Description
Explores efforts of rural citizens to counter intolerance, build inclusive communities, and become better neighbours.
About the Author
Clark Banack is Director of the Alberta Centre for Sustainable Rural Communities at the University of Alberta, Augustana Campus, Camrose. Dionne Pohler is Associate Professor at the University of Saskatchewan Edwards School of Business in Saskatoon.
Reviews
"The contributors to Building Inclusive Communities in Rural Canada refuse to fall back on simple, misleading stereotypes about rural place-as uniquely friendly and welcoming or as places of entrenched racism and xenophobia-and instead do the difficult work of recognizing the heterogeneity of rural places, people, and practices." -Karen Foster, Dalhousie University
"This collection by scholars and practitioners is an important contribution to countering stereotypes about rural communities. It explores the complexity and diversity of attitudes and the work against intolerance taking place in groups and institutions in rural communities and offers helpful practical tools to foster inclusivity." Belinda Leach, University of Guelph
"Clark Banack and Dionne Pohler's essay collection, Building Inclusive Communities in Rural Canada, plants some critical seeds in a research field relatively barren of sustained inquiry. To what extent, their contributors ask, does racial intolerance prevail in rural Canada, and how do we create more inclusive rural communities in this country? The co-editor Clark Banack's standout chapter on attitudes toward cultural and religious minorities is a must-read for anyone who picks up this volume.... His fascinating answers should be required reading for federal policy makers and community educators alike." Julie McGonegal, Literary Review of Canada, July-August 2023
Book Information
ISBN 9781772126334
Author Clark Banack
Format Paperback
Page Count 344
Imprint University of Alberta Press
Publisher University of Alberta Press
Weight(grams) 450g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 19mm