answersLogoWhite

0


Best Answer

The poor conditions of workers during the Industrial Revolution gave rise to labor and wage laws with the goal of improved conditions. It resulted in a shift in power that gave lower classes more control over their circumstances.

User Avatar

Wiki User

βˆ™ 9y ago
This answer is:
User Avatar
More answers
User Avatar

Wiki User

βˆ™ 14y ago

socialism, in which society owns and controls the means of production.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

βˆ™ 9y ago

Pitiful conditions during the industrial revolution gave rise to labor reform. It also gave rise to the first unions to enforce safety regulations.

This answer is:
User Avatar

User Avatar

Wiki User

βˆ™ 12y ago

The Iron Workers Revolt of 1886

This answer is:
User Avatar

Add your answer:

Earn +20 pts
Q: The pitiful conditions created by the industrial revolution gave rise to what?
Write your answer...
Submit
Still have questions?
magnify glass
imp
Continue Learning about General History

How does Anne Frank portray the poignant and pitiful life of the Jewish community in Nazi Germany?

The Diary of Anne Frank permits the reader to see the thoughts of a young Jewish girl in hiding during the Nazi period.


What if you want to be depressed?

Nobody wants to be depressed only if your trying to seek some pitiful attention as depressoin is a illness and wanting depression is like saying you want cancer as you can die, As when you have depression you can come to the time in your life you want to end it and nobody wants you to die even if you think nobody loves you or cares but they do and you would be a fool to waste life so says some people but depression turns you like that xxx keep safe love Tina -15


Why were the Articles of Confederation was not a satisfactory federal government?

Alexander Hamilton wasn't unfounded in his opinions. He didn't think the federal government had any power whatsoever, and he was right. It didn't. The financial situation was a mess, he said, and the government didn't have any power to fix it (and Hamilton would be the one to fix it later). The government was laughably unstable and weak in other countries eyes and looked like it would surely collapse, and to Hamilton, who was obsessed with status and hierarchies (why he was obsessed is a story for another day), this was the worst of all its faults. Trade was another huge problem, and Hamilton believed the only way to get a government to be powerful was through trade. No trade, and the nation remains pitiful.


Declamation piece entitled the richman and the poorman?

"Food and money I give to you, Why do you shout so mercily When I give you your part?" queried the rich man. The poor man replied: "Your question you cannot answer For from pain and agony you are free, But I have suffered and borne The situation that I don't like to be in." "That I couldn't understand Because Life for me is easy; I take this and take that, And life is just what I want it to be." consented the rich man. "Comfort your mind, rich man, with realities of death. Your wealth I do not envy For you can not buy eternity with money. If to live happily is to live in hypocrisy, Then I prefer to be silly so I would be holy. Life you love so much you will lose And only then will you understand What agony is," the poor man shouted. "Ha! Ha! Ha! You say so For you desire this place of mine. Indulgence you have clouded with reason But I understand because of your situation." boastfully the rich man said. Outraged the poor man answered: "How pitiful the person blinded with pleasure; No, you don't care of our journey That you have created through your greediness. Come now, man of weak soul! Your days are numbered for you to face The man of Love. You may not cry now but later you will When the chilling reality of the last judgment Comes across your way; Yes, then you will pity, but not for me. Not for anybody else. But for yourself only! Yes, eat, drink, and be merry. For tomorrow you shall die!


Do the Japanese recognize December 7?

It was December 8 in Japan, because Japan is on the other side of the International Date Line from Hawaii. And no, they do not. The Japanese have tried to sweep the ugly facts of the history of their effort to conquer Asia and the western Pacific under the rug. Its barely mentioned in Japanese schools. They are PROUD of their war criminals, whose names are included in the Yasakuni Shrine. One who ate an Australian flier's liver served in the cabinet, and dozens have served in the Japanese parliament. The Emperor was the biggest war criminal unhung. About all most Japanese are told in school about their war for empire is that somehow in there, they were the VICTIMS of the big, bullying US in the world's only nuclear attacks. So, the date they remember is August 7. (Hiroshima was on August 6 in the US). And US education seems to be coming around to the Japanese point of view, that the evil Americans made victims of those poor, pitiful little Japanese. Ignorance reigns supreme.