31 results
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2. Social Innovation and Chinese Overseas Hydropower Dams: The Nexus of National Social Policy and Corporate Social Responsibility.
- Author
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Nordensvard, Johan, Urban, Frauke, and Mang, Grace
- Subjects
SOCIAL responsibility of business ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
ABSTRACT The nexus between hydropower dams, social policy and corporate social responsibility (CSR) is a currently understudied topic. This paper aims to fill parts of this gap by discussing these issues in relation to the world's largest builder of hydropower dams, Chinese state-owned enterprise Sinohydro. This paper draws on the analysis of firm strategy documents and CSR documents and gains additional insights from key informant interviews. The research finds that in 2011 Sinohydro developed its first comprehensive policy framework for social and environmental safeguards that was in line with international standards set by the World Bank/International Finance Corporation. These policies were however later replaced by weaker, vaguer policy. The paper suggests there is a need for Sinohydro and other dam-builders to re-engage with social innovation to mitigate some of the negative social and environmental implications of hydropower dams. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. An attempt at implementing a holistic inclusive development model: Insights from Malaysia's land settlement scheme.
- Author
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Mamat, Mohd Zufri, Ng, Boon‐Kwee, Azizan, Suzana Ariff, and Chang, Lee Wei
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,SOCIAL development ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,ECONOMIC conditions in Malaysia - Abstract
This paper examines the influences of Malaysia's Federation Land Development Authority (FELDA) scheme in fostering inclusive rural development. Based on the model of holistic inclusive development, the paper investigates the performance of FELDA from four perspectives: social development, industrialisation, modernisation and basic needs. The main findings of the study indicate that, to a large extent, the scheme has successfully stimulated both the social and economic development of the community. Nonetheless, establishing a strong trust, social cohesion and rapport between the public authorities and community remain the main challenges in determining the success of this state-led agenda. Moreover, keeping traditional values in the modern system will be the key principle for the sustainability of the programme if plans are made to adopt the scheme in other regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Low Carbon Innovation in China: From Overlooked Opportunities and Challenges to Transitions in Power Relations and Practices.
- Author
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Tyfield, David, Ely, Adrian, and Geall, Sam
- Subjects
CARBON ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
ABSTRACT This paper explores environmental innovation in the largest emerging economy - China - and its potential for contributing to global transitions to low-carbon, more sustainable patterns of development. It builds on earlier studies bringing alternative forms of low(er)-technology, 'below-the-radar', 'disruptive' and/or social innovation into its analysis. In addition, however, the paper develops our understanding of low-carbon innovation by paying particular attention to issues of changing power relations and social practices: theoretical issues that need attention in the literature generally but are notably absent when studying transitions in China. This shift in perspective allows four neglected questions to be introduced and, in each case, points to both opportunities and challenges to low-carbon system transition that are overlooked by an orthodox focus on technological innovations alone. These are briefly illustrated by drawing on examples from three key domains of low-carbon innovation: solar-generated energy, electric urban mobility, and food and agriculture. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. South-South Technology Transfer of Low-Carbon Innovation: Large Chinese Hydropower Dams in Cambodia.
- Author
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Urban, Frauke, Siciliano, Giuseppina, Sour, Kim, Lonn, Pich Dara, Tan‐Mullins, May, and Mang, Grace
- Subjects
WATER power ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
ABSTRACT Large dams have been controversially debated for decades due to their large-scale and often irreversible social and environmental impacts. In the pursuit of low-carbon energy and climate change mitigation, hydropower is experiencing a new renaissance. At the forefront of this renaissance are Chinese actors as the world's largest hydropower dam-builders. This paper aims to discuss the role of South-South technology transfer of low-carbon energy innovation and its opportunities and barriers by using a case study of the first large Chinese-funded and Chinese-built dam in Cambodia. Using the Kamchay Dam as an example, the paper finds that technology transfer can only be fully successful when host governments and organizations have the capacity to absorb new technologies. The paper also finds that technology transfer in the dam sector needs to go beyond hardware and focus more on the transfer of expertise, skills and knowledge to enable long-term sustainable development. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. How do Public Demonstration Projects Promote Green-Manufacturing Technologies? A Case Study from China.
- Author
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Zhou, Yuan, Xu, Guannan, Minshall, Tim, and Liu, Peng
- Subjects
PILOT projects ,PUBLIC demonstrations ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,INDUSTRIAL policy ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,ECOLOGICAL modernization - Abstract
ABSTRACT Public demonstration projects are used to promote the upscaling of green-manufacturing technologies in China, in order to expedite innovation 'catch-up' and transitions to sustainable development. However, these projects are facing implementation challenges, because the relevant barriers are different from traditional demonstrations in new technological niches, when involving complex economic concerns and prolific small and medium enterprises (SMEs) as adopters. This paper, therefore, adopts a case-based approach to investigate a specific example of a demonstration project in China to support the large-scale diffusion of green technology and its pilot implementations. Through the case study, this paper reveals that these demonstrations face a different set of diffusion barriers in testing technologies and promoting learning. In addition, this case also shows that a new policy model may be needed in order to cope with these barriers, when emphasizing market-oriented policies and non-legislative actors as well as combining them with traditional mandatory measures. Copyright © 2015 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd and ERP Environment [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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7. My Village Is Dying? Integrating Methods from the Inside Out.
- Author
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Peters, Paul, Carson, Dean, Porter, Robert, Vuin, Ana, Carson, Doris, and Ensign, Prescott
- Subjects
RURAL development ,POVERTY ,ECONOMIC development ,EMPLOYMENT ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Canadian Review of Sociology is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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8. Impact of Accessibility and Knowledge Creation on Local and Regional Development in Turkey.
- Author
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Ersoy, Aksel
- Subjects
RURAL development ,INFORMATION economy ,SOCIOECONOMIC factors ,QUALITY of life ,RECESSIONS ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
One of the fundamental aspects of the economic and social viability of the local and regional areas of Turkey is the degree to which they have access to the wider national economic and social system. Accessibility is, therefore, of major social, economic and political significance in Turkey and it directly affects Turkey's regional growth and the quality of life in local communities. However, the importance of the economic and social viability of the communities is increasingly complicated in the face of rapid global economic recession. It is argued that countries need to develop knowledge economies to compete successfully as knowledge is a critical factor for growth. This paper integrates accessibility and the importance of knowledge creation in understanding local and regional economic development. This empirical study has shown that although there is a high correlation between the accessibility index and the population figures of Turkey, accessibility to knowledge differs across Turkish provinces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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9. Benefiting from the regional problem: The politics of 60 years of regional development.
- Author
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McNeill, Jeffrey
- Subjects
RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
The New Zealand government approach to regional development and the economy more broadly has oscillated from the 1970s economic growth and investment focus to 1980s neoliberal neglect, followed by the more recent rediscovery of the regions' importance in national economies, all with tenuous outcomes. This paper explores the changing scope of regional development initiatives by successive New Zealand governments over the last 60 years to show a pattern of opportunism and neglect that suggests regional development is more aligned to electoral priorities than regional success. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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10. Influence of Income Disparity on Child and Adolescent Education in China: A Literature Review.
- Author
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Cai, Wangchun and Wu, Fuxiang
- Subjects
INCOME inequality ,ACADEMIC achievement ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,CHILD development - Abstract
This paper reviews how income inequality at the micro and regional levels influenced the inequality in educational outcomes for children and adolescents in China over the past decades. First, we find that the economic condition of the family influences children's and adolescents' education through home educational resources and parental involvement. Second, income disparity is significantly correlated with the regional differences in educational outcomes. Finally, the differences in the development of child and adolescent education between different regions are mainly due to the uneven distribution of educational resources, which is closely related to the public education financing system and local economic development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
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11. Innovation in local economic development strategy: The Wireless Research Center of North Carolina.
- Author
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Clayton, Paige A.
- Subjects
INNOVATIONS in business ,RESEARCH institutes ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development - Abstract
Abstract: Innovation in local economic development strategy is necessary to support struggling regions and foster growth across municipalities with varying resources and needs. This paper presents a case of innovation in local economic development strategy to illustrate how institutional entrepreneurship can be used as a tool to help local governments innovatively approach economic development strategy. Through the creation of the Wireless Research Center of North Carolina, institutional entrepreneurs transformed the institutionalized role for local government in economic development, while simultaneously creating a new institutional form that would support local development goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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12. Stayers in China's “hollowed‐out” villages: A counter narrative on massive rural–urban migration.
- Author
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Ye, Jingzhong
- Subjects
RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,NO Child Left Behind Act of 2001 ,URBANIZATION ,AGRICULTURE - Abstract
Abstract: China has been undergoing a rapid industrialisation and urbanisation process with an ongoing transfer of people and economic resources from rural to urban areas. Labour migration from rural to urban areas has been massive and become a “rite of passage” for rural young people. There is a widespread view that modernisation and the subsequent transformation of peasants, agriculture, and the countryside have undermined agriculture and hollowed out rural communities. However, due to the peculiarity of the hukou system and the circularity of rural urban migration, the large rural population can all be institutionally regarded as de jure rural stayers. The de facto rural stayers consist of the left‐behind ones and the non‐left‐behind ones. Yet these categories are quite fluid links with migration as people make different decisions at different stage in their life cycle. Motivations for migrating and staying in the countryside are highly complex. Those who migrate often do so because of economic pushes resulting from the commodification of subsistence. Many women who stay behind do so because of structural forces, such as the traditional culture of gender division and economic coercion. The non‐left‐behind people who are not stuck in the countryside are often able to actively pursue alternative rural livelihoods. These rural stayers develop diversified livelihood strategies that involve multiple job holding and make significant contributions to their household livelihoods and to driving rural development. The paper concludes that rural villages are not, as is often supposed, hollowed out, and many rural stayers do so voluntarily. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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13. Innovation and Regional Growth in Mexico: 2000-2010.
- Author
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Rodríguez‐Pose, Andrés and Villarreal Peralta, Edna M.
- Subjects
RURAL development ,REGIONAL planning ,ECONOMIC development ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations & economics ,SOCIAL conditions in Mexico ,TWENTY-first century - Abstract
This paper looks at the factors driving regional growth in Mexico, paying special attention to the potentially growth-enhancing role of innovation and innovation policy. The analysis combines innovation variables with indicators linked to the formation of adequate social conditions for innovation (the social filter), and spillovers for 31 Mexican states and the Mexico City capital district (the D istrito F ederal) during the period 2000-2010. The results indicate that regional economic growth across Mexican states stems from direct investment in research and development ( R& D) in areas with favorable social filters and which can benefit not only from knowledge spillovers, but also from being surrounded by rich neighbors with good social conditions. The results stress that, although Mexican innovation policy has been relatively well targeted in order to generate greater economic growth, its relatively modest size may have undermined the attainment of its main objectives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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14. EU regional development policy and territorial capital: A systemic approach.
- Author
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Fratesi, Ugo and Perucca, Giovanni
- Subjects
RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,GROSS domestic product - Abstract
Copyright of Papers in Regional Science is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. A Fabian paradise or a one‐man show? How the interwar Queensland economy seduced two prominent English economists.
- Subjects
INTERWAR Period (1918-1939) ,ECONOMIC models ,PARADISE ,RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
This article tells how the two British economists Hugh Dalton and Colin Clark, came to regard Queensland in the 1930s as an enviable model of economic development. Both men were Fabian socialists and impressed by Queensland's authoritarian premier and by its array of economic controls. Clark even surrendered a promising career at Cambridge to become an economic advisor there. In turn, Queensland, and a personal spiritual crisis, would propel Clark to discard Fabianism for Distributivism. In the final analysis Queensland's agrarian socialism was not drawn upon Fabian lines but rather impelled by a mix of rural development and electoral pragmatism. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Peatlands and plantations in Sumatra, Indonesia: Complex realities for resource governance, rural development and climate change mitigation.
- Author
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Thorburn, Craig C. and Kull, Christian A.
- Subjects
PEATLANDS ,PLANTATIONS ,RURAL development ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,ECONOMIC development ,GREENHOUSE gases - Abstract
Peatlands play a crucial role in Indonesia's economic development, and in its stated goal of reducing greenhouse gas emissions. Improved peatland management - including a national moratorium on the granting of any new conversion licenses - forms a cornerstone of Indonesia's climate change mitigation commitment. At the same time, rapid expansion of the plantation sector is driving wide-scale drainage and conversion of peat swamp ecosystems. The province of Riau, in central Sumatra, finds itself at the crossroads of these conflicting agendas. This essay presents a case study of three islands on Riau's east coast affected by industrial timber plantation concessions. It examines the divergent experiences, perceptions and responses of communities on the islands. A mix of dramatic protests, localised everyday actions and constructive dialogue has succeeded in delaying or perhaps halting one of the concessions, while negotiations and contestation with the other two continue. With the support of regional and national non-governmental organisations and local government, communities are pursuing alternative development strategies, including the cultivation of sago, which requires no peat drainage. While a powerful political economy of state and corporate actors shapes the contours of socio-environmental change, local social movements can alter trajectories of change, promoting incremental improvements and alternative pathways. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. The Dynamic Effects of Entrepreneurship on Regional Economic Growth: Evidence from Canada.
- Author
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Matejovsky, Lukas, Mohapatra, Sandeep, and Steiner, Bodo
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMETRICS ,COMMUNITY development ,RURAL development ,MATHEMATICAL models in business ,ENTREPRENEURSHIP ,SELF-employment - Abstract
Facilitating entrepreneurship to address regional income disparity continues to be a major concern of policy makers across the globe. This study explores the temporal pattern of income disparity for Canadian provinces in two estimation steps. First, an econometric growth regression model is applied to identify the impact of entrepreneurship on regional economic growth. The estimation results suggest that entrepreneurship, measured in terms of the self-employment rate, plays a pivotal role in determining regional development in Canada. Second, a dynamic vector autoregression model is employed to simulate long-run regional growth effects that result from policy shocks affecting entrepreneurship. Compared to other growth drivers, entrepreneurship is found to have more pronounced and long-term stimulative effects on regional development for the period of 1987-2007. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Negotiating Local Development within Processes of Neoliberalisation: Empirical Evidence from a Campesinos Cooperative.
- Subjects
NEOLIBERALISM ,REGIONAL economic disparities ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL population ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
This article highlights the role of organised rural communities in negotiating local development within processes of neoliberalisation. Based on the empirical evidence of a cooperative organisation from rural Chile, it is argued that local actors claim ownership of regional economic processes and local development agendas, while negotiating between mainstream economic growth worldviews and alternative solutions to market distribution failures. This negotiation results in local economies that manoeuvre between adapting and rejecting neoliberal economic policies offering a locally embedded solution to inequality and segregation, in this case to the benefit of a historically marginalised rural population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Spatio‐temporal pattern evolution and spatial spillover effect of green development efficiency: Evidence from Shandong Province, China.
- Author
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Guo, Fuyou, Tong, LianJun, Xu, Limeng, Lu, Xiao, and Sheng, Yanwen
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,SPATIO-temporal variation ,RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,GOVERNMENT aid ,PROVINCES - Abstract
Improving green development efficiency is urgently required, yet challenging, since it comprehensively reflects the bidirectional evolutionary relationship between regional development and resource and environmental consumption. The issue of regional green development efficiency has become a key topic; however, where the increase in efficiency originates and its spatial spillover effect remains unclear to date. Therefore, the spatial spillover effect of the green development efficiency of Shandong Province was quantified through the slack variable (SBM)‐Undesirable and Spatial Durbin model. The green development efficiency showed clear spatial differentiation in Shandong Province. This was more obvious than the polarized development trend of the provincial capital circle that has Jinan at its core and the eastern coastal region with Qingdao at its core. Green development efficiency has a significant spatial spillover effect. The regression coefficient of the direct effect of the economic development level is positive. The regression coefficient of the indirect effect of the marketization level and government financial support level is negative. Science and technology played a positive role in the promotion of the green development efficiency of local and neighboring cities. This study contributes empirical evidence to the green development efficiency associated with regional development and resource and environment consumption of Shandong Province. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
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20. Community Colleges: Drivers of Economic Development in Small Rural Communities.
- Author
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Friedel, Janice Nahra and Reed, Jared W.
- Subjects
COMMUNITY colleges ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,GOVERNMENT policy ,CULTURAL activities - Abstract
This chapter discusses an innovative state public policy which has incentivized Iowa's community colleges to become the economic drivers of their region. Created in the 1983 legislation, it continues to this day to affect Iowa's rural communities and their colleges. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. The impact of R&D and knowledge spillovers on the economic growth of Russian regions.
- Author
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Kaneva, Maria and Untura, Galina
- Subjects
RUSSIAN economy ,RESEARCH & development ,ECONOMIC development ,RURAL development ,ENDOGENOUS growth (Economics) ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations ,FOREIGN investments - Abstract
Russia presents an interesting case of a country which has strived to implement innovation policies since the transition period but so far has achieved mixed results. This study aims to analyze the impact of knowledge production and knowledge spillovers on regional growth in Russia within a framework of endogenous growth models. Applying GMM and spatial error panel modeling techniques to Rosstat data for 80 Russian regions from 2005 to 2013, the authors test the hypothesis about the relevance of R&D and expenditure on technological innovations (H1) and the hypothesis about the relevance of knowledge spillovers (H2) on the growth rates of GRP per capita. Hypothesis 1 was confirmed while Hypothesis 2 was rejected, indicating the absorptive capacities of innovatively lagging regions were not high enough for effective adaptation of new technologies from technologically innovative regions. Inclusion of indicators related to additional channels of knowledge diffusion in regressions resulted in the relevance of FDI and imports of goods and services for regional growth. Results of the study could form the basis for developing innovation policies for the Russian regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Multi‐sited Himalayan households and the misleading rural–urban dichotomy.
- Author
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Aase, Tor H., Chapagain, Prem, and Dangal, Hemanta
- Subjects
HOUSEHOLDS ,RURAL development ,URBANIZATION ,CENSUS ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
The dichotomous differentiation of people into rural and urban is necessary for the purpose of enumeration, but it is important to acknowledge that the outcome of censuses is shaped by the analytic categories that are applied. Squeezing a complex and fuzzy reality into narrow analytic categories gives a simplified picture of reality that hardly reflects actual events and processes on the micro level. Defining Himalayan rural households as multi‐sited economic units is more in touch with householders' own perceptions and practices than dividing them into urban and rural units. Urbanisation rates derived from census data may be coherent with the assumption that households are units of domicile, but they do not reflect undercurrents of ongoing settlement processes in a valid manner. The term translocis encompasses all localities where households are active. It softens the stiff dichotomy of rural–urban by directing attention to the ways in which multiple sites and sectors are interwoven in the activities of the world's most basic economic unit – the household. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Local effects of the new land rush: How capital inflows transformed rural Russia.
- Author
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Wengle, Susanne A.
- Subjects
CAPITAL movements ,RURAL development ,FARM produce prices ,ECONOMIC development ,SOCIAL change ,RUSSIAN politics & government - Abstract
Rising global prices for agricultural commodities have led to the inflow of capital to rural economies and to transfers of land ownership to new agricultural operators (NAOs) in developing and post‐Soviet countries. How capital inflows affect rural communities is often explained with the variable of institutional strength, an explanation aligned with the good governance approach to economic development: Capital inflows have positive developmental effects, if strong domestic institutions vet land deals and regulate NAOs. Contra the focus on institutional parameters as exogenous variables, this article highlights the role of political projects in shaping local outcomes and driving institutional change. Evolving political priorities are important to understand domestic rural transformations because they lead to interventions that privilege some actors as agents of change, while others are sidelined—hence transforming local economies. This theoretical suggestion is based on a study of Russia's rural transformation that followed a significant influx of capital. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Do Airports Boost Economic Development by Attracting Talent? An Empirical Investigation at the Subcounty Level.
- Author
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Chen, Xinxiang, Chi, Guanghua, and Chi, Guangqing
- Subjects
AIRPORTS ,ECONOMIC development ,COMMUNITY development ,RURAL development ,STRUCTURAL equation modeling ,RANDOM effects model ,ECONOMICS - Abstract
Objective: The objectives of this study were to examine (1) the linkage from airports to regional talent distribution and (2) the effect of talent on regional economic development. Methods: Using the data collected in Wisconsin at the municipal level, a subcounty level, in a region of the North Central United States from 1970 to 2010 and the American Community Survey 2006–2010 five‐year estimates, and random effects models and structural equation models, we employ descriptive and inferential statistics to examine the linkage from airports to talent to regional economic development. Results: We find that the farther a location is away from the airport, the lower its talent share tends to be, while greater passenger flow at the nearest airport increases a location's talent share. Given the quantity of passenger flow, a longer distance from the airport also reduces a location's talent share. The results furthermore suggest that economic development is impacted positively by passenger flow and talent share and negatively by distance to an airport. Conclusion: Our results underscore the intermediate role of talent between airports and regional economic development; building the linkage from airports to talent within the context of regional economic development provides important insights for local policy making aimed at attracting talented migrants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Protected Area Designation, Natural Amenities, and Rural Development of Forested Counties in the Continental United States.
- Author
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Kovacs, Kent, Haight, Robert G., and West, Grant
- Subjects
RURAL development ,WAGES ,HUMAN capital ,HOME prices ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Policy makers who wish to spur economic development in rural forests face challenges that include population decline and poverty. Protected land and natural amenities enhance the quality of life and prospects for economic development, but there is limited research on how different types of protected land or natural amenities affect the rural forest economy. We use county level variables for protected areas differentiated by access and extractive use, and natural amenities differentiated by climate, water area, and topography to explain spatial variation in labor and built space markets. Results show that temperate summers and water area increase wages and housing prices and explain more than 30 percent of the spatial differences in wages, housing price, employment density, built space percent, human capital, and local road density. Protected area decreases wages, but, if open access, increase housing prices and human capital and explain more than 20 percent of the spatial differences in human capital, built space percent, and local road density. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Social Network Analysis of Actors in Rural Development: A Case Study of Yanhe Village, Hubei Province, China.
- Author
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Wang, Xu, Wang, Xiaoming, Wu, Jingxia, and Zhao, Guochao
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL productivity ,SOCIAL development ,RURAL development ,NONGOVERNMENTAL organizations ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Agricultural production, rural areas, and farmers are three key aspects of agriculture related to sustainable economic and social development in China. Rural development is a process of multi-participation, which involves actors from governments, village committees, villagers, rural economic cooperatives, enterprises, financing institutions, and non-government organizations (NGOs). Based on social network analysis (SNA), this article analyzes the social network structures and characteristics of various actors in different stages of rural development in Yanhe village, Hubei Province, China. The results show that both the village committee and villagers have great influence on rural development; NGOs are the leaders of rural environmental improvement; village cooperatives are the promoters of rural economic development; enterprises are the accelerators of rural construction and development. The study outlines the rural development model in Yanhe village where the village committee is the leader and multiple forms of participation and cooperation are present; there are excellent partnerships and communication mechanisms among the participants. The endogenous and sustainable development model identified from Yanhe village is valuable for other villages in China to adopt. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. RURAL-URBAN INTERDEPENDENCE: A FRAMEWORK INTEGRATING REGIONAL, URBAN, AND ENVIRONMENTAL ECONOMIC INSIGHTS.
- Author
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JUNJIE WU, WEBER, BRUCE A., and PARTRIDGE, MARK D.
- Subjects
RURAL development ,ECONOMIC development ,ENVIRONMENTAL economics ,DECISION making ,ECONOMIC opportunities - Abstract
Economic development in rural areas affects the natural environment, which in turn affects economic growth--both rural and urban. These shared interests and feedback effects in the natural environment are increasingly recognized as important economic and political issues, and necessitate a new framework for better understanding them. This article asks why such a framework does not exist and why it should be developed. It then presents such a framework by integrating regional, urban, and environmental economic insights. The framework focuses on the interactive location decisions of firms and households and centripetal forces for concentration and centrifugal forces for decentralization. The article captures the economic and environmental consequences of rural-urban relocation and feedback effects through changes in agglomeration economies, congestion costs, natural and social amenities, and the location of economic opportunities. Results show that some feedback effects reinforce the initial forces, but others weaken them. We present two examples to demonstrate the application of the framework. The first focuses on how agglomeration economies affect the effectiveness of environmental regulation and illustrates the benefits of incorporating regional and urban economic insights into environmental policy analysis. The second example focuses on how conservation policy can create localized amenities that help resource-rich regions avoid the natural resource curse and illustrates how concepts and perspectives from resource and environmental economics can improve our understanding of regional and rural issues. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Rural Marginalisation and the Role of Social Innovation; A Turn Towards Nexogenous Development and Rural Reconnection.
- Author
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Bock, Bettina B.
- Subjects
SOCIAL innovation ,RURAL development ,SOCIAL integration ,EQUALITY ,SOCIAL change ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Rural development in Europe is a long-standing issue that has been supported through EU policies in various ways. The effects of rural development have been uneven, and differences between well-to-do and marginal rural areas have been increasing both across and within countries. This process is reinforced by the current financial crisis. Recently, social innovation has been introduced as the new panacea for realising development and growth while, at the same time, warranting social inclusion and counteracting social inequality. A central question of this article is whether social innovation may help to effectively fight rural marginalisation, why that could be the case and what conditions then must be met. Three examples of rural social innovation are used to distil specific features of social innovation and compare them with other concepts and approaches to rural development. Rural social innovation is distinctive in its dependence on civic self-reliance and self-organisation due to austerity measures and state withdrawal, and its cross-sectoral and translocal collaborations. This article concludes that it is time to go beyond earlier ideas of exogenous versus (neo-)endogenous development and introduces the idea of nexogenous development with socio-political reconnection as an engine of revitalisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Pathways to poverty reduction.
- Author
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Saleem, Zahabia and Donaldson, John A.
- Subjects
ECONOMIC development ,POVERTY reduction ,INDUSTRIALIZATION ,RURAL development ,SOCIAL services - Abstract
Of the myriad approaches to reducing poverty, which have proved effective on a national scale? This article analyses 15 systematically selected national cases of demonstrated rapid poverty reduction, seeking insights into effective approaches to reducing poverty. From these 15 economies, in which the bottom quintile experienced an annual increase in income of at least 6% over at least a decade, emerge four poverty-reduction pathways: (1) industrialisation, (2) rural development, (3) social welfare and (4) petroleum-generated employment. In addition to helping us understand what policy approaches have actually helped reduce poverty, this article has implications for the understanding of economic growth, the impact of pro-growth policies, the relationship between state and market, and the roles of non-government organisations ( NGOs) and civil society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Role of Microfinance in Sustainable Development in Rural Bangladesh.
- Author
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Mazumder, Mohummed Shofi Ullah
- Subjects
MICROFINANCE ,FINANCIAL services industry ,SMALL business finance ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ECONOMIC development - Abstract
Here, the effects of length of microfinance borrowing, service provider and other factors on microfinance participation and outcomes in Bangladesh are investigated. Data were collected from 300 microfinance respondents using face-to-face semi-structured interviews. Descriptive and econometric statistics were used for data analysis. The financing authorities gave preference to rural, powerless, illiterate and poor people in all groups of candidates. Spillover effects were minimized by considering endogeneity, attrition bias and unobserved bias. The fixed effect instrumental variable method was used to show that the microfinance effects changed over time, i.e. were greater in historical borrowing than in more recent borrowing. Farm size, repayment behavior, savings amount per week and annual household income were identified as significant factors that influenced recipients' effective participation in the microfinance program. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. New Urbanisation under Globalisation and the Social Implications in China.
- Author
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Hu, Biliang and Chen, Chunlai
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,SOCIAL impact ,GLOBALIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE urban development ,ECONOMIC development ,URBAN poor ,RURAL development - Abstract
China launched a new urbanisation programme for the period of 2014-2020. The new urbanisation programme will produce positive impacts on China's social and economic development through focusing on integrated urban and rural development, creating city clusters and promoting sustainable urban development. However, the new urbanisation programme may also bring some new social and economic problems, like widening the gap in urban development between different regions in China, leading to the formation of a new urban poor class, based on the current design and implementation. To minimise the negative effect, we suggest to better deal with the relationships between market and government and between economic and social development in the process of urbanisation. We argue that the key is to allow the market to determine the flows of capital, land and people in the process of urbanisation so as to achieve a sustainable development of China's urbanisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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