The editors and authors of this fine collection of articles, though mostly sociologists, demonstrate how geography is in a sense destiny to the rural poor. By focusing on nine regions spanning the country from New England to the Rio Grande Valley to the Pacific Northwest, they show how social as well as spatial isolation has created common problems among a rural underclass that is forgotten by mainstream America. Socio-spatial isolation may take many forms, but the outcome for all the places studied is the same: lack of full participation in American economic life. Educational isolation in the Black Belt of the South has produced a population only half of which has a high school education. In Mississippi, traditional paternalistic societ...
Almost half of the population of the world lives in rural regions and mostly in a state of poverty. ...
Book Review (Submitted by Peter A. Kindle) - Survival of Rural America: Small Victories and Bitter H...
In this brief, authors Rebecca Glauber and Andrew Schaefer provide a glimpse of the economic and dem...
The editors and authors of this fine collection of articles, though mostly sociologists, demonstrate...
This book is a comprehensive examination of poverty in the United States from 1969 to 1999. Its thre...
Poverty rates are highest in the most urban and most rural areas of the United States, and are highe...
Ph. D. University of Missouri--Columbia 1999.Research on nonmetro poverty indicates that it tends to...
was a prosperous timber community of about 4,000 people until its last mill closed in 1990. Many hou...
Review of: The Changing American Countryside: Rural People and Places. Castle, Emery N., ed
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
The incidence of poverty in rural areas is actually higher than that in urban places. This study fi...
This study focuses on the longstanding impoverishment of the rural South and three of its subregions...
Rural America is a diverse and changing place. Small-town America, the family farm, and the frontier...
Rural poverty is largely regional. The nation\u27s primary region of rural poverty is the Black Belt...
There is abundant research that focuses on the causes and consequences of poverty in rural areas, a...
Almost half of the population of the world lives in rural regions and mostly in a state of poverty. ...
Book Review (Submitted by Peter A. Kindle) - Survival of Rural America: Small Victories and Bitter H...
In this brief, authors Rebecca Glauber and Andrew Schaefer provide a glimpse of the economic and dem...
The editors and authors of this fine collection of articles, though mostly sociologists, demonstrate...
This book is a comprehensive examination of poverty in the United States from 1969 to 1999. Its thre...
Poverty rates are highest in the most urban and most rural areas of the United States, and are highe...
Ph. D. University of Missouri--Columbia 1999.Research on nonmetro poverty indicates that it tends to...
was a prosperous timber community of about 4,000 people until its last mill closed in 1990. Many hou...
Review of: The Changing American Countryside: Rural People and Places. Castle, Emery N., ed
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
The incidence of poverty in rural areas is actually higher than that in urban places. This study fi...
This study focuses on the longstanding impoverishment of the rural South and three of its subregions...
Rural America is a diverse and changing place. Small-town America, the family farm, and the frontier...
Rural poverty is largely regional. The nation\u27s primary region of rural poverty is the Black Belt...
There is abundant research that focuses on the causes and consequences of poverty in rural areas, a...
Almost half of the population of the world lives in rural regions and mostly in a state of poverty. ...
Book Review (Submitted by Peter A. Kindle) - Survival of Rural America: Small Victories and Bitter H...
In this brief, authors Rebecca Glauber and Andrew Schaefer provide a glimpse of the economic and dem...