The Dictionary of Human Geography

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late-modernwar; and thestateregulation of
migrancy andmobility. These issues are
urgent reminders that the production and
transformation of the rural is by no means
confined to the global North and is every-
where enmeshed with globalization (cf.
Woods, 2007; McCarthy, 2008). Despite the
predictions of the imminent demise of the
peasantry in the global South and the depopu-
lation of the countryside in the North, the
rural continues to be a site of political contest-
ation, from debates over the agricultural policy
of the European Union to the resurgence of
rural protest in China. dg/jl/mw

Suggested reading
Cloke, Marsden and Mooney (2006); Murdoch
and Marsden (1994).

rural planning The attempt to organize and
control the distribution ofdevelopmentand
resourcesacross rural areas: concerns include
the management of land-use change (seeland
use and land-cover change) in relation to the
built and some aspects of the natural environ-
ment, as well as economic and social issues.
Rural planning in the developed world has
two main functions: first, the strategic alloca-
tion of development through the production
of frameworks and principles for resource
distribution andconservation; and, second,
the control of the alteration, growth and
design of the built form (cf. zoning).
Tensions have frequently arisen in planning
for rural areas between the many demands
on rural land, particularly in the context of
the changing importance of farming and
foodproduction. In addition, pressure from
counter-urbanizationin many parts of the
developed world has introduced conflicts
within rural planning between the desire to
conserve the natural environment and provide
housing in desirable residential areas. In some
rural areas, land-use designations such as
national parkshave sought to maintain tight
control on development and resource use in
the most valued environments. In developing
countries, emphasis is placed less on control
but, rather, on the generation of economic

growth in the distribution of resources and
the organization of agricultural development.
The study of rural planning during the
1970s and early 1980s was largely descriptive
and uncritical. From the late 1980s, however,
greater attention was paid to thepowerrela-
tions within which planning operated, includ-
ing the influence of social class over the
allocation of resources and the broader stra-
tegic direction of the planning process (Cloke
and Little, 1990). Particular attention was
given to the role of environmental politics in
shaping planning agendas and outcomes
(Williams, 2001). More recently, these discus-
sions have been set within understandings of
the shifting nature ofgovernancewithin rural
communitiesand of the relevance of new
decision-making structures and responsibil-
ities (Goodwin, 1998). Work on the emer-
gence of new forms of rural politics has also
helped to inform contemporary research on
rural planning (see Woods, 2006). jl

Suggested reading
Lapping (2006); Woods and Goodwin (2003).

rural^urban continuum A once-popular
hypothesized continuous gradation of ways of
life between rural areas and large cities. It
assumed a polarization of attitudes and behav-
iours between idealruralsituations, on the
one hand – characterized bycommunitiesbuilt
around kinship, attachment to place and
co-operation (what To ̈nnies (1955) referred
to asGemeinschaft) – and large cities, on the
other – characterized bysocietiesdominated
by impersonal, especially market, relationships
(Gesellschaft). Although some empirical studies
found patterns consistent with the hypothesis,
it was largely demolished by studies – such
as Pahl’s (1965) – that identified village-like
communities within cities and urban traits
spreading into the countryside. rj

rustbelt A descriptive term for the area
of declining manufacturing industries in the
north-east of the USA, now more widely
applied to any area of industrial decline
(cf.sunbelt/snowbelt). rj

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RURAL PLANNING
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