The Southern Appalachian Region is the largest American “problem area”—an area whose participation in the economic growth of the nation has not been sufficient to relieve the chronic poverty of its people. The existence of the problem was recognized a generation ago, but in the past decade the resistance of such areas to economic advance has acquired a more urgent significance in American thought. In 1958, a group of scholars undertook to make a new survey of the Southern Appalachian Region. Aided by grants from the Ford Foundation ultimately amounting to $250,000, they set out to analyze the direction and extent of the changes which had taken place since the last survey (in1935), to define the problem in terms of the present situation, and...
The Problem and Purpose of the Study: Possibly no other area in Anglo-America shows better the relat...
Contents: Introduction, by L. C Gray and C. F. Clayton; Physical Features and Conditions, by F. J. M...
This study hypothesizes that Appalachian Kentucky\u27s nineteenth century commercial economic develo...
In The Southern Appalachian Region: A Survey, published by the University Press of Kentucky in 1962,...
Appalachian population trends over the last century have fluctuated from large gains to enormous los...
The 49 Appalachian counties of Kentucky have undergone significant economic changes in recent years....
report presents an analysis of the changes in the number of distressed counties in Appalachia and th...
Appalachia : an American problem region. During the 1960s a series of enactments stimulated planni...
The Appalachian area of the United States, which includes sections of eastern Kentucky, West Virgini...
Long viewed as a problem in other countries, the ownership of land and resources is becoming an issu...
Excerpts from the report Highlights: In 1960, Appalachia's population was over 50 percent rural but...
The United States prides itself as a nation that offers equity and opportunity to its citizens. Howe...
The poverty of Appalachia is not the product of modernization. Nor is it a unique phenomenon. An exa...
Richard Drake has skillfully woven together the various strands of the Appalachian experience into a...
Since 1970 the communities of eastern Kentucky have comprised the largest contiguous area of perenni...
The Problem and Purpose of the Study: Possibly no other area in Anglo-America shows better the relat...
Contents: Introduction, by L. C Gray and C. F. Clayton; Physical Features and Conditions, by F. J. M...
This study hypothesizes that Appalachian Kentucky\u27s nineteenth century commercial economic develo...
In The Southern Appalachian Region: A Survey, published by the University Press of Kentucky in 1962,...
Appalachian population trends over the last century have fluctuated from large gains to enormous los...
The 49 Appalachian counties of Kentucky have undergone significant economic changes in recent years....
report presents an analysis of the changes in the number of distressed counties in Appalachia and th...
Appalachia : an American problem region. During the 1960s a series of enactments stimulated planni...
The Appalachian area of the United States, which includes sections of eastern Kentucky, West Virgini...
Long viewed as a problem in other countries, the ownership of land and resources is becoming an issu...
Excerpts from the report Highlights: In 1960, Appalachia's population was over 50 percent rural but...
The United States prides itself as a nation that offers equity and opportunity to its citizens. Howe...
The poverty of Appalachia is not the product of modernization. Nor is it a unique phenomenon. An exa...
Richard Drake has skillfully woven together the various strands of the Appalachian experience into a...
Since 1970 the communities of eastern Kentucky have comprised the largest contiguous area of perenni...
The Problem and Purpose of the Study: Possibly no other area in Anglo-America shows better the relat...
Contents: Introduction, by L. C Gray and C. F. Clayton; Physical Features and Conditions, by F. J. M...
This study hypothesizes that Appalachian Kentucky\u27s nineteenth century commercial economic develo...