释义 |
Definition of immiseration in English: immiserationnounɪˌmɪzəˈreɪʃ(ə)ni(m)ˌmizəˈrāSHən mass nounEconomic impoverishment. 经济贫困 rapid modernization had an impact on the level of urban immiseration Example sentencesExamples - It is not immediately clear how this jibes with the subsequent emphasis on working-class docility and immiseration of workers under the burden of capital's competitive restructuring efforts.
- I do not think that Europe can remain a ‘social market capitalist island’ in a sea of general global immiseration.
- In the Philippines, for example, rapid development and modernization led to the immiseration of the urban poor and the impoverishment of the rural population.
- But, of course, neither Marx nor the anti-capitalist movement expect or have expected absolute immiseration to be the rule for either the advanced capitalist core or the increasingly excluded periphery.
- For the country as a whole, it is very hard to resist the economic pressure to become bigger, to grow one's way out of social problems, most obviously the immiseration of the poor.
- Some countries have witnessed concentration of capital among agroexporters alongside the marginalization and immiseration of small-scale producers and processors.
- The 1929 stock market crash which marked the beginning of the Great Depression ushered in a period of immiseration for virtually the entire working class.
- That gap creates lots of profound problems, but the progressive immiseration of the citizenry is not one of them.
- He predicted the growing immiseration and impoverishment of the working class in capitalist societies.
- Hand-loom weaving survived much longer, but growing immiseration was the lot of its practitioners by the 1840s.
- In nineteenth-century Europe the immiseration of the Industrial Revolution was certainly eased by emigration, but it was eventually conquered by the very economic development that had originally caused it.
- This includes killing, bodily or mental harm, preventing births, immiseration and forcibly transferring children.
- The women recount stomach-churning stories of childhood slavery and abuse, rape, and immiseration.
- Similar, if less sanguine, interpretations can be constructed around globalization, environmental agendas, and economic immiseration in the South.
- They will also engage themselves vigorously with the immiseration and the violence suffered by that great portion of the planet who have never known democracy and freedom.
- Firstly, the bulk of the population, which has long been suffering from neo-liberal policies and increasing immiseration, is now open to real social and economic alternatives.
- The price paid by others in immiseration and suffering means that the leisure and creativity of the dominant class is prevented from being fully human.
- Indeed, even those who hated the war may find themselves morally trapped into supporting direct rule if the alternative appears to be a collapse into anarchy, immiseration and ethnic conflict.
- The first is the supposed correlation between market-friendly policies and mass immiseration.
- Poverty and hardship continued to trouble social reformers and politicians in the second half of the nineteenth century, but there was a real change in emphasis from the sense of inescapable immiseration of the early nineteenth century.
Origin1940s: translating German Verelendung. Definition of immiseration in US English: immiserationnouni(m)ˌmizəˈrāSHən Economic impoverishment. 经济贫困 rapid modernization had an impact on the level of urban immiseration Example sentencesExamples - For the country as a whole, it is very hard to resist the economic pressure to become bigger, to grow one's way out of social problems, most obviously the immiseration of the poor.
- Some countries have witnessed concentration of capital among agroexporters alongside the marginalization and immiseration of small-scale producers and processors.
- That gap creates lots of profound problems, but the progressive immiseration of the citizenry is not one of them.
- But, of course, neither Marx nor the anti-capitalist movement expect or have expected absolute immiseration to be the rule for either the advanced capitalist core or the increasingly excluded periphery.
- In nineteenth-century Europe the immiseration of the Industrial Revolution was certainly eased by emigration, but it was eventually conquered by the very economic development that had originally caused it.
- I do not think that Europe can remain a ‘social market capitalist island’ in a sea of general global immiseration.
- He predicted the growing immiseration and impoverishment of the working class in capitalist societies.
- Hand-loom weaving survived much longer, but growing immiseration was the lot of its practitioners by the 1840s.
- Similar, if less sanguine, interpretations can be constructed around globalization, environmental agendas, and economic immiseration in the South.
- The price paid by others in immiseration and suffering means that the leisure and creativity of the dominant class is prevented from being fully human.
- In the Philippines, for example, rapid development and modernization led to the immiseration of the urban poor and the impoverishment of the rural population.
- Firstly, the bulk of the population, which has long been suffering from neo-liberal policies and increasing immiseration, is now open to real social and economic alternatives.
- Poverty and hardship continued to trouble social reformers and politicians in the second half of the nineteenth century, but there was a real change in emphasis from the sense of inescapable immiseration of the early nineteenth century.
- It is not immediately clear how this jibes with the subsequent emphasis on working-class docility and immiseration of workers under the burden of capital's competitive restructuring efforts.
- The women recount stomach-churning stories of childhood slavery and abuse, rape, and immiseration.
- The 1929 stock market crash which marked the beginning of the Great Depression ushered in a period of immiseration for virtually the entire working class.
- This includes killing, bodily or mental harm, preventing births, immiseration and forcibly transferring children.
- Indeed, even those who hated the war may find themselves morally trapped into supporting direct rule if the alternative appears to be a collapse into anarchy, immiseration and ethnic conflict.
- The first is the supposed correlation between market-friendly policies and mass immiseration.
- They will also engage themselves vigorously with the immiseration and the violence suffered by that great portion of the planet who have never known democracy and freedom.
Origin1940s: translating German Verelendung. |