Explain How Was The Social Problem Addressed During The Industrial Age

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Social Problem of the Industrial Age
How was the Social Problem addressed during the Industrial Age (social movement, law, etc.)?
Was the Social Problem addressed successfully? Be sure to support your opinion with evidence from the lesson or your research.
Is the Social Problem still an issue today? How?
Child Labor
Labor unions fought for better working conditions, and age limits to prevent children under 14 from working in factories. Many people against child labor helped create the Children’s Bureau to help protect children in the US.
With the attention that many people brought to child labor, the issue of child labor was almost obliterated in the US.
Child labor is still in effect in other countries, whether for companies within those countries or some US companies using this labor from other countries. Very little cases within the US have surfaced over the past decades.
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The Tenement House Act of 1867 helped this problem by establishing construction rules and requiring one toilet for every twenty people. (http://www.history.com/topics/tenements)
Though the government did take action against this, the tenements were still unhealthy, and crowded with people.
The issue of tenement housing does not appear to be a major issue today. Many people who would live in tenements are instead homeless, and stay in homeless shelters.
Poverty
Many movements, like the Social Gospel movement, believed the difference between the wealthy and the penniless was too great, and aimed to change that. They developed ways to help the poor, one of the most influential being settlement houses.
Many settlement houses and movements helped those in poverty, but poverty was not abolished.
Poverty in the US is still a major problem, though it has improved since the 19th and 20th centuries. Poverty is the topic of many political debates and