolved from h... to as the agricultural, and then industrial revolutions. More recently, the Green Revolution, ... large numbers of young people create conditions that can foster violence and conflict. (31) Increa...

  • ... to suggest that liberal ideas and revolutions owe their emergence and endurance to ecological ab... to any changes in its material conditions, and to sustain itself as the basis on which effor... that problem (be it capitalism, industrialism, the spread of materialist values, or the states s... economy that offered a rising standard of living to most people. Whether political stability and de..., creating a world unlike any we have known during our lifetimes." (46) The US Department of En-erg)'...

  • Introduction - II. What is the nation-state good for? - III. The nation-state and social integration - IV. The staying power of national identity - V. How nation-states destroy morality - VI. Economic globalization vs. the nation-state - VII. The political and military decay of the nation-state - VIII. Conclusion

  • Over the past two to three decades economics has played an increasingly important role in the development of U.S. antitrust enforcement and policy. This essay first reviews the major facets of U.S. antitrust enforcement and next reviews the ways in which economics - starting from a low base - has grown in importance in antitrust. The essay then highlights three antitrust areas in which the influence of economics has had the greatest influence: merger analysis, vertical relationships, and predatory pricing. The essay concludes with the identification of four antitrust areas where further economics analysis could have high returns.

    ... thought that could be identified as "industrial organization" (IO).8 By the end of the 1930s, howe..., with the inclusion of entry conditions (e.g., Mann 1966; Comanor and Wilson 1967; Collins...17 But a "Chicago School" counter-revolution was brewing as well, which argued that high concen..., Jesse Markham, and Willard Mueller, and during the 1960s the size and budget of BE expanded consi... was presented at the AEA session "Better Living through Economics (V)", New Orleans, January 5, 20...

  • I can't think of a better fit," says [Rollings], who also sees the Y becoming something of a hub for Burlington's recreational and health infrastructure. For example, the building could continue to house the sailing center, as well as host cycling and running groups. In the summer, the Y could take advantage of lake access to offer public-swimming instruction, and in the winter, skating. Then there's the green space just to the north, perfect for playing fields, or tennis courts. Of course, it's still not clear whether this space can be made to work. On the "con" side, the Moran site doesn't offer many more parking options than the Y's current location. And the building's interior needs significant renovation, to say the least. "It's like a seven-story chicken coop inside," Rollin...

    ... waterfront, a rusting husk of industrial waste. For more than 30 years beginning in the mi... a YMCA - an organization that was founded during the Industrial Revolution to address the unhealthyy living conditions of poor laborers in London. If this 21...

  • ... "invented modern economic growth" during their Industrial Revolution. Although the actual s... this compromise managed to produce the conditions for an economic revolution without disenfranchisin... accustomed to making a modest but secure living in an economy of fragmented production, increasing...

  • [...] according to Gibbs and Leech, the only inevitable aspects of neoliberalism are its two damaging consequences: massive inequality and environmental unsustainability Hence, the book's objective is to prove that those negative effects are not exceptional "collateral damage," nor misapplications of the neoliberal model, but are built into its very logic, and its "success" will only maintain and worsen these harmful consequences. Despite these shortcomings, the book still offers a powerful critique of neoliberalism. [...] the upside of avoiding extensive theoretical explorations or methodological justifications is that Gibbs and Leech present their argument in a highly accessible way.

    ... their incomes would increase the cost of living in the North as a result of higher manufacturing c...'s labor struggles around coal mining during the 20th century. In response to the domestic dema... the small fishing town into an industrial city between 1891 and 1911. The island's history w...Although the working conditions during the island's industrial era were rough and ..., which still undermines the Bolivarian Revolution's transformative potential. On the other hand, Las...

  • ...2002). Simultaneously, the costs of living had increased because Mexico was now importing bas..., provided cheap access to industrializing centers in the cities (Cardoso 1980). Mexico's bur... rewards, when in reality the work conditions better resembled indentured servitude (De Genova a... industrialization that was established during the Porfiriato mobilized what can be considered th...1910 - 1929: Revolution and Reconstruction. The Porfiriato came to a sudde...

  • Du Bois's modernism is racialist (he shows a diasporic racial identity to be the result of the violent dislocation of slavery and, at the same time, the unifying ideal that might redress this past and open a different future), nationalist (he reformed concepts of nationality to accommodate international confederations), collective (he considered psychological experiences as inextricable from social and material conditions), textual (he made transcription and analysis an integral part of his methodology), and historical (modern conditions are the result of "world-old phenomena" that require a new form of address).

    ...-great-grandfather's role in the Revolutionary War, Du Bois was elected in 1908 to become a membe... in 1901 as the "new exemplification during the new century" of the "world-old phenomenon of t... thousand or more people of Negro blood now living in the city of Philadelphia," Du Bois begins (i). ... that make modern imperialism and industrial capitalism possible. Refusing the transcendence or...

  • ...Mass tourism organized along industrial lines is largely a product of modern society (Eadi... relationships, and under the right conditions, relationships can grow into institutions, which c... who travel to assist on a research project during their vacation (Clifton & Benson, 2006; Ellis, 200... and negative." The interruption about not living in Tallahatchie County at that time indicates that...(2005). The sustainability revolution: Portrait of a paradigm shift. Gabriola Island, BC...



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