Book details

Publication date: February 2022
Features: References, footnotes, index
Keywords: rural governance; environment; economy; education; economic development; geography; sociology; capitalism; human rights; citizenship; sustainability; resistance
Subject(s): SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Rural, Social Sciences, Social Sciences, Social Sciences / Rural Studies, Sociology, POLITICAL SCIENCE / Human Rights, rural governance; environment; economy; education; economic development; geography; sociology; capitalism; human rights; citizenship; sustainability; resistance, Sociology, Human Rights, Rural communities, Sociology, Human rights, civil rights, Population and demography, SOCIAL SCIENCE / Human Geography, Settlement, urban and rural geography, Geography, Sociology / Rural Studies / Human Rights, Social Sciences
Publisher(s): The University of Alberta Press

Karen R. Foster. Karen R. Foster is Associate Professor of Sociology at Dalhousie University and holds the Canada Research Chair in Sustainable Rural Futures for Atlantic Canada.

Jennifer Jarman. Jennifer Jarman is Professor and Chair of Interdisciplinary Studies at Lakehead University.

Ray Bollman.

Clement Chipenda.

Innocent Chirisa.

Logan Cochrane.

Pallavi Das.

Laura Domingo-Peñafiel.

Laura Farré-Riera.

Jens Kaae Fisker.

Lesley Frank.

Greg Hadley.

Stacey Haugen.

Kathleen Kevany.

Eshetayehu Kinfu.

Al Lauzon.

Katie MacLeod.

Jeofrey Matai.

Ilona Matysiak.

Kayla McCarney.

Rachel McLay.

Egon Noe.

Howard Ramos.

Katja Rinne-Koski.

Sulevi Riukulehto.

Sarah Rudrum.

Ario Seto.

Nuria Simo-Gil.

M.A. (Peggy) Smith.

Sara Teitelbaum.

Annette Aagaard Thuesen.

Tom Tom.

Ashleigh Weeden.

Satenia Zimmermann.

“The Right to Be Rural is a formidable beginning to problematizing and unpacking rural life, creating a better understanding of the challenges and opportunities that lie before rural citizens. International scholars spell out meaningful strategies to stem the tide of community loss as they look at issues of digital citizenship, housing, and resources in Canada, Denmark, Ethiopia, Finland, India, Poland, and Zimbabwe.” Fabrizio Antonelli, Mount Allison University


“In this excellent collection for rural development scholars, practitioners, and policymakers, contributors focus on issues such as climate change, neoliberal social and economic policies, economic globalization, restructuring and de-industrialization, population ageing and outmigration, food security, and sovereignty.” Ataharul Chowdhury, School of Environmental Design and Rural Development, University of Guelph

Acknowledgments ix
1 Geographies of Citizenship, Equity, Opportunity, and Choice 1
Karen R. Foster & Jennifer Jarman

I The Right to Rural Education
2 The Right to Language in Rural Nova Scotia, Canada 19
Katie K. MacLeod
3 Experiencing an Active Citizenship 35
Democratic and Inclusive Practices in Three Rural Secondary Schools in Spain
Laura Domingo-Penafiel, Laura Farre-Riera & Nuria Simo-Gil
4 Hallway Pedagogy and Resource Loss 51
Countering Fake News in Rural Canadian Schools
Ario Seto

II The Right to Rural Livelihoods
5 Stemming the Tide 71
Youth Entrepreneurial Citizenship in Rural Nova Scotia, Canada
Gregory R. L. Hadley
6 Dispossession, Environmental Degradation, and the Right to Be Rural 91
The Case of Small-Scale Fishers in Chilika Lagoon, India
Pallavi V. Das

III The Right to Rural Health
7 Reproducing the Rural Citizen 107
Barriers to Rural Birthing and Maternity Care in Canada
Sarah Rudrum, Lesley Frank & Kayla McCarney
8 Rural Food 123
Rights and Remedies for Older Persons in Canada
Kathleen Kevany & Al Lauzon
9 The Multifaceted Sense of Belonging 141
Discursive Conceptions of Home by Third Age Residents in Rural Finland
Katja Rinne-Koski & Sulevi Riukulehto

IV The Right to Rural Representation
10 Citizens or Individuals? 159
Patterns of Local Civic Engagement of Young University Graduates Living in Rural Areas in Poland
Ilona Matysiak
11 Beyond the “Rural Problem” 177
Comparing Urban and Rural Political Citizenship, Values, and Practices in Atlantic Canada
Rachel McLay & Howard Ramos
12 Defining Indigenous Citizenship 193
Free, Prior, and Informed Consent (FPIC), the Right to Self-Determination, and Canadian Citizenship
Satenia Zimmermann, Sara Teitelbaum, Jennifer Jarman
& M. A. (Peggy) Smith

V The Right to Rural Policy
13 Density Matters and Distance Matters 211
Canadian Public Policy from a Rural Perspective
Ray D. Bollman
14 Rural Citizenship Under the Impact of Rural Transformation 237
Unpacking the Role of Spatial Planning in Protecting the Right to Be Rural in Zimbabwe
Jeofrey Matai & Innocent Chirisa
15 The Right to Multiple Futures in the Shadow of Canada’s Smart City Movement 253
S. Ashleigh Weeden
16 “What Makes Our Land Illegal?” 271
Regularization and the Urbanization of Rural Land in Ethiopia
Eshetayehu Kinfu & Logan Cochrane

VI The Right to Rural Mobility
17 Exploring Rural Citizenship through Displacement 289
An Analysis of Citizenship in the Context of Refugee Resettlement and Integration in Rural Canada
Stacey Haugen
18 Local Politics of Inclusion and Exclusion 303
Exploring the Situation of Migrant Labourers and their Descendants after Land Reform in Rural Zimbabwe
Clement Chipenda & Tom Tom
19 Rural Redlining in the Danish Housing Market 321
Toward an Analytical Framework for Understanding Spatial (In)justice
Jens Kaae Fisker, Annette Aagaard Thuesen
& Egon Bjornshave Noe
20 What’s Next for the Right to Be Rural? 339
Jennifer Jarman & Karen R. Foster

Contributors 351
Index 365
ISBNs: 9781772125832 978-1-77212-583-2 Title: the right to be rural ISBNs: 9781772125948 978-1-77212-594-8 Title: the right to be rural ISBNs: 9781772125955 978-1-77212-595-5 Title: the right to be rural