Stepping into the Modernisation
Modernisation have a different aspect on the life of people, life, education’s , social values, communication and their way of living life.
On the other hand certain groups are suffering from negative effect of modernisations.
By the end of second war many countries like Africa, Asia and Latin America had failed to developed modernisation and remained poor.
modern society is industrial society, to modernise any society first of all make it industrialised.
Industrialism and industrial society imply far more than the economic and technological component that make up their own core, industrialism is a way of life that encompasses profound economic, social, political, and cultural changes.
it is by under going the comprehensive transformation of industrialisation, that society become modern.
Modernisation is a continuous and open ended process. Historically the span of time over which it has occurred must be measured in centuries, although their are examples of accelerated modernisation.
thier Seems to be a dynamic principal built in to the very fabric of modern societies that does not allow them to settle, or to achieve equilibrium.
thier development is irregular and uneven. Whatever the level of development, their are always “ backward” regions and peripheral groups.
this is a persistent source of strain and conflict in modern societies. It can be seen on a global scale, as modernisation extend outward from its original western base to take in the whole world.
The existence of unevenly and unequally developed nations introducing are fundamental elements of instability into the world system of states.
Modernisation seems to have two main phases.
Upto a certain points in its course, it carries the institution’s and values of societies with it, in what is generally regarded as a progressive, world movement.
Initial resistance to modernisation and may be sharp and prolonged.
beyond some points modernisation begin to bread discontent on an increasingly scale.
groups tend to make escalating demands on the community, and these demands becomes increasingly difficult to meet.
more seriously, modernisation on an intensified level on a world scale brings new social and material strains that may threaten the vary growth and expansion on which modern society is founded.
in the second phase, modern society finds themselves phased with an array of new problems whose solutions often seem beyond the competence of traditional nation state.
at the same time the worlds remain dominated by a system of sovereign nations states of unequal strengths and conflicting interests.
Good