Journal article 1426 views 300 downloads
From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies
Dialogues in Human Geography, Volume: 8, Issue: 1, Pages: 26 - 30
Swansea University Author: Keith Halfacree
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DOI (Published version): 10.1177/2043820617752003
Abstract
Via The Archers BBC radio show, this paper responds to Smith and Phillips call for investigating rural population change within the Global North from a class-foregrounded gentrification perspective and for undertaking it in an internationally comparative manner. Neither is sufficiently developed wit...
Published in: | Dialogues in Human Geography |
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ISSN: | 2043-8206 2043-8214 |
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2018
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URI: | https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa39431 |
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2018-04-18T12:09:38.3796031 v2 39431 2018-04-16 From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies 41fab8d4f5894e6afbe7195678e2b7e3 0000-0002-1529-609X Keith Halfacree Keith Halfacree true false 2018-04-16 BGPS Via The Archers BBC radio show, this paper responds to Smith and Phillips call for investigating rural population change within the Global North from a class-foregrounded gentrification perspective and for undertaking it in an internationally comparative manner. Neither is sufficiently developed within scholarship to date. Although endorsing their call, this paper adds three contextual framings: describing and explaining the late blossoming of explicit ‘rural gentrification’ research; stressing the challenges presented to geographical transferability of concepts and terminology; and noting the not exclusive role class needs to play within critical discourse on contemporary rural populations. Journal Article Dialogues in Human Geography 8 1 26 30 2043-8206 2043-8214 Rural populations, migration, class, gentrification 22 3 2018 2018-03-22 10.1177/2043820617752003 COLLEGE NANME Biosciences Geography and Physics School COLLEGE CODE BGPS Swansea University 2018-04-18T12:09:38.3796031 2018-04-16T18:33:03.1524152 Faculty of Science and Engineering School of Biosciences, Geography and Physics - Geography Keith Halfacree 0000-0002-1529-609X 1 0039431-18042018120821.pdf Dialoguescommentary.pdf 2018-04-18T12:08:21.9230000 Output 519776 application/pdf Accepted Manuscript true 2018-04-18T00:00:00.0000000 true eng |
title |
From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies |
spellingShingle |
From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies Keith Halfacree |
title_short |
From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies |
title_full |
From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies |
title_fullStr |
From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies |
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From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies |
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From Ambridge to the world? Class returns to rural population geographies |
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41fab8d4f5894e6afbe7195678e2b7e3 |
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41fab8d4f5894e6afbe7195678e2b7e3_***_Keith Halfacree |
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Keith Halfacree |
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Keith Halfacree |
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Dialogues in Human Geography |
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description |
Via The Archers BBC radio show, this paper responds to Smith and Phillips call for investigating rural population change within the Global North from a class-foregrounded gentrification perspective and for undertaking it in an internationally comparative manner. Neither is sufficiently developed within scholarship to date. Although endorsing their call, this paper adds three contextual framings: describing and explaining the late blossoming of explicit ‘rural gentrification’ research; stressing the challenges presented to geographical transferability of concepts and terminology; and noting the not exclusive role class needs to play within critical discourse on contemporary rural populations. |
published_date |
2018-03-22T19:29:55Z |
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11.048042 |