Examples of industrial paternalism in the following topics:
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- In this second form of welfare capitalism, also known as industrial paternalism, companies have a two-fold interest in providing these services.
- Business-led welfare capitalism was only common in American industries that employed skilled labor.
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- Advanced paternal age sharply increases the risk of miscarriage, as well as Down syndrome, schizophrenia, autism, and bipolar disorder.
- However, the majority of middle-age people in industrialized nations can expect to live into old age.
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- The adjective "paternal" refers to a father and comparatively to "maternal" for a mother.
- Whereas the idea of the father complex had originally evolved to deal with the heavy Victorian patriarch, by the new millennium there had developed instead a postmodern preoccupation with the loss of paternal authority, or the absence of the father.
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- Their interactions with the ruler are based on paternal authority and filial dependence.
- First, feudalism replaced the paternal relationship of patrimonalism with a contract of allegiance based on knightly militarism.
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- Industrializing countries have low standards of living, undeveloped industry, and low Human Development Indices (HDIs).
- Considering global stratification, industrializing nations are at the middle of the hierarchy.
- Standards of living in industrializing nations are lower than in developed countries, but range widely depending on whether a nation is rapidly industrializing or is in decline.
- For example, India is considered a industrializing country.
- Explain why some scholars use the term 'less-developed country' instead of 'industrializing country'
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- Nevertheless, while paternity was unknown in the "full biological sense," for a woman to have a child without having a husband was considered socially undesirable.
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- To encourage greater paternal involvement in childrearing, a minimum of two months out of the sixteen is required to be used by the "minority" parent, usually the father.
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- One schematic by which one can divide the world is between industrialized and non-industrialized countries.
- Countries that score poorly on these scales are considered to be non-industrialized, though it should be noted that non-industrialized countries are undergoing the process of industrialization.
- However, while the trend of a growing older population appears the world over, people in industrialized nations are older than people in non-industrialized nations.
- Thus, while people in all countries are living longer than prior generations, people in industrialized nations live longer than people in non-industrialized nations.
- Produce a short debate which shows the pros and cons of industrialization
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- During the industrial era, cities grew rapidly and became centers of population growth and production.
- During the industrial era, cities grew rapidly and became centers of population and production.
- Since the industrial era, that figure, as of the beginning of the 21st century, has risen to nearly 50%.
- Rapid growth brought urban problems, and industrial-era cities were rife with dangers to health and safety.
- Rapidly expanding industrial cities could be quite deadly, and were often full of contaminated water and air, and communicable diseases.
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- But this type of production required a new type of labor, industrial labor.
- Building new industrial machines required enormous investments.
- Industrial labor is defined as labor in industry.
- This being said, industrial labor also includes service jobs that rose up alongside, and as a result of, industrial production.
- Karl Marx referred to industrial laborers as members of the proletariat .