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To watch a video of Mil Duncan describing
the “four rural Americas” concept,
click here.
To download the complete report, click here.
New
Carsey Institute Report finds four distinct
Rural Americas
From waving wheat fields to shuttered
manufacturing plants... from the majestic
Rocky Mountains to the impoverished
Mississippi River Delta ... rural America is
as varied and nuanced as the landscape it
inhabits.
A new report from the Carsey Institute at
the University of New Hampshire, based on a
comprehensive survey of 8,000 Americans from
19 rural counties, identifies four distinct,
often disparate, rural Americas.
The data-rich report presents a complex
picture of the economics, demographics,
politics, and values of people in rural
America.
The report, called “Place Matters:
Challenges and Opportunities in Four Rural
Americas,” identifies four broad types of
rural places:
• Amenity-rich areas that draw vacationers,
retirees, and second home-owners with their
mountains, lakes, coastlines, or forests.
• Declining resource-dependent areas that
once thrived on the agriculture, timber,
mining and manufacturing industries which,
now threatened by globalization and resource
depletion, no longer support a vibrant
middle class population.
• Chronically poor regions where residents
and the land have suffered decades of
resource depletion and underinvestment.
• A transitional type characterized by
amenity-driven growth and resource-based
decline. While traditional resource-based
economies in these areas have weakened,
these transitional regions show potential
for amenity-driven growth.
“Our findings indicate that at the beginning
of the twenty-first century, ‘rural America’
is changing, often dramatically, as
economic, demographic and environmental
forces sweep across the country,” said
Carsey Institute Director Mil Duncan, who
authored the report with Carsey senior
fellow and UNH professor of sociology Larry
Hamilton, writer Leslie Hamilton, and Chris
Colocousis, a Ph.D. candidate in sociology
at UNH.
The report surveyed residents from rural
counties around the U.S.: Park and Chafee
counties in the amenity-rich Rocky Mountains
of Colorado; Jewell, Osborne, Republic and
Smith counties in the declining heartland of
Kansas; Harlan and Lechter counties in
Appalachian Kentucky; Coahoma, Tunica and
Quitman counties in the Mississippi Delta;
Choctaw, Clarke, Marengo and Wilcox counties
in the “Black Belt” of Alabama; Clatsop
County in Oregon and Pacific County in
Washington, both along the Pacific coast;
and Coos County, New Hampshire, and Oxford
County, Maine, in the Northern Forest.
While some issues – the need for more jobs
chief among them – transcended these four
regions, others created unique problems or
opportunities to individual regions. Among
the key issues:
• Only 40 percent of respondents to the
survey, called the Community and Environment
in Rural America (CERA) survey, say they
work full time, well below the national
average of 53 percent.
• Populations in all but the amenity-rich
regions are aging, as young adults leave,
older residents remain, and reproduction
rates fall. Amenity-rich areas, on the other
hand, are attracting both retiring boomers
and young professional families.
• The natural environment is a significant,
although varied, force on rural America,
attracting residents to amenity-rich areas
and leading to their departure from
declining areas where natural resources have
been depleted and economic shifts have
diminished employment opportunities.
• Strong traditions of self-reliance and
individualism remain in all rural Americas;
civic engagement is also strong, especially
in the declining Heartland. Political
leanings and the role of religion in daily
life vary among the four areas.
• Concerns about community problems vary
greatly among the four rural Americas, with
drugs and crime chief concerns in
persistently poor places, population decline
worrisome in the declining-resource
Heartland, and growth and sprawl concerning
residents of high-amenity areas.
“A one-size-fits-all approach to
policymaking will not work, as each of these
regions struggles with its own
place-specific issues and problems,” notes
Duncan. “Addressing the challenges in rural
America requires an understanding of the
complex changes happening right now in these
very different regions in order to target
their unique needs and opportunities.”
The Carsey Institute at the University of
New Hampshire conducts research and analysis
on the challenges facing rural families and
communities in New Hampshire, New England,
and the nation.
The Carsey Institute sponsors independent,
interdisciplinary research that documents
trends and conditions affecting families and
communities, providing valuable information
and analysis to policymakers, practitioners,
the media, and the general public.
Through this work, the Carsey Institute
contributes to public dialogue on policies
that encourage social mobility and sustain
healthy, equitable communities.
The Carsey Institute was established in May
2002 with a generous gift from UNH alumna
and noted television producer Marcy Carsey.
Visit us online at
http://carseyinstitute.unh.edu/ .
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