Development specialists often overlook the feet that the towns of a rural region play as essential a role in the region's economy as does agriculture, and they design and implement broad strategies without due recognition of the unique and dynamic character of each individual region. Proper analysis requires consideration of the changing nature of rural regions and the principal agents of change. The contributors to this volume argue that development strategists should focus on processes rather than on products by taking the nonfarm aspects, as well as the farm aspects, of rural development into account and by recognizing that land, labor, water, and technology do not alone lead to balanced regional and agricultural development. The analytical approaches presented in this book incorporate wide-ranging variables from the urban space of rural regions-markets, towns, service industries, and organizations-that have major impacts on the rural regional economy. These methodologies aim at improving rural regional development processes.
About the Author"Raphael Bar-El is an economist at the Settlement Study Centre and a professor at Ben-Gurion University.
Avrom Bendavid-Val is an international consultant in the field of regional development planning; he is currently on assignment as an economist with the Settlement and Resource Systems Analysis Project at Clark University.
Gerald J. Karaska is professor of geography and director of the Settlement and Resource Systems Analysis Project at Clark University."
Book InformationISBN 9780367297893
Author Dafna SchwartzFormat Paperback
Page Count 165
Imprint RoutledgePublisher Taylor & Francis Ltd
Weight(grams) 320g