Tracking Rural Change : Community, Policy and Technology in Australia, New Zealand and Europe

A key, intensifying change affecting rural areas in the last few decades has been a decline in the proportion of national populations whose principal livelihood is farming. The corresponding re-distribution of population has typically resulted in a net population loss to rural areas, and diversifica...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Merlan, Francesca (auth)
Other Authors: Raftery, David (auth)
Format: eBook
Published: Canberra ANU Press 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:Get fulltext
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245 1 0 |a Tracking Rural Change : Community, Policy and Technology in Australia, New Zealand and Europe 
260 |a Canberra  |b ANU Press  |c 2009 
300 |a 1 electronic resource (187 p.) 
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520 |a A key, intensifying change affecting rural areas in the last few decades has been a decline in the proportion of national populations whose principal livelihood is farming. The corresponding re-distribution of population has typically resulted in a net population loss to rural areas, and diversification of rural activity. The corporatization and technological modification of food production has prompted new policy challenges, and has bound rural and urban populations together in new relationships articulated in moral discourses of custodianship, food safety, and sustainability. Contributors to this volume came together in the attempt to stimulate collective insight into trends of rural change in Australia, New Zealand and Europe. The first two countries have been characterised by avowedly `neoliberal' rural policy - with considerable departures from it in practice; Europe, on the other hand, by a mix of policy measures which attempt to integrate land management and sustainability, diversification and maintenance of a competitive farming sector within an overarching policy framework more overtly, though only partially, oriented towards sustaining rural society. Aiming to build on research relating to the character of rural transitions, this volume offers substantive and critical contributions to the understanding of the sources of unpredictability, instability, and continuity, that underpin rural transition. The papers explore changes and continuities in policy, the governance of rural spaces, technological developments relating to rural areas and populations, and social forms of subjectivation and participation in increasingly diverse rural settings. 
540 |a All rights reserved 
546 |a English 
650 7 |a Rural communities  |2 bicssc 
650 7 |a Political geography  |2 bicssc 
653 |a australia 
653 |a community 
653 |a policy 
653 |a technology 
653 |a development 
653 |a rural change 
653 |a new zealand 
653 |a europe 
653 |a Agrarianism 
653 |a Nanotechnology