Historical patterns of industrialization

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Bibliographic Information

Historical patterns of industrialization

Tom Kemp

Longman, 1993

2nd ed

Available at  / 28 libraries

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Note

Companion volume to: Industrialization in the non-Western world. 2nd ed. 1989

Bibliography: p. 201-209

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

Industrialization is still the factor that distinguishes the modern world from the past, and advanced countries from undeveloped ones. In this revised and expanded edition, Tom Kemp uses the historical record of industrialization to explore key questions about its impact and the significance we assign to it. The book adopts a thematic approach to examine the roles of technology, banking, transport and the state; the fate of the peasantry in an industrializing society; and the changing features of industrial capitalism in the latter part of the 19th century. It features four contrasted case studies from outside Europe - India, Canada, Japan and, for the first time in this second edition, South Africa. It is aimed at 1st year University/Polytechnic students and is suitable for courses in economic history, social history, development studies, applied economics, international economics and area studies.

Table of Contents

  • Chapter 1 Presentation
  • Chapter 2 Industrialization in historical perspective
  • Chapter 3 The peasantry and economic growth
  • Chapter 4 Technology and industrialization
  • Chapter 5 Industrialization and the transport revolution
  • Chapter 6 Banking and industrialization
  • Chapter 7 The state and industrialization
  • Chapter 8 Late nineteenth-century industrialization
  • Chapter 9 India
  • Chapter 10 Canada
  • Chapter 11 Japanese industrialization
  • Chapter 12 South Africa
  • Chapter 13 Problems and prospects

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