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What Can Social Scientists Contribute to the Challenges of Rural Economic Development?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2015

David Freshwater*
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics and the Martin School of Public Administration and Public Policy, University of Kentucky, TVA Rural Studies

Extract

While this session focuses on the persistence of poverty in the rural South, my paper looks beyond how the research community can be effective in dealing with poverty to how we might better approach rural development. Persistent poverty is clearly a major element of the development dilemma, but the solution to poverty cannot come through transfer programs that support the poor, although they may play a role. It can only come from a broad development initiative that changes the environment in which the rural poor live and provides them with the opportunity to participate in the economy. This is a large task, and it is not one that we should believe will be easily or rapidly accomplished. But despite the odds we have an obligation to society to identify a role for social science research in the process and to carry out that role to the best of our ability.

Type
Invited Paper Sessions
Copyright
Copyright © Southern Agricultural Economics Association 2000

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References

Freshwater, David. “Farm Production Policy versus Rural Life Policy.” American Journal of Agricultural Economics 79:5. pp. 15151524 (1997).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
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Reeves, Richard. “What Happens If There Isn't Work?International Herald Tribune Nov.29, p.10 (1995).Google Scholar
Stauber, Karl. “Envisioning a Thriving Rural America Through Agriculture” in Lockertz, William ed. Visions of American Agriculture. Iowa State University Press:Ames IA (1997).Google Scholar
Swanson, Louis and Freshwater, David. “From New Deal to No Deal.” FORUM for Applied Research and Public Policy 14:1 pp. 8489 (1999).Google Scholar