Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-skm99 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-26T23:12:35.563Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Southern Farms and Rural Communities: Developing Directions for Economic Development Research and Policy

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 April 2015

Mark S. Henry*
Affiliation:
Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Sociology, Clemson University
Get access

Extract

The objective of this paper is to give an overview of research policy issues and conceptual analyses for the South for the following economic development questions:

1. What are the relationships of southern agriculture to rural areas and communities?

2. What trends and adjustments are underway and having an impact on economic development in the region?

3. What directions should economic development research take to analyze and understand the current situation?

Type
Invited Papers and Discussions
Copyright
Copyright © Southern Agricultural Economics Association 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Agriculture and Rural Economy Division. ERS, USDA. Rural Economic Development in the 1980's: Preparing for the Future. ERS Staff Report No. AGES870724, July, 1987.Google Scholar
Aspen Institute. “Policy Options For Rural Development in a Restructured Global Economy: an International Seminar.” Wye Island, Md., November, 1987.Google Scholar
Barkley, D.L., Dahlgran, R.A., and Smith, S.M.. “High Technology Manufacturing in the Nonmetropolitan West: Gold or Just Glitter.Amer. J. Agr. Econ., (forthcoming), 1988.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bergman, E. Remarks at the Aspen Institute Conference, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Bonnen, J. Remarks at the Aspen Institute Conference, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Branson, W., and Love, J.. “The Real Exchange Rate and Employment in U.S. Manufacturing. State and Regional Results.” Paper presented at the Western Economics Association meetings, Vancouver, July, 1987.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bryden, J., and Fuller, A.. “Pluriactivity as a Rural Development Option: the Emerging Policy and Research Agenda.” Paper presented at the Aspen Institute Conference, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Castle, E. “Sector Specific Policies as a Component of Structural Change Policies.” Aspen Institute, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Clouser, R., and Libby, L.. “Rural Development in the South: In Search of Priorities.” In Agriculture and Rural Development in the South. Eds. Mulkey, D..and Clouser, R., SNERC Publication 25, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Commission on the Future of the South. “Cross Cutting Issue Reports 1-6.Southern Growth Policies Board, Research Triangle Park N.C., 1986.Google Scholar
Council of State Governments, Center for Agriculture and Rural Development. Rural Economic Development: The States Agenda. Lexington, KY, 1987.Google Scholar
de Janvry, A., Runsten, D., and Sadoulet, E.. “Toward a Rural Development Program for the United States: A Proposal.” Aspen Institute, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Deavers, K. Remarks at the Aspen Institute Conference, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Dillman, D. “Information Technologies and Rural Development.” In Rural Economic Development: the States Agenda, Council of State Governments, 1987.Google Scholar
Drabenstott, M., and Gibson, L.. Rural America in Transition. Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City, forthcoming, 1988.Google Scholar
Duvall, T. “Observations on the Rural Crisis in the South.” In Responding to the Crisis in the Rural South, Southern Rural Development Center, October, 1987.Google Scholar
Eberts, R. “Estimating the Contribution of Urban Public Infrastructure to Regional Growth.” Working Paper 8610, Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland, December, 1986.Google Scholar
Economic Research Service, USDA. “The Diverse Social and Economic Structure of Metropolitan America.” Rural Development Research Report 49, September, 1985.Google Scholar
Ferris, J. “State Value-Added Activities as Related to Economic Efficiency.” Paper at the American Agricultural Economics Association annual meeting, Michigan State University, Aug. 1987.Google Scholar
Fox, W. “Public Infrastructure and Economic Development.” In Rural Economic Development in the 1980s, Agriculture and Rural Economy Division, ERS, USDA, 1987.Google Scholar
Fox, W., and Neel, C.. “Saturn: The Tennessee Lessons.Forum for Applied Research and Public Policy, Vol. 2, No. 1, Spring, 1987.Google Scholar
Henry, M. “A Changing Rural South.” In Agriculture and Rural Development Issues in the South: Proceedings of a Regional Workshop. SNERC Publication No. 25. November, 1987.Google Scholar
Hines, F., Green, B., and Petrulis, M.. “Vulnerability to Farm Problems Varies by Region.Rural Development Perspectives, Vol. 2, No. 5, June, 1986.Google Scholar
Hite, J. “Natural and Rural Community Resources and the Environment and Their Users.” In Social Science Agricultural Agenda Project: Proceedings from the Phase 1 Workshop, Resources and Technology Division, ERS, USDA, 1987.Google Scholar
Johnson, T., Deaton, B., and Segarra, E.. Local Infrastructure Investment in Rural America. Boulder, Col.: Westview Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Lee, C., Schluter, G., Edmonson, W., and Wills, D.. Measuring the Size of the U.S. Food and Fiber System. Agricultural Economic Report Number 566, ERS, USDA, March, 1987.Google Scholar
Lugar, M.Does North Carolina's High Tech Development Program Work?American Planning Association Journal, 50 (1984):280294.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mulkey, D., and Clouser, R., eds. Agriculture and Rural Development in the South. SNERC Publication 25, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Mulkey, D., and Henry, M.. “Development Strategies in the Rural South: Issues and Alternatives.” Paper presented at the conference, “The Rural South in Crisis,” Atlanta, May, 1987.Google Scholar
Newby, H. “Economic Restructuring and Rural Labor Markets in Europe.” Paper presented at the Aspen Institute Conference, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Resources and Technology Division, ERS, USDA. Social Science Agricultural Agenda Project: Proceedings of the Phase I Workshop. June, 1987.Google Scholar
Smith, E., and Anschel, K.. “Education in the Strategy of Economic Development: A Retrospective View and an Alternative Perspective.” Staff Paper 235, Dept. of Agric. Economics, U.of Kentucky, November, 1987.Google Scholar
Southern Rural Development Center. Beaulieu, L., ed. The Rural South in Crisis. Boulder, Col.: Westview Press, 1988.Google Scholar
Tamblyn, C, and Powell, R.. “Intersectoral Linkages in Australian Agriculture.Papers of the Australian and New Zealand Section, Regional Science Association. Tenth meeting, Adelaide, Australia, 1985.Google Scholar
Thurow, L. “Agricultural Institutions and Arrangements Under Fire.” In Social Science Agricultural Agenda Project: Proceedings from the Phase 1 Workshop, Resources and Technology Division, ERS, USDA, 1987.Google Scholar
Ulbrich, H., Bryan, E.L., and Hite, J.. “Financing Water System Capital: Implications for Water Pricing in South Carolina.” Working Paper 072787, Strom Thurmond Institute, Clemson University.Google Scholar
Wright, G.The Economic Revolution in the American South.The Journal of Economic Perspectives, 1 (1987):161178.CrossRefGoogle Scholar