Industrial Capitalism and Its Paradoxes in Europe XVIII – XIX Century Cover Image
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Industrial Capitalism and Its Paradoxes in Europe XVIII – XIX Century
Industrial Capitalism and Its Paradoxes in Europe XVIII – XIX Century

Author(s): E.V. Lapteva, V.V. OSTROUMOV, S.Yu. Boldyreva, N.I. PROTOPOPOVA
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Supranational / Global Economy
Published by: ASERS Publishing
Keywords: industrial revolution; economy; labor; factory; manufacture; development;

Summary/Abstract: Until the mid-eighteenth century the world economy was slowly evolving, but after the 1750-s a radical change occurred, which had a huge impact not only on the economy, but also on culture, society and life in general. The industrial revolution became the main lever of change. As a result, its main economic component - agriculture - has ceased to be dominant. Traditionally, the industrial revolution was seen as a sequential event, a chain of events from the lowest to the highest. The author made an attempt to consider the main parameters of the industrial revolution as a chain of paradoxes characteristic of developed European countries. To do this, turning to classical works of a theoretical and scientific-practical nature, the authors tried to consider the problem of European countries entering the industrial stage as a complex, contradictory and difficult process that revealed both leaders and Laggards.

  • Issue Year: X/2019
  • Issue No: 42
  • Page Range: 1250-1257
  • Page Count: 8
  • Language: English