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Summary Of: Industrialized

Encyclodia Page On: Industrialized

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| citations | verification | reliable references | challenged | | cleanup | quality standards | The Crystal Palace Great Exhibition. The United Kingdom was the first country in the world to industrialise. | | The Crystal Palace | Great Exhibition | United Kingdom | An industrial factory located in Ilmenau, Germany around 1860 | | Ilmenau | Germany | pre-industrial society | industrial | modernisation | social change | economic development | innovation | energy | metallurgy | philosophical | nature | natural resources | labour | Africa | Asia | Middle East | Latin America | Caribbean | imports | innovation | markets | investment | economic growth | East Asia | free market | Hong Kong | sector classification | Jean Fourastié | Primary sector | secondary sector | Tertiary Sector | agrarian | Industrial Revolution | Western Europe | Great Britain | Second Industrial Revolution | electric power | internal-combustion engines | assembly lines | industrial | Map showing the global distribution of industrial output in 2005, based on a percentage of the top producer, which is the United States | | United States | subsistence | classical Athens | Famines | Netherlands | England | Italian city states | Greek | Roman | civilisations | commercialisation | agricultural sector | imported | innovation | England | Great Britain | agricultural revolution | population growth | Industrial revolution | mechanised | peasant | workers | machines | hardware | urban | artisans | bourgeoisie | rural | exodus | business | rationalisation | standardisation | workshops | division of work | Fordism | good | productivity | income | capital | investments | conception and application of new technologies | western | northern Europe | settler colonies | Western world | development | subject country | economic system | metropole | triangular trade | Third World | slave trade | West Indian | Convention of Kanagawa | Matthew C. Perry | Tokugawa shogunate | feudal system | Meiji | powerful | Allied intervention in the Russian Civil War | Soviet Union | centrally controlled economy | infrastructures | superpower | cold war | European communist countries | Comecon | heavy industry | Southern European countries | European economy | Third World | Cold War | socialist | Sub-Saharan Africa | decolonisation | citation needed | self-sufficiency | imported | education | health care | capitalistic | state | huge debts | public corruption | liquidity | elites | petrodollars | luxury goods | citation needed | Persian Gulf states | per capita income | Bahrain | United Arab Emirates | Arab states | diversified their economies | upcoming end of oil reserves | citation needed | Japan | East Asia | Asian tigers | investments | workforce | exchange rate | South Korea | economic power | communist | offshoring | tertiary | China | India | geo-political | United States | treasury bonds | bioengineering | nuclear technology | pharmaceutics | informatics | higher education | Newly industrialized country | The countries in green are considered to be newly industrialising nations. China and India (in dark green) are special cases. | | China | India | Mexico | Brazil | Turkey | European Union | citation needed | newly-industrialised countries | African | Latin American | citation needed | trend | oil price increases since 2003 | Maquiladora | decades | international inequality | social inequality | citation needed | large towns | Talcott Parsons | extended family | nuclear family | stressors | pollution | poor nutrition | dangerous machinery | impersonal work | isolation | poverty | homelessness | substance abuse | Health | industrial nations | political | cultural | pathogens | citation needed | | confusing or unclear | clarify the article | talk page | GDP composition of sector and labour force by occupation. The green, red, and blue components of the colours of the countries represent the percentages for the agriculture, industry, and services sectors, respectively. | | GDP | International Monetary Fund | citation needed | World Bank | OECD | United Nations | citation needed | water purification | primary education | citation needed | inefficient | free-trade | Deindustrialisation | ISBN 978-0-906321-26-3 | ISBN 978-0-906321-27-0 | Categories | Industry | Economic growth | Economic development | Articles needing additional references from December 2006 | Cleanup from March 2008 | All pages needing cleanup | All articles with unsourced statements | Articles with unsourced statements since March 2008 | Wikipedia articles needing clarification |
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Industrialized".