Excerpts from the report Highlights: White Americans in rural areas are a major and persistent poverty problem in the Nation. Estimates concerning the extent of this problem are based on an extension beyond the census definition of rural to include all nonmetropolitan territory outside of central cities and urban fringe. In 1960, there were 9.65 million families (white and nonwhite) in the Nation whose 1959 net cash incomes were less than $3,000. Of this number, some 6.1 million families lived in nonmetropolitan areas. Eighty percent of these families were white. This proportion of poor rural whites is likely to be at least as high today. Although Spanish Americans are included in the census of the white population, they are excluded...
Testimony of Mark Partridge, Ph.D. Swank Chair in Rural-Urban Policy, The Ohio State University. B...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
Excerpt from the report introduction: Poverty and illness are often so interwoven that it is diffic...
Excerpts from the report Highlights: The Mississippi Delta had the highest incidence of severe and ...
Nine million people in the United States live in rural poverty. This large segment of the population...
Excerpts from the report Highlights: Because of the complex nature of poverty in rural areas and it...
Excerpts from the report Introduction: The prosperity of the United States has reached an unprecede...
One in five poor children in this country lives in a rural area. Yet this group of vulnerable young ...
In this brief, authors Rebecca Glauber and Andrew Schaefer provide a glimpse of the economic and dem...
Rural America is commonly viewed as a repository of virtuous and patriotic values, deeply rooted in ...
The American public generally perceives poverty as an urban problem. However, the incidence of pover...
Excerpts from the report Preface and Introduction: The present report is an initial contribution of...
Excerpts from the report: In recent decades agriculture in southeastern United States has undergone...
This report examines the changing demographics of rural America and shows that the makeup of rural A...
America’s rural Hispanic population is growing at an unprecedented rate. Many of the Hispanic people...
Testimony of Mark Partridge, Ph.D. Swank Chair in Rural-Urban Policy, The Ohio State University. B...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
Excerpt from the report introduction: Poverty and illness are often so interwoven that it is diffic...
Excerpts from the report Highlights: The Mississippi Delta had the highest incidence of severe and ...
Nine million people in the United States live in rural poverty. This large segment of the population...
Excerpts from the report Highlights: Because of the complex nature of poverty in rural areas and it...
Excerpts from the report Introduction: The prosperity of the United States has reached an unprecede...
One in five poor children in this country lives in a rural area. Yet this group of vulnerable young ...
In this brief, authors Rebecca Glauber and Andrew Schaefer provide a glimpse of the economic and dem...
Rural America is commonly viewed as a repository of virtuous and patriotic values, deeply rooted in ...
The American public generally perceives poverty as an urban problem. However, the incidence of pover...
Excerpts from the report Preface and Introduction: The present report is an initial contribution of...
Excerpts from the report: In recent decades agriculture in southeastern United States has undergone...
This report examines the changing demographics of rural America and shows that the makeup of rural A...
America’s rural Hispanic population is growing at an unprecedented rate. Many of the Hispanic people...
Testimony of Mark Partridge, Ph.D. Swank Chair in Rural-Urban Policy, The Ohio State University. B...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
Excerpt from the report introduction: Poverty and illness are often so interwoven that it is diffic...