Asked by C.W
Analyze how governments after 1450 used laws, policies, and processes to affect labor systems. (1 point)
Governmental systems used laws, policies, and other systems of enforcement to control labor systems and those who participated in them. These included anti-slavery laws in the 1500s and the use of federal troops to quash strikes in the 1800s.
Governmental systems used laws, policies, and other systems of enforcement to control labor systems and those who participated in them. These included pro-slavery laws in the 1700s and the use of federal troops to quash strikes in the 1800s.
Governmental systems used laws, policies, and other systems of enforcement to control labor systems and those who participated in them. These included pro-slavery laws in the 1700s and the use of federal troops to encourage strikes in the 1800s.
Governmental systems used laws, policies, and other systems of enforcement to loosen control on labor systems and those who participated in them. These included pro-slavery laws in the 1700s and the use of federal troops to quash strikes in the 1800s.
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"Governmental systems used laws, policies, and other systems of enforcement to control labor systems and those who participated in them. These included pro-slavery laws in the 1700s and the use of federal troops to quash strikes in the 1800s."
Why: governments codified and reinforced labor regimes (e.g., eighteenth-century slave codes in British North America and the Caribbean that defined enslaved people as property and restricted their rights) and later used state power to suppress labor unrest (for example, federal troops were sent to break the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 and the Pullman Strike of 1894). These actions strengthened control over labor rather than loosening it.
"Governmental systems used laws, policies, and other systems of enforcement to control labor systems and those who participated in them. These included pro-slavery laws in the 1700s and the use of federal troops to quash strikes in the 1800s."
Why: governments codified and reinforced labor regimes (e.g., eighteenth-century slave codes in British North America and the Caribbean that defined enslaved people as property and restricted their rights) and later used state power to suppress labor unrest (for example, federal troops were sent to break the Great Railroad Strike of 1877 and the Pullman Strike of 1894). These actions strengthened control over labor rather than loosening it.
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