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Political Consequences of Industrialization

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1 Political Consequences of Industrialization
CHY4U Unit 3 Activity 3

2 New (Mixed) Groups 1 2 3 4 5 Kalli Nanymajah Alice Elise Sofia Laura
Stefania Hana Irina Aelita Yanyan Dong Mikaela Chris Tamera Mikhail Nykita Bobby Rebecca Brynna Varnikaa

3 Liberalism, Democracy and intro to marxism
Day 1 Liberalism, Democracy and intro to marxism

4 Economic Impact Recall output worksheet from day of industrialization
Elisabeth Gaynor Ellis and Anthony Esler, World History: Connections to Today – Teachers Edition (Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice Hall, 2001), 520.

5 Social Impact Recall the lives of the workers in mills and mines.
National Archives Learning Curve, Victorian Britain, Industrial Nation, Source 4, n.d., (October 15, 2005)

6 Political Impact Did you think it would affect people’s political thinking? HOW?

7 Review of Liberalism  Moderate Radical Conservative
At your table, fill in the top part of the Chart on Liberalism, recalling the major ideas involved in this moderate ideology. Vocab: Franchise = the vote Moderate Radical Conservative

8 The Dirty D Word Timeline of Democracy in Britain Year
People who could vote 1815 Less than ____ % (that’d be…) 1832 Reform Act of 1832 gave people like factory owners the vote: in total, about ____ % of adult males (but still only people). “However, the Act gave the vote in towns only to men who occupied property with an annual value of £10, which excluded six adult males out of seven from the voting process.” (National Archives, Getting the Vote, N.d., (May 1, 2017))

9 Secret ballot introduced.
Year People who could vote 1867 The Reform Act of 1867 doubled the amount of people who could vote. Cities got more representatives in parliament. Skilled workers pushed for this change. 1872 Secret ballot introduced. 1880s Farm workers and most other ________ got the right to vote. 1918 Universal male suffrage achieved. 1928 ___________ got the right to vote.

10 19th Century Political Spectrum
Place on the spectrum: Fast change is good Change is scary Not too fast, not too slow Let’s go back to the way things used to be 3 2 4 1 5

11 Connection Between Voting and Ideologies
Political parties want voters… If a certain group of people starts to get the right to vote, a political party might change its policies to appeal to them New Liberalism moved to the the left to appeal to workers, which meant it supported more government intervention

12 What If… A certain group of people feels excluded from democracy?
Feel like they don’t “count”? They might want to …

13 Background of Marx Born 1818 in western “Germany”, died 1883 in London
Son of a lawyer Heavily influenced by the enlightenment, Napoleonic Code (a relatively enlightened document that set out rights) Studied philosophy (he became a ‘Hegelian’ radical) Became a journalist, later founded a newspaper that was shut down in Prussia Became a socialist and tried to unite European socialists Ousted from Germany, Belgium and France due to his liberal/radical views

14 Moved to London in 1849 He was able to live and work mostly due to the financial generosity of Friedrich Engels who owned a cotton mill in Manchester Tried to organize workingmen’s political parties but was not highly successful in this Took a long time for his ideas to gain popularity with intellectuals and workers Mostly after his lifetime Mostly due to the work of Engels and Marx’s daughter in publishing his works


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