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Eco‐Esteem and Depopulation: Broadening the Perspective on the Demographic Challenge in the Rural World* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-19 Germán Jaraíz‐Arroyo, Esteban Ruíz‐Ballesteros, María Cristina Gálvez García
The dynamics of contemporary rural depopulation have been explained and addressed mainly as a result of structural transformations brought about by economic globalization. The influence of cultural/relational aspects has been less present in the scientific literature, where much of the analysis has been concerned with questions such as the effect of bond and attachment to the local. In connection with
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Towards an Emplaced Vocabulary of Motive: Senses of Place and Land Sale Decision‐Making in the Northern Great Plains* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-15 Danielle Schmidt
One of the most remote regions in the contiguous United States, the Upper Missouri River Breaks in the Northern Great Plains of Montana is both “cattle country” and “pristine prairie”: an identity that brings repeated tension over land use. Over the last twenty years, a conservation organization with a mission to rewild the region has purchased thousands of acres of ranchland from willing sellers despite
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Saving the Wild or Saving the Cowboy? Cultural Conflict between the Old and Nouveau West* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-25 John Canfield
In North Central Montana, a land‐based conflict centered on the environmental organization American Prairie sparked the formation of the “Save the Cowboy, Stop the American Prairie Reserve” Facebook page, attracting posts and comments from ranchers and members of the area's agriculture‐dependent communities. Despite Montana's rapid amenity migration and rural gentrification, this region has largely
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The Watersheds Speak: The Voice of Ecosystems in Northern New York's Environmental Movements☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-23 Blake Lavia, Tzintzun Aguilar‐Izzo, Leanne M. Avery
This paper explores how connectivity to place has brought life to contemporary environmental struggles in what is now known as New York State. Layers of memory, colonization, and stewardship are embedded within a community's relationship with their environment. By focusing on two case studies, the authors will illustrate how this relationship shaped successful place‐based resistance. Throughout our
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Indigenous Perspectives on Dismantling the Legacies of Settler Colonialism in Rural Sociology☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-17 Clint Carroll, Andrew Curley, Doreen E. Martinez, Lindsey Schneider, Johann Strube
Rural Sociology has failed to incorporate Settler‐colonialism and Indigenous theory in studying rural social relations. This presents a serious gap in the discipline's conceptualization of land as the foundation of social reproduction. Indigenous theory provides rich insights about humans' relations among themselves and with the more‐than‐human that inform our understanding of Settler colonialism as
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Energy Service Security for Public Health Resilience: Perception and Concerns in Western Upper Peninsula of Michigan☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-07 Shardul Tiwari, Zoē Ketola, Chelsea Schelly, Eric Boyer‐Cole
The Western Upper Peninsula of Michigan includes six rural counties and one Tribal Nation. The region is characterized by long winters, legacies of the extractive mining economy, and the infrastructural features of extreme rurality, including aging housing and low health service density. The region also faces exceptionally high electricity prices. There is limited research on the public health implications
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The Dignity of Nonworking Men* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Sarah Halpern‐Meekin, Seungmi L. Cho, Grace Landrum, Adam Talkington
Studies have demonstrated the centrality of work and dignity in men's understanding of themselves and their place in society, especially in rural areas. However, previous studies of work and identity among men have generally drawn from the perspectives of the employed. From interviews with nonmetro prime‐age men (25–54 years old) who were out of the formal labor force (N = 61), we find that men present
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Family Farmers as Agents in the Struggle for Survival: A Case Study from Turkey☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-09-16 Ebru Sevgili Canpolat
This paper discusses the survival strategies of small family farms in a western Anatolian village in the context of ongoing debates in the current literature concerning the future of small or peasant family farms under the conditions of the neoliberal era. The main argument of the paper is that even though the neoliberal agrarian policies in Turkey put into effect since the early 1980s have divested
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Shared Ideals, But Persistent Barriers: Improving Tribal‐University Research Engagement to Strengthen Native Nation Building and Rural Development☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-09-13 Laticia J. Herkshan, Georgia M. Hart‐Fredeluces, Elizabeth A. Redd, TJ Tso, Morey Burnham
Research partnerships between Tribal Nations and rural colleges and universities can support rural development and strengthen Tribal Nation building through reclamation of economic, political, cultural, and social affairs. However, Tribal Nation–University relationships have received little attention in rural sociology. While scholars identify best practices for research engagement in light of colonial
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Uneven Growth and Unexpected Drivers of Ethnoracial Diversity across Nonmetropolitan and Metropolitan America☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-09-12 Matthew M. Brooks, J. Tom Mueller, Brian C. Thiede, Daniel T. Lichter
High levels of ethnoracial diversity are a defining demographic characteristic of U.S. metropolitan areas, but the role of diversity in nonmetropolitan areas is often underappreciated. Here, we use Decennial Census data from 2000 to 2020 to evaluate growing ethnoracial diversity in nonmetropolitan counties and to highlight the uneven geographic distribution of diversity, and changes therein, across
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Presidential Address: Reconceptualizing Rurality and Nurturing Rural Sociological Souls☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-09-10 Jennifer Sherman
This address focuses on the importance of inclusivity and diversity to the future of the Rural Sociological Society. It begins by sharing the author's experiences within the society as a rural‐focused scholar trained in a Sociology department without strong ties to the RSS, and the challenges she faced in earning recognition in the RSS. It goes on to explore the development of the RSS and the ways
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Perceptions and Experiences of Gender Transformative Approaches in Rural Honduras* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-09-06 Hazel Velasco Palacios, Paige Castellanos, Leif Jensen, Janelle Larson, Francisco Alfredo Reyes Rocha, Carolyn Sachs, Arie Sanders, Kathleen Sexsmith
This research examines the potential of gender‐transformative approaches (GTAs) to improve gender equality in agricultural extension programs and food security through experiential learning and participatory methods. Scholars of gender and agriculture have long highlighted the gender gap in access to agricultural resources; to address this issue, development organizations have integrated GTAs into
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Food Security for Rural Africa: Feeding the Farmers First, by TerryLeahy, New York: Routledge, 2019. 246 pp. $42.36 (paper). ISBN:9780367665753. Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-08-29 Hannah Dixon Everett
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The Role of ICT in Maintaining Social Cohesion: Understanding the Potential of Digital Initiatives for Social Networks in Rural Areas☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-08-19 Rita Helena Phillips
Digital initiatives may have helped to maintain active social networks during restrictive, social distancing measures of the COVID‐19 pandemic. To examine how and under which circumstances digital initiatives can contribute to social cohesion, semistructured interviews with 35 stakeholders of local communities and clubs were conducted. The thematic analysis of the transcribed interviews identified
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Critical Rural Theory: A Decade of Influence on Rural Education Research☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-08-14 Wendy Pfrenger
Rural education researchers have long been interested in the impact of increasing urbanization, with its attendant shifts in policy, culture, and capital mobility, on rural people and communities, but their findings have existed largely to the side of “mainstream” research examining urban and suburban populations. With the publication in 2011 of Critical Rural Theory: Structure, Space, Culture, scholars
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“People that are Supporting [the] Whole Sector are on their Knees”; Uncertainty and Socioeconomic Change are Occupational Stressors for Irish Farmers☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-07-29 Joseph Firnhaber, Sandra M. Malone, Anna Donnla O'Hagan, Sinéad O'Keeffe, John McNamara, Siobhán O'Connor
Farming is a stressful occupation with many farmers facing daily uncertainty and high mental health risks. In addition to unpredictable occupations, rapidly changing European and Irish agricultural policies may put farmers in a liminal state. We aimed to identify sources of occupational stress or well‐being for Irish farmers, particularly regarding change in their lives and communities. We collected
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Rural–Urban/Suburban Differences in the Effects of Adverse Childhood Experiences on Delinquency☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-07-26 Melissa S. Jones, John P. Hoffmann, Benjamin T. Wheelock
Adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) are recognized as significant precursors to delinquency. However, to date, no studies have explicitly examined the interconnectedness of ACEs, residency in rural or urban/suburban areas, and delinquent behavior to discern potential variations among youths residing in these distinct areas. This study aims to address this important gap in existing literature. Data
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Remittances and Livestock Management in Agropastoral Households in Rural Kyrgyzstan: Telecoupled Impacts of Globalization☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-07-09 Christian Kelly Scott, Elizabeth A. Mack, Guangqing Chi, Kamilya Kelgenbaeva, Geoffrey M. Henebry
Agropastoralism and international labor migration are livelihood strategies that are interconnected as dominant ways of life across rural Kyrgyzstan. A prevalent rural livelihood strategy—agropastoralism—is closely tied to agrarian semi‐nomadic ways of life that link families and communities to the surrounding mountain environment. Another livelihood strategy—international labor migration—links or
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Countryside, Borderlands, Nature—Public Art beyond the City☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-26 Karolina Izdebska
This article emphasizes several primary realms of contemporary artistic endeavors in public art, specifically those unfolding outside urban metropolises. I analyzed the examined practices in terms of their functions and goals, the forms they take, and the problematic areas they address. This allowed for identifying certain symptomatic areas of artistic activities; domains shaped by diverse perceptions
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What's Good for the Land is Good for the Farmer: Investigating Conservation‐Related Variables as Predictors of Farmers' Job Satisfaction☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-05-30 Lijing Gao, J. G. Arbuckle
Rising stress, mental health issues, and suicide rates among farmers highlight the need to understand factors influencing their job satisfaction. Farming presents distinct challenges with its unique mix of positive and negative characteristics. This study utilized dual‐factor theory to investigate how various factors, such as economic dynamics, farm financial health, stewardship views, experience with
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Rural Development in the Digital Age: Exploring Information and Communication Technology through Social Inclusion☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-05-25 John J. Green
Approaching the interplay between social stability and social change as a complex network of “development pathways” and the routes people and communities take as their “livelihood journeys,” this Rural Sociological Society Presidential Address explores how information and communication technologies (ICTs) influence our capabilities to choose and navigate where to go and how to get there. Access and
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Early Family Formation, Selective Migration, and Childhood Conditions in Rural America☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-05-24 Matthew M. Brooks, Shelley Clark
Thirty years ago, rural Americans got married and had children at significantly younger ages than urban Americans. More recent data indicate that these differences persist today, but our understanding of what drives these differences remains limited. To address this gap, we (1) generate Kaplan–Meier estimates of the ages of the first marriage, first union, and first birth among those who lived in rural
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What Is Rural Well‐Being and How Is It Measured? An Attempt to Order Chaos* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-05-10 Vanda Veréb, Carla Marques, Livia Madureira, Carlos Marques, Tigran Keryan, Rui Silva
While a substantial body of literature has been built on rural well‐being, due to the great heterogeneity of rural territories, the literature is highly fragmented, even contradictory. Moreover, no systematic review of the entire domain exists to guide rural decision‐makers. Debated conceptualization, contradicting results, and pressing policy requirements make it timely to deliver a systematized state‐of‐the‐art
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Markets on the Margins: Mineworkers, Job Creation and Enterprise Development, by K.Philip, James Currey, Suffolk: Woodbridge, 2018. Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-03-23 Jennifer Rachels
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A Systematic Analysis of Statewide Reports on Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples in the U.S.: What We Know and Where to Go from Here☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-03-09 Kathleen A. Fox, Kayleigh A. Stanek, Leonard Mukosi, Christopher Sharp, Valaura Imus‐Nahsonhoya
For generations, Indigenous communities have been calling attention to a widespread form of victimization known as Missing and Murdered Indigenous Peoples (MMIP). In response to grassroots efforts across rural communities, there has been a marked increase in legislation at the federal and state levels to address MMIP from 2018 to the present. Federal legislation has provided the most comprehensive
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Self‐Employment, the COVID‐19 Pandemic, and the Rural–Urban Divide in the United States☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-03-05 Samuel C. H. Mindes
Self‐employed individuals faced numerous challenges amid the global health and economic crisis that was the COVID‐19 pandemic. Similarly, rural and urban workers faced different challenges during the pandemic. This rural–urban disparity further complicates the impacts of self‐employment and exacerbates inequalities resulting from gender, race, ethnicity, or immigration status. This study examines the
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Changes to Rural Migration in the COVID-19 Pandemic☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-24 Julia K. Petersen, Richelle L. Winkler, Miranda H. Mockrin
Media stories highlighted accounts of migration away from city centers towards more rural destinations during the COVID-19 pandemic, but systematic research about how the pandemic changed migration in more rural destinations is only starting to emerge. This paper relies on U.S. Postal Service change-of-address data to describe whether and how established domestic migration systems changed during the
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Eviction and the Rental Housing Crisis in Rural America☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Carl Gershenson, Matthew Desmond
Evictions are commonplace in the United States, and their negative consequences are broad and severe. However, research on evictions to date has focused primarily on urban areas, and thus has not addressed the impact evictions have on rural renters. This paper offers the first comprehensive analysis of evictions in rural communities, where the number of renters has been increasing in recent decades
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Testing and Expanding the Concept of Traditional and Contemporary Localism in Rural Local Food Systems with Ozark Wild Harvesters☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-13 Sarah Hultine Massengale, Mary Hendrickson
While research shows the potential benefits of local food systems to improve community economy and quality of life, there is a critique that these studies overlook how informal, non-market food access practices contribute to local food systems, especially in rural places. McEntee promoted the concepts of traditional and contemporary localism in his work with rural food systems, arguing that the motivations
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“Go Back To Where You Came From!”: Moral Economy of Land and the Politics of Belonging in Coastal Tanzania☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-07 Youjin B. Chung
This article examines how the threat of eviction by a transnational land deal in coastal Tanzania shaped competing narratives with which longtime residents and migrants defended and legitimated the moral economy of land: a widely shared customary norm that land belonged to those who cleared, occupied, and used it continuously for their daily provisioning, with or without title deeds. To counter the
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Rural Residence, Motorcycle Access, and Contraception Use in South and Southeast Asia☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-27 Jonathan A. Muir, Scott R. Sanders, Hannah Z. Hendricks, Michael R. Cope
Access to contraception is critical for limiting fertility. Yet, in South and Southeast Asia, access to these resources is often limited by spatial inequalities between rural and urban areas. Access to a motorcycle may empower women living in rural areas to attenuate these spatial inequalities, increase their educational attainment and participation in labor markets, and thereby facilitate a shift
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Reversing the Gaze: Developing Indigenous and Western Media Frames to Coverage of Climate Change and Indigenous Peoples in the News Media* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-27 Gina McCrackin, Jennifer E. Givens, Eric C. Wilkes, Breanne K. Litts, Marisela Martinez-Cola
The news media is an important force shaping societal views of the socio-politics of climate change. International scholarship finds it not uncommon for Indigenous cultures, communities, and perspectives to be underrepresented and misrepresented in Western media, especially on climate change issues. Research also indicates that accurate Indigenous representation occurs when Indigenous peoples are the
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Nowhere Else to Go: Housing Insecurity in a Hispanic-Majority Rural County During the COVID-19 Pandemic☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-27 Morgan Montañez
Northern New Mexico was uniquely vulnerable to the COVID-19 pandemic and its fallout. Its Hispanic majority, aging population, and decreased access to healthcare put many of the communities in this area of the United States at risk. Taos County was particularly at increased risk of impact from COVID-19. The county was also more vulnerable to the economic consequences of a pandemic due to reliance on
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“Homophobia” in the Country? Rural America and the Stigmatization of LGBTQ People: An Empirical Test of Norm-Centered Stigma Theory Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-23 Meredith G. F. Worthen, Melissa S. Jones
In-depth explorations of LGBTQ attitudes among rural Americans are sparse and often rely upon sweeping stereotypes that cluster all perspectives into one broad statement such as “homophobia” in the country. As a result, little is known about the relationships between rurality and the stigmatization of LGBTQ people. In addition, though research demonstrates that men are less supportive of LGBTQ people
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Engagement for Life's Sake: Reflections on Partnering and Partnership with Rural Tribal Nations☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-15 Chelsea Schelly, Valoree Gagnon, Kathleen Brosemer, Kristin Arola
In this paper, we reflect on our collective experiences engaging with Anishinaabe Tribal Nations in the Great Lakes region to support Tribal sovereignty in decision-making for food, energy, and water (FEW) systems. In these diverse experiences, we find common lessons. The first set of lessons contributes new empirical knowledge regarding the challenges and opportunities that rural Great Lakes Tribal
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The Making of an Indigenous Community and the Limits of Community: Class Differentiation and Social Ties in Southern Chile☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-12-18 Carlos Bolomey Córdova
This article seeks to challenge essentialist comprehensions of rural Indigenous communities through examining one particular Mapuche community who were the recipients of a land subsidy. Mapuche people are the largest Indigenous group in Chile. Since the 1990s, the Chilean government, responding to calls for social justice, has purchased land and relocated Mapuche people, mostly landless or almost landless
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Dualities of Place among Rural and Urban Periphery Homegrown Adults in Israel☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-06 Yael Grinshtain
Following the general idea of place matters and based on the particular features of rural/peripheral settlements, people, and communities, the current study aims at exploring the development and meaning of peripheral identity and its construction, as perceived by adults who were born and raised in the northern periphery of Israel. Using the phenomenological genre, 40 interviews were conducted with
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“Keeping Things under the Rug”: Racial Dynamics in the Context of Large Immigration Raids in Rural Mississippi☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-10-15 Diego Thompson
A large body of literature has evidenced racism and other challenges experienced by Latinx immigrants working in the food system and rural communities in the U.S. Despite a large number of studies showing complex and difficult realities experienced by Latinx immigrants, little has been studied about how immigration law enforcement operations impact Latinx communities and racial dynamics in rural communities
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“Do you Know What's Underneath your Feet?”: Underground Landscapes & Place-Based Risk Perceptions of Proposed Shale Gas Sites in Rural British Communities☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-10-15 Stacia S. Ryder, Jennifer A. Dickie, Patrick Devine-Wright
Resource extraction relies on human interaction with the underground, often near rural communities. Yet, little research has explored localized, place-based relationships to the underground and subsequent concerns tied to proposed energy activities. This paper highlights the importance of place in localized risk perceptions of proposed shale exploration in two rural communities in the United Kingdom
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Narratives and Self-Reflective Process of Lifestyle Migrants: The Quest for the “Good Life”* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-10-07 Johanna Sagner-Tapia, David Matarrita Cascante, Hugo Marcelo Zunino, Jaime Tijmes-Ihl
This article analyses the self-reflective process and narratives of 12 lifestyle migrants who settled between 1990 and 2010 in a rural Andean community in southern Chile. The results show that the time of their arrival and the migrants' life stages were relevant in their reflective process regarding belongingness to the local community and other migrants, the search for an ontological sense and a critical
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Disrupting Political Polarization: The Role of Politics in Explanations of Farm Loss in Southern Wisconsin☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-09-07 Claudine Pied, Shan Sappleton
Social science and popular media have described political polarization as a threat to democracy and effective policy. Scholars connect right/left political divides to macro-level social divisions, such as those between rural and urban residents, environmentalists and farmers, and pro-versus anti-government sentiments. While previous scholars have complicated these dichotomies, political polarization
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A Fair Comparison: Women's and Men's Farms at Seven Scales in the United States☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-09-07 Katherine Dentzman, Paul Lewin
Successful farms—in the public imagination, agricultural policy, and more—tend to be highly profitable and operate at extremely large scales. Research has shown that women are less likely to operate these types of farms, possibly due to their preferences and lifestyle choices. There is evidence, however, that these gaps are additionally the result of differences in access to resources due to gender
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Does Geography Matter? A Regional Analysis of Early Transfer within Ontario Post-Secondary Education* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-09-07 Yujiro Sano, Cathlene Hillier, Roger Pizarro Milian, David Zarifa
The relationship between geography and early transfer behavior has received limited empirical attention. In this study, we track six cohorts of university and community college entrants to examine differences in the early pathways they travel through Ontario post-secondary education (PSE), paying particular attention to how transfer pathway uptake by students in the province's rural north might vary
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Geographical Tensions Within Municipalities? Evidence from Swedish Local Governments☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-08-11 Gissur Ó. Erlingsson, Richard Öhrvall, Susanne Wallman Lundåsen
When Sweden transformed its geography of local government in 1952 and 1962–1974, the number of municipalities was reduced from 2,498 to 278. The reforms were infused by the “central place theory,” which aimed to identify a larger town as the “local capital” (centralort) for each municipality. The centralort became the municipalities' political and administrative center, responsible for providing public
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Informal Modes of Social Support among Residents of the Rural American West during the COVID-19 Pandemic☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-31 Kathryn McConnell, J. Tom Mueller, Alexis A. Merdjanoff, Paul Berne Burow, Justin Farrell
During the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic, federal spending on government safety net programs in the United States increased dramatically. Despite this unparalleled spending, government safety nets were widely critiqued for failing to fully meet many households' needs. Disaster research suggests that informal modes of social support often emerge during times of disruption, such as the first year
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Migration Across Metro-Nonmetro Boundaries and Hourly Wages☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-14 Xiao Li, Alair MacLean
Previous scholars have demonstrated that nonmetro residents who move to metro areas earn higher wages. It remains an open question whether this metro wage advantage persists in the contemporary era, and how migrating influences young adults from metro areas. Migrants may earn higher wages due to higher education. Alternatively, they may earn lower wages because they lack social capital. They may experience
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Seeing Green: Lifecycles of an Arctic Agricultural Frontier☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-07-14 Mindy Jewell Price
Imaginaries of empty, verdant lands have long motivated agricultural frontier expansion. Today, climate change, food insecurity, and economic promise are invigorating new agricultural frontiers across the circumpolar north. In this article, I draw on extensive archival and ethnographic evidence to analyze mid-twentieth-century and recent twenty-first-century narratives of agricultural development in
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Misrecognition and Well-being in Culturally White Northern New England☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-06-27 Emily Walton
Rural America is undergoing a demographic transition, as the white population decline is matched by a growing movement of racialized minorities into small towns. In the current study, I examine processes of belonging among middle-class racialized minorities living in predominantly white and rural Northern New England. Through an analysis of in-depth interviews with n = 58 individuals of color, I show
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A Guide to the American Community Survey (ACS) for the Rural Researcher: Unpacking the Conceptual and Technical Aspects of Using Secondary Data for Rural Research☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-06-03 Kristie LeBeau
Sparsely populated rural areas are susceptible to high levels of error in their data, making it difficult to examine patterns and trends across geographies. This article aims to advance research methods for rural researchers by offering guidelines for navigating high levels of error associated with the American Community Survey (ACS). The ACS presents a useful source of U.S. community level data for
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The Built Environment and Social and Emotional Support among Rural Older Adults: The Case for Social Infrastructure and Attention to Ethnoracial Differences☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-05-19 Danielle Rhubart, Jennifer Kowalkowski, Logan Wincott
Social and emotional support (SaES) is essential for older adult mental health and is shaped by individual-level factors and the built environment. However, much of the focus on the built environment, and specifically social infrastructure—the physical places that facilitate social interaction and social tie formation—relies heavily on urban settings or samples with limited diversity. Consequently
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Negotiating the Gemeinschaft/Gesellschaft Dichotomy: Appalachian Medical Student Perceptions of Practice☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-05-15 Jason S. Hedrick, Erin McHenry-Sorber
This study investigated motivations for Appalachian medical students to stay or leave the region weighing postgraduation options. Semi-structured interviews were employed with final year medical students. Transcripts were open-coded and analyzed using the theoretical concept of Gemeinschaft/Gesellschaft. Participants were in continuous negotiation between notions of Gemeinschaft and Gesellschaft in
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Farm to Food Bank: Exploring the Ties between Local Food Producers and Charitable Food Assistance☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-04-26 Alana Haynes Stein, Catherine Brinkley
This research explores the dependencies between community food security and local food movements. We use a mixed methods approach that includes: analysis of 2.97 million pounds of food bank donations from 296 organizations, network analysis of the local food system with 77 farms and 439 market connections, and 24 interviews with food bank donors and staff. We find strong ties between the food bank
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Barriers of Women in Acquiring Leadership Positions in Agricultural Cooperatives: The Case of Cambodia☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-04-25 Sovanneary Huot, Leif Jensen, Ricky Bates, David Ader
Gender inequality in agriculture remains a global concern. Cambodia is marked by a lack of women representatives in leadership and decision-making positions at every level, a problem that is clearly seen in agriculture. Previous research suggests a need to focus on financial and time constraints for women in acquiring leadership positions. Therefore, we study the barriers that women face in acquiring
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Bank on it: Do Local Banks Contribute to Rural Community Prosperity?* Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-04-14 F. Carson Mencken, Craig Wesley Carpenter, Michael Lotspeich-Yadao, Charles M. Tolbert
Recent research on the restructuring of the financial industry from local banks to interstate conglomerates has raised questions about the impact on nonmetropolitan economies. In this paper, we develop two competing hypotheses and scrutinize the impact of local bank concentration (percent banks that are locally headquartered) on four measures of economic growth from 1980 to 2010 in metropolitan, micropolitan
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Labor and Sustainability: The Role of Farm Labor Practices in Shaping Antibiotic Use☆ Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-04-01 Krushna Ranaware, Rebecca Schewe
In this study, we examine the role that human labor practices and attitudes play in mastitis infections on US dairy farms. Mastitis infection is a key barrier to sustainability in dairy production, contributing to financial losses, animal welfare concerns, and perhaps most importantly imprudent antibiotic use. We combine data from five sources on herd characteristics, owner/manager attitudes and behaviors
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Differential Access in Mortgage Credit: The Role of Neighborhood Spatial and Racial Stratification Rural Sociology (IF 2.3) Pub Date : 2023-03-20 Jose Loya
Inequality in homeownership is a major component of ethno-racial stratification. Previous studies demonstrate large ethno-racial differences in access and outcomes throughout the home buying process at both the individual and neighborhood levels. An underlying assumption in these studies is that neighborhood ethno-racial disparities in lending are similar across neighborhood spatial types. However