Rural U.S.A.: Persistence and ChangeThomas R. Ford |
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Page 30
... individual and his groups must become known . Only with these moral sanctions are financial subsidies and legal penalties likely to become effective . However , the main thrust of the environmental movement has evolved from awareness to ...
... individual and his groups must become known . Only with these moral sanctions are financial subsidies and legal penalties likely to become effective . However , the main thrust of the environmental movement has evolved from awareness to ...
Page 109
... individual nuclear family " homesteaders " and the group communes . There is no census of either category . One study roughly estimated the number of rural communes in 1973 at some 25,000 with 250,000 to 300,000 current residents ...
... individual nuclear family " homesteaders " and the group communes . There is no census of either category . One study roughly estimated the number of rural communes in 1973 at some 25,000 with 250,000 to 300,000 current residents ...
Page 226
... individual ( see Ferkiss , 1974 ) . What this means is that we have been so effectively socialized into perceiving ourselves as individuals that the process of becoming an in- dividual has remained opaque to most of us . It has appeared ...
... individual ( see Ferkiss , 1974 ) . What this means is that we have been so effectively socialized into perceiving ourselves as individuals that the process of becoming an in- dividual has remained opaque to most of us . It has appeared ...
Contents
Quality and Conflicts in Land | 19 |
People on the Land | 37 |
The Changing Character of the Nonmetropolitan | 55 |
Copyright | |
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activities Agriculture American associated become beliefs blacks Bureau Census centers characteristics cities compared concern continue costs counties cultural decline Department differences economic effects employment energy environment environmental expected farm farmers federal fertility future greater groups growth higher important improved income increased Indian indicated individual industry institutions interests labor force land larger less living major means median metropolitan Michigan migration million minority natural needs nonmetropolitan occupational opportunities organization pattern percent persons places planning poor population poverty present problems production programs proportion recent reduced regional relatively reported Research residents response role rural areas rural communities Rural Development rural society rural-farm rural-nonfarm social Source status studies Table tend towns traditional trends United University urban values Washington women workers