New book!

Thanks to Edi Kasabov at Exeter Unviersity for all of his hard work in bringing together a new book on “Rural Cooperation in Europe” (and thanks for making us chapter 1!).  While digital technologies might allow greater connectivity between urban and rural areas, the conditions for building and maintaining social and economic relationships in more peripheral, rural areas continue to provide distinctive opportunities for cooperation.

The link is here: Rural Cooperation in Europe so please order it to complement the Routledge book, “Interpreting Rurality”

 

“An island in time; The biography of a village” by Geert Mak

http://www.amazon.co.uk/Island-Time-Biography-Village/dp/0099546868

Interesting to read about the changing patterns of village life in Friesland, a rural province in the North-West of the Netherlands.  The contrast between the old village economy and the expectations of modern rural dwellers was very familiar.  The loss of traditional village services, loss of agricultural labour and decline of traditional community events made emotional reading as older residents found it challenging to adapt to new lifestyles.  However, the changes in these villages are driven by the desire of younger people to travel, to seek higher education and employment elsewhere just as much as being the result of external factors. Yes, counterurbanisation (where urban workers are now more able to choose a rural home in an attractive environment and commute or tele-work back into the urban economy), EU agricultural policy and national planning regimes have an influence too but it is perhaps too easy to blame outside factors.  Mak makes a telling observation that rural areas are no longer just those places that haven’t become urban, and are thus under-developed and disadvantaged, but they exist as places that are positively different to urban places.  Today’s rural resident is part of the urban economy but seeks to experience elements of rurality.  These are not necessarily the closed communities with common identities and collective memories that Mak describes, but they are communities where a number of people participate in different ways but participation is a choice expressed as part of an individualised lifestyle.

I recommend this book to anyone with an interest in rural society in Europe and would love to know whether similar books exist in the UK.

Rural Entrepreneurship conference

Thanks to our hosts at Harper Adams for a typically stimulating rural entrepreneurship conference this year. The presentation of ongoing research into rural broadband initiatives with Koen Salemink from the University of Groningen can be viewed here.  Harper Adams presentation 

The University of Lincoln will be staging the conference in 2016 so watch this space for further information.

An evaluation of Nature Conservation Policies for sustainability

conference photo

Susan Marango is presenting her first conference paper this week in Cambridge.  This is part of an ongoing study into the ways in which sustainability objectives are translated between transnational and local scales.

 

The working paper can be viewed here:

An evaluation of nature conservation policy S Marango