NCERT Solutions for Class 12 Sociology Chapter 5: Change and Development in Industrial Society
These Class 12 Sociology Chapter 5 solutions cover Change and Development in Industrial Society from Social Change and Development in India, the NCERT textbook for the 2026–27 session. The chapter examines how industrialisation has reshaped social relations in India — the structure of the organised and unorganised sectors, the impact of liberalisation, privatisation and disinvestment, how people find jobs, how work is carried out under mechanisation, working conditions in mining and home-based work, and the role of strikes and trade unions. Below you get step-by-step, exam-ready answers to both NCERT exercise questions, clear notes on key concepts, extra practice, MCQs, Assertion–Reason questions and FAQs.
Class 12 Sociology Chapter 5 – Overview
Chapter 5, Change and Development in Industrial Society, studies how the kind of work people do, and the technology they use, transforms social relations — while institutions like caste, kinship, gender and region continue to shape how work is organised. Classical thinkers (Marx, Weber, Durkheim) linked industry with urbanisation, a detailed division of labour and Marx’s idea of alienation. The chapter highlights the specificity of Indian industrialisation: a large share of workers still in agriculture, low regular salaried employment, and over 90% of work in the unorganised/informal sector. It traces the effects of liberalisation since the 1990s — foreign investment, takeovers, disinvestment, outsourcing and contract labour — and examines how people find jobs (personal contacts, jobbers, contractors, badli workers), how work is carried out under mechanisation (Maruti’s assembly line, IT ‘time slavery’, Braverman’s deskilling thesis), working conditions in mining and migrant labour, home-based work like the bidi industry, and the history of strikes and unions, illustrated by the Bombay Textile strike of 1982.
Key Concepts & Terms
Division of labour: the splitting of production into many small specialised tasks so that each worker produces only one part of a product and often does not see the end result; it raises output but makes work repetitive.
Alienation (Marx): the condition in which workers do not enjoy their work and see it only as something they must do to survive, having lost control over the product and the process of labour.
Organised (formal) sector: by one definition, all units employing ten or more people throughout the year; these are registered with the government, which ensures proper wages, pension and other benefits.
Unorganised (informal) sector: the vast majority — over 90% — of Indian work in agriculture, industry and services, where personal relationships govern employment and laws are poorly enforced.
Liberalisation: the post-1990s policy of opening the economy — encouraging private and foreign investment in sectors once reserved for the government, removing the need for industrial licences, and freely allowing foreign products.
Disinvestment: the process by which the government sells its share in public sector companies, often leaving workers afraid of losing their jobs (as in ‘Modern Foods’).
Outsourcing and contracting: reducing permanent staff and giving out work to smaller firms or homes; for multinationals this happens across the globe, using cheap labour from developing countries like India.
Jobbers, mistris and badli workers: in the past, factory workers were recruited through contractors or jobbers (called mistris in Kanpur mills); badli workers substitute for permanent workers on leave, often for years, without the same status or security.
Just-in-time production: a system (seen at Maruti Udyog) in which parts arrive from nearby suppliers every couple of hours, keeping costs low but making workers very tense and exhausted.
Deskilling (Harry Braverman): the argument that the use of machinery actually reduces workers’ skills — for example, computers now do much of the drafting that architects and engineers once did by hand.
Home-based work: piece-rate production of goods like lace, zari, carpets, bidis and agarbattis, done mainly by women and children, with an agent supplying raw materials and collecting the finished product.
Strike and lockout: in a strike workers refuse to come to work; in a lockout the management shuts the gates and prevents workers from entering. The Bombay Textile strike of 1982 (led by Dr. Datta Samant) is a famous example.
NCERT “Questions” — Full Solutions
Both questions below are reproduced verbatim from the NCERT textbook’s end-of-chapter Questions section. Answers are original, written in exam-ready style.
1. Choose any occupation you see around you – and describe it along the following lines: a) social composition of the work force – caste, gender, age, region; b) labour process – how the work takes place, c) wages and other benefits, d) working conditions – safety, rest times, working hours, etc.
2. How has liberalisation affected employment patterns in India?
Extra Practice Questions
Short Answer Type Questions
Q1. What did Karl Marx mean by ‘alienation’?
Q2. Distinguish between the organised and unorganised sectors.
Q3. What is disinvestment? Give an example from the chapter.
Q4. Who are badli workers?
Q5. What is the difference between a strike and a lockout?
Long Answer Type Questions
Q1. Explain the specificity of Indian industrialisation with reference to employment.
Q2. Describe how work is carried out in industrial settings, using examples from the chapter.
Q3. Examine the working conditions of mine workers and home-based workers in India.
MCQs & Assertion–Reason
1. The term ‘alienation’ in industrial society is associated with:
(a) Max Weber (b) Karl Marx (c) Emile Durkheim (d) Clark Kerr
2. According to one definition, the organised sector consists of units employing:
(a) five or more people (b) ten or more people throughout the year (c) twenty or more people (d) any number of people
3. Approximately what share of work in India is in the unorganised or informal sector?
(a) about 50% (b) about 70% (c) over 90% (d) about 24%
4. The process by which the government sells its share in public sector companies is called:
(a) liberalisation (b) outsourcing (c) disinvestment (d) privatisation of labour
5. In Kanpur textile mills, the jobbers who recruited workers were known as:
(a) badli (b) mistris (c) contractors (d) sardars
6. Workers who substitute for regular permanent workers on leave are called:
(a) casual workers (b) badli workers (c) self-employed workers (d) regular salaried workers
7. The idea that the use of machinery actually deskills workers is associated with:
(a) Harry Braverman (b) Karl Marx (c) Carol Upadhya (d) Datta Samant
8. At Maruti Udyog Ltd., how much rest do workers get in the entire day?
(a) 30 minutes (b) 45 minutes (c) 60 minutes (d) 90 minutes
9. The famous Bombay Textile strike of 1982 was led by:
(a) Jan Breman (b) Dr. Datta Samant (c) Clark Kerr (d) Harry Braverman
10. Home-based work such as rolling bidis and making lace is done mainly by:
(a) regular salaried men (b) government employees (c) women and children (d) software professionals
For each Assertion–Reason question, choose: (A) Both true and the Reason correctly explains the Assertion; (B) Both true but the Reason is not the correct explanation; (C) Assertion true, Reason false; (D) Assertion false, Reason true.
A-R 1. Assertion: Industrialisation involves a detailed division of labour.
Reason: Workers often produce only one small part of a product and do not see the end result of their work.
A-R 2. Assertion: In India, the majority of workers are in regular salaried employment.
Reason: Over 52% of Indian workers are self-employed and only about 24% are in regular salaried jobs.
A-R 3. Assertion: Liberalisation has increased the use of outsourcing and contract labour.
Reason: Companies reduce permanent staff and give work to smaller firms that keep wages low to compete for orders.
A-R 4. Assertion: Government employment has helped overcome boundaries of caste, religion and region.
Reason: Public sector firms like the Bhilai Steel Plant employ people from all over India who work together.
A-R 5. Assertion: A strike and a lockout are the same thing.
Reason: In a strike workers refuse to come to work, while in a lockout the management shuts the gates and keeps workers out.
Exam Tips & Common Mistakes
How to score full marks in this chapter
For the occupation question, use the four sub-headings (social composition, labour process, wages/benefits, working conditions) as a clear structure and back each point with concrete detail. For the liberalisation question, organise your answer into themes — foreign investment and takeovers, disinvestment, outsourcing and contract labour, growth of services — and use the textbook’s own examples (Parle/Coca Cola, Modern Foods, Maruti Udyog). Remember key figures (over 90% in the unorganised sector, 52% self-employed, 60% of Modern Foods workers retired) and key names (Marx’s alienation, Braverman’s deskilling, Datta Samant’s 1982 strike) to show you have studied the chapter.
Common mistakes to avoid
- Confusing the organised sector (registered units of ten or more, with benefits) with the unorganised sector (over 90% of work, little security).
- Mixing up strike (workers stop coming) with lockout (management shuts the gates).
- Treating disinvestment and privatisation as identical — disinvestment is the government selling its share.
- Leaving the observation question (Q1) blank or vague — describe a real occupation under all four headings.
- Forgetting that in India most workers are self-employed, not regular salaried.
- Attributing the deskilling thesis to Marx instead of Harry Braverman.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is Chapter 5 of Class 12 Sociology (Social Change and Development in India) about?
Chapter 5, Change and Development in Industrial Society, explains how industrialisation and technology reshape social relations in India — the organised and unorganised sectors, the effects of liberalisation, privatisation and disinvestment, how people find jobs, how work is carried out under mechanisation, working conditions in mining and home-based work, and the role of strikes and trade unions.
How many questions are there in the NCERT exercise for this chapter?
The end-of-chapter Questions section of Chapter 5 contains two questions — one observation-based question on describing an occupation, and one on how liberalisation has affected employment patterns in India. Both are answered fully and step by step on this page.
What is meant by alienation in this chapter?
Alienation, a concept from Karl Marx, refers to the situation in industrial society where workers do not enjoy their work and see it only as a means of survival. Because of the detailed division of labour, a worker makes only one part of a product, never sees the finished result, and loses creativity and control over the work.
