Description:
Three main reasons require to look closely at rural areas and to analyse
rural development and policies: they represent the major part of world’s surface
area; they are the object of strong competition between and within regions and
countries; they contain almost all the resources necessary for human existence.
They are therefore central to the public policies and strategies of interest groups and
nations and their future is an inescapable issue on the agendas of policymakers,
decision-makers and researchers. Nowadays rural areas are facing two fundamental
types of change, suggesting that there is no longer a dominant model: they are
subject to increasingly strong influence from cities and urban populations; competition for natural resources located in rural areas plays a key role in current
development policies. The rural world appears as a mosaic of highly diverse
socio-economic configurations and spatial distribution patterns, marked by a
diversity of development paths, whereas public policies dedicated to rural development are undergoing important changes. The goal of the book is to provide tools
for addressing the question of rural and peri-urban development, whether through
analytical thinking or public policy development, on the basis of two distinct but
overlapping approaches:—regional development approaches—especially regional
science—on the one hand; and studies on rural dimensions and policies, on the
other.