The rise of industrial democracyUp until the industrial revolution, the conditions under which ordinary people did their work changed very slowly, if at all, over the centuries. The majority of people worked on the land, a minority as craftsmen and tradesmen, and a few as soldiers and servants for a small aristocratic elite. Most persons lived close to a subsistence level, and expected little else other than to merely survive. However, the organization of society did afford a measure of protection to the peasants and craftsmen; masters looked after their retainers, craftsmen and tradesmen and formed themselves into guilds and associations to look after their interests, and in local communities people helped each other in a variety of ways. In addition, since most people were either apprentices or servants, or worked on the land, employment was fairly secure. In the few instances where contracts of employment existed, lengthy periods of notice of termination were commonly required. While working hours may have been long and the Perspectives in Industrial Psychology 1977 3.4Rise (and fall) of Industrial Democracy (C. Orpen) 2 nature of the work fairly arduous, the man working on his own or for a benevolent master had a place in society which gave him a measure of security and recognized status.With the advent of the industrial revolution, first in Britain and then through most of the Western world, conditions of work changed drastically. To an increasing extent, workers, who were 'forced' off the land or 'attracted' to the rapidly developing cities and towns, found their conditions of employment determined by the vagaries of the labour market. Because the high cost of machines required their intensive utilization, workers were increasingly brought together in factories. In addition, motive power and integrated production schedules demanded a labour force that worked by the clock and was subject to a system of impersonal rules and regulations. Partly as a response to these requirements and partly as a result of the 'conventional wisdom' of the times, the typical manager soon came to regard his workers simply as a factor of production, and their status and security as a matter of economic circumstances rather than social obligation. With few exceptions, employers took it for granted that ownership and technical expertise gave them the right to run their establishments as they wished, and that this was something that both the State and the workers themselves should recognize and uphold.Up until as least the First World War, it was accepted by most managers and not a few employees that the overriding purpose of an industrial or commercial enterprise was to make money for its owners. It was generally agreed that the relation between the worker and the enterprise, as represented initially by its owners, later by its managers, was basically a contractual one in which work was done in exchange for a wage. It was not until the 1930s that most managers and owners started to regard the contract of employment as constituting ...