
The Routledge Handbook of Comparative Rural Policy
DOI link for The Routledge Handbook of Comparative Rural Policy
The Routledge Handbook of Comparative Rural Policy book
The Routledge Handbook of Comparative Rural Policy
DOI link for The Routledge Handbook of Comparative Rural Policy
The Routledge Handbook of Comparative Rural Policy book
Get Citation
This volume represents the result of almost two decades of trans-Atlantic collaborative development of a policy research paradigm, the International Comparative Rural Policy Studies program. Over this period dozens of scientists from different disciplines but with a common interest in rural issues and policy have collaboratively studied the policies in North America, Europe, and other parts of the world.
A core element of the book is the idea and practice of comparative research and analysis – what can be learned from comparisons, how and why policies vary in different contexts, and what lessons might or might not be “transferable” across borders. It provides skills for the use of comparative methods as important tools to analyze the functioning of strategies and specific policy interventions in different contexts and a holistic approach for the management of resources in rural regions. It promotes innovation as a tool to valorize endogenous resources and empower local communities and offers case studies of rural policy in specific contexts. The book largely adopts a territorial approach to rural policy. This means the book is more interested in rural regions, their people and economies, and in the policies that affect them, than in rural sectors, and sectoral policies per se.
The audience of the book is by definition international and includes students attending courses in agricultural and rural policy, rural and regional studies, and natural resource management; lecturers seeking course material and case studies to present to their students in any of the courses listed above; professionals working in the field of rural policy; policy-makers and civil servants at different levels seeking tools to better understand rural policy both at the local and global scale and to better recognize and comprehend how to transfer best practices.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part I|2 pages
Introduction to comparative rural policy studies
chapter 1|18 pages
What is rural? What is rural policy? What is rural development policy?
chapter 2|16 pages
Comparing ruralities
chapter 3|13 pages
What is rural?
chapter 5|11 pages
Why comparative rural policy studies?
chapter 6|16 pages
Policy process theory for rural policy
chapter 7|11 pages
Policy outcomes of decentralized public programs
chapter 8|10 pages
Co-constructing rural futures
chapter 9|19 pages
Territorial capital in rural policy development
part II|2 pages
People and society
chapter 10|15 pages
International migration
chapter 12|13 pages
The role of women in rural areas
chapter 14|9 pages
Understanding the dimensions of aging and old age in rural areas
chapter 16|12 pages
Rural policy and the cultural construction of the urban/rural divide in the United States and Europe
part III|2 pages
Resources and environment
chapter 17|12 pages
Environmental policy
chapter 18|13 pages
The inefficiency of resource policy as a mechanism to deliver rural policy
chapter 21|14 pages
Rethinking energy in agricultural and rural areas
chapter 22|13 pages
Conventional and alternative agri-food chains
chapter 23|11 pages
Building sustainable regional food systems
chapter 24|14 pages
Drivers of food losses and their implications for the agro-food chain
chapter 25|11 pages
Fish as food
chapter 26|8 pages
Public policies affecting community forest management
part IV|2 pages
Innovation
chapter 27|12 pages
Social economy and entrepreneurship in rural areas
chapter 30|10 pages
Climate change adaptation by farmers
part V|2 pages
Rural policy reviews
chapter 34|19 pages
Rural policy in the Western Balkans
part VI|2 pages
Comparative rural policy case studies