The accepted social construction of the rural criminal is that of the (alien) urban marauder. In this social script the farmer is presented as the victim of crime. Traditionally, farmers enjoy high levels of social esteem and rarely are they vilified. This case story examines alternative income generating strategies from the margins of agriculture which include theft of animals and property; engaging in the illegal meat trade; trading in illegal medicines and wildlife and dog breeding. This case using ethnographic observation examines the activities of such individuals and documents the phenomenon of an indigenous rural criminal fraternity in Scotland
In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as an idyll...
In respsonse to the concept of the ‘fortress farm’ and its appropriation of traditional defensible s...
This summary reports on the pilot phase of an ongoing study, funded by SIPR, into the changing natur...
The accepted social construction of the rural criminal is that of the (alien) urban marauder. In thi...
Illegal diversification strategies in farming contexts are neglected in research terms. There are en...
This article develops a working typology of rural criminal types in a UK wide context. It considers ...
Traditionally, farmers enjoy high levels of social esteem. Like the entrepreneur, they are ascribed ...
In this viewpoint article we seek to make the farming community aware of the increasing presence of ...
In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as an idyll...
This article develops a working typology of rural criminal types in a UK wide context. It considers...
Abstract In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as...
Illegal entrepreneurship in the rural is under researched and scrutinised, yet it occupies a distinc...
Research into rural entrepreneurship continues to expand, albeit slowly. A common theme in the liter...
Although the notion of rural crime has an idyllic aura to it, crime occurs in a changing social land...
In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as an idyll...
In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as an idyll...
In respsonse to the concept of the ‘fortress farm’ and its appropriation of traditional defensible s...
This summary reports on the pilot phase of an ongoing study, funded by SIPR, into the changing natur...
The accepted social construction of the rural criminal is that of the (alien) urban marauder. In thi...
Illegal diversification strategies in farming contexts are neglected in research terms. There are en...
This article develops a working typology of rural criminal types in a UK wide context. It considers ...
Traditionally, farmers enjoy high levels of social esteem. Like the entrepreneur, they are ascribed ...
In this viewpoint article we seek to make the farming community aware of the increasing presence of ...
In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as an idyll...
This article develops a working typology of rural criminal types in a UK wide context. It considers...
Abstract In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as...
Illegal entrepreneurship in the rural is under researched and scrutinised, yet it occupies a distinc...
Research into rural entrepreneurship continues to expand, albeit slowly. A common theme in the liter...
Although the notion of rural crime has an idyllic aura to it, crime occurs in a changing social land...
In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as an idyll...
In rural sociology and rural studies, rurality in many countries is commonly constructed as an idyll...
In respsonse to the concept of the ‘fortress farm’ and its appropriation of traditional defensible s...
This summary reports on the pilot phase of an ongoing study, funded by SIPR, into the changing natur...