Hurricane Katrina exposed the poverty that lay in our midst, and although the images served to remind the country of its enduring inequality, the picture was one of urban poverty. What the images failed to expose is the rural face of poverty, which in the South -- and especially in the Delta -- is the face of poverty. About one-third of the area hit by Katrina is rural, and the rate of poverty in the rural South stands at nearly 18%, the highest of any region in the country. What is too often overlooked is that poverty rates nationwide are consistently higher in rural than in urban areas (as a percentage of the population), and poverty is far more persistent in rural localities.On one level, the rebuilding of the Delta and other parts of th...
Nine million people in the United States live in rural poverty. This large segment of the population...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the 1970...
The editors and authors of this fine collection of articles, though mostly sociologists, demonstrate...
This brief shows how the characteristics of rural Gulf Coast families place them at higher risks dur...
In rural America today, more than one in seven residents lives in poverty. Poverty's causes are a co...
Persistent poverty is overwhelmingly rural and is very geographically concentrated. We have redefine...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
It is the goal of NeighborWorks America to make every place a community of opportunity. Unfortunatel...
Poverty rates are highest in the most urban and most rural areas of the United States, and are highe...
Rural poverty is largely regional. The nation\u27s primary region of rural poverty is the Black Belt...
One in five poor children in this country lives in a rural area. Yet this group of vulnerable young ...
There is abundant research that focuses on the causes and consequences of poverty in rural areas, a...
The incidence of poverty in rural areas is actually higher than that in urban places. This study fi...
After a decade of population loss, rural America has seen its population grow again. Nearly three-fo...
Bureau of Health Professions, US Health Resources and Services Administration presentatio
Nine million people in the United States live in rural poverty. This large segment of the population...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the 1970...
The editors and authors of this fine collection of articles, though mostly sociologists, demonstrate...
This brief shows how the characteristics of rural Gulf Coast families place them at higher risks dur...
In rural America today, more than one in seven residents lives in poverty. Poverty's causes are a co...
Persistent poverty is overwhelmingly rural and is very geographically concentrated. We have redefine...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the Dece...
It is the goal of NeighborWorks America to make every place a community of opportunity. Unfortunatel...
Poverty rates are highest in the most urban and most rural areas of the United States, and are highe...
Rural poverty is largely regional. The nation\u27s primary region of rural poverty is the Black Belt...
One in five poor children in this country lives in a rural area. Yet this group of vulnerable young ...
There is abundant research that focuses on the causes and consequences of poverty in rural areas, a...
The incidence of poverty in rural areas is actually higher than that in urban places. This study fi...
After a decade of population loss, rural America has seen its population grow again. Nearly three-fo...
Bureau of Health Professions, US Health Resources and Services Administration presentatio
Nine million people in the United States live in rural poverty. This large segment of the population...
This paper documents changing patterns of concentrated poverty in nonmetro areas. Data from the 1970...
The editors and authors of this fine collection of articles, though mostly sociologists, demonstrate...