Answer:
- The first Industrial Revolution, by moving from muscle to mechanical power changed the pace of production. As that pace changed and the hours of production increased, the ability to increase earnings practically without limit presented itself, since one could reinvest earnings to gain even more earning power.
- Industrialization created an abundance of goods and resources. Workers noticed that despite the increase in production they participated in the creation of, they themselves were not seeing much of the increases to their wages. Workers saw themselves as contributing to the formation of the industrialized and automated system and didn’t want to be left out of reaping the abundance it promised.
hope it help if not then sorry and sorry again have a good assignment
Answer:
i think it's A but I'm not sure
The correct option is A
The bureaucracy is necessarily hierarchical, first because of the iron law of the oligarchy and secondly because the bureaucracy grows adding more subordinate layers. As in the absence of a market there is no genuine proof of "merit" in government service to consumers, in a bureaucracy limited by rules, the hierarchy is often used as representative of merit. Increasing the hierarchy leads therefore to the promotion to the highest levels, while the expanded budgets take the form of multiplication of levels of ranks under you and expand your income and power. The bureaucratic growth takes place, therefore, multiplying the levels of the bureaucracy.
Answer:
1) identify one cause of the historical development depicted in the map
A cause of the historical development depicted in the map (the industrial revolution) was the discovery of large sources of coal in Northern England, which were not very deep, something that made them relatively easy to dig out.
This coal provided a significant source of energy to the factories that would be established in the following years.
2) identify one effect of the historical development depicted in the map
An effect of the industrial revolution was the fast growth of several cities in Northern England, which had been, up until that time, small villages. These cities grew because hordes of workers from the countryside emigrated there to work in the factories.
The main cities that grew around the time of the Industrial Revolution are: Manchester, Liverpool, Birimingham, Leeds, Sheffield, New Castle, and Middlesbourgh.