A post-industrial society is a proposed name for an economy that has undergone a specific series of changes in structure after a process of industrialization.
Such societies are often marked by:
Post-industrial society has often been a term of criticism, with many seeking to restore industrial development. Increasingly, however, citizens are seeing abandoned old factories as sites for new housing, shopping, recreational, and commercial development opportunities. This however does not imply that there has been a decrease in manufactured goods, as many factories now use machines instead of a human workforce.
The concept of the post-industrial society is linked with the work of Daniel Bell. Here are some of his observations from the 1970s:
However, Bell used Colin Clark's three-sector model, which did not distinguish between, say, retailing, personal care services and telecoms or information technology.
Postmodernism | Social philosophy | Theories of history | économie post-industrielle | Постиндустриальное общество | 後工業社會
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"Post-industrial society".
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