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Showing 1 to 15 of 78 results Save | Export
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Schafft, Kai A. – Peabody Journal of Education, 2016
Despite the significant proportions of rural Americans, schools, and public school students situated in the geographic peripheries of an increasingly urbanizing country, rural education in the United States has consistently occupied both scholarly and policy peripheries. This is to the detriment of rural America, especially to the extent that…
Descriptors: School Community Relationship, Well Being, Rural Schools, Rural Development
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Yu, Jiantuo – Social Indicators Research, 2013
This paper estimates multidimensional poverty in China by applying the Alkire-Foster methodology to the China Health and Nutrition Survey 2000-2009 data. Five dimensions are included: income, living standard, education, health and social security. Results suggest that rapid economic growth has resulted not only in a reduction in income poverty but…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Income, Poverty, Economic Progress
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Houser, Teresa M. – Great Plains Quarterly, 2011
Franklin Delano Roosevelt's election to the presidency in 1932 signaled a mandate for sweeping reform at the federal level to lift the nation out of the economic turbulence of the Great Depression. Under Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier, the Bureau of Indian Affairs (BIA) joined other agencies in launching policies to rebuild economic…
Descriptors: American Indians, Rural Areas, Federal Indian Relationship, American Indian History
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Sherval, Meg – Journal of Rural Studies, 2009
There is no doubt that defining and measuring "rurality" is problematic. In states such as Alaska on the western Pacific coast of the United States, more than two-thirds of the State is classified as "remote rural". In 2000, despite only 10 per cent of the general Alaskan population living in these regions, for more than 41 per…
Descriptors: Alaska Natives, Rural Areas, Geographic Regions, Public Policy
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da Silva, Emanuel; Heller, Monica – Language Policy, 2009
This paper explores the challenges that neoliberalism and the globalized new economy present to the politics of linguistic minority movements by ethnographically examining language policy as a discursive process, rooted in political economy. Following the post-WWII period, as most Western States restructured from welfarism to neoliberalism, there…
Descriptors: Language Minorities, Economic Development, Language Planning, Linguistics
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Markey, Sean; Halseth, Greg; Manson, Don – Journal of Rural Studies, 2008
In current policy discourse, rural decline is often described as an inevitable process associated with such broader structural trends as globalization and urbanization. The purpose of this paper is to challenge the supposed inevitability of rural decline in northern British Columbia (BC), Canada. We argue that rural decline in northern BC has been…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Foreign Countries, State Government, Comparative Analysis
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Fluharty, Charles; Scaggs, Bill – New Directions for Community Colleges, 2007
Rural communities have fewer financial resources, making the community colleges located in these regions central to economic development. This chapter reviews the importance of recognizing the rural differential via policy changes and offers strategies to close the resource gap between rural and nonrural community colleges.
Descriptors: Rural Areas, Economic Development, Community Development, Community Colleges
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Ballas, D.; Clarke, G. P.; Wiemers, E. – Journal of Rural Studies, 2006
Microsimulation attempts to describe economic and social events by modelling the behaviour of individual agents. These models have proved useful in evaluating the impact of policy changes at the micro level. Spatial microsimulation models contain geographic information and allow for a regional or local approach to policy analysis. This paper…
Descriptors: Models, Rural Areas, Policy Analysis, Foreign Countries
Clouser, Rod, Ed. – 1991
The Southern Region Information Exchange Group-53 consists of 20 institutional members seeking a better understanding of the relationship between community infrastructure and economic development. This document contains four papers prepared for the group's working meeting in October 1990. "The Contribution of Four Lane Highway Investments to…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Policy Formation, Public Policy, Rural Areas
Gillis, William; And Others – 1988
This paper isolates critical rural economic development issues and identifies needed federal policy interventions. Despite a long history of federal efforts to improve rural economic conditions, recent policies and programs aimed at stimulating rural development have had little impact. Reasons include: (1) narrowly focused economic development…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Federal Aid, Federal Programs, Government Role
Manning, Monica M.; Campbell, Candace; Triplett, Thomas J. – Center for Rural Policy and Development, 2004
Rural regions across the nation are threatened by declining populations, slowing economies, and legislative power transfers to urban and suburban regions. The very survival of colleges located in these rural regions is at stake. The potential for these rural campuses to survive and thrive via more far-reaching collaboration with their communities…
Descriptors: Campuses, Rural Areas, Economic Development, Rural Schools
Oden, Michael; Strover, Sharon – 2002
This report documents the status of information, computing, and telecommunications (ICT) technologies in the Appalachian region, assessing their potential relationship to economic growth and the federal, state, and local policies that influence their development. Key findings include the following. Leading producers of ICT products and services…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Information Technology, Public Policy, Rural Areas
Freshwater, David – Rural Development Perspectives, 1991
Reviews the history of Canadian rural development, comparing Canadian rural policy with U.S. rural policy. Canada's programs, although sharing some features with U.S. programs, are often delivered in a manner that emphasizes local planning and encourages rural areas to make a long-term commitment to integrating programs into a broader development…
Descriptors: Comparative Analysis, Economic Development, Foreign Countries, Long Range Planning
Bagi, Faqir S.; Reeder, Richard J.; Calhoun, Samuel D. – Rural America, 2002
One third of rural Appalachian counties are distressed. Central Appalachia has particularly high poverty, unemployment, and dropout rates. Appalachia received more per capita federal funds than the U.S. average, but only in urban areas. Appalachia received less than average funding for community resources and human resources, which create jobs and…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Federal Aid, Poverty, Poverty Areas
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Zekeri, Andrew A. – Journal of Rural Studies, 1994
Analysis of survey data from 539 community leaders in 120 rural Pennsylvania school districts found that, when the effects of need and socioeconomic and ecological characteristics were controlled, past community action and community solidarity had significant effects on adoption of various local economic development strategies. (TD)
Descriptors: Community Development, Community Involvement, Economic Development, Policy Analysis
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