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Counterurbanisation in post-covid-19 times. Signifier of resurgent interest in rural space across the global North?

Keith Halfacree Orcid Logo

Journal of Rural Studies, Volume: 110, Start page: 103378

Swansea University Author: Keith Halfacree Orcid Logo

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Abstract

This review paper draws upon a wide range of diverse international sources to give a still relatively early assessment of the extent to which the COVID-19 pandemic stimulated a resurgence of counterurbanisation across much of the global North. Whilst it finds and argues that a ‘resurgence’ was appar...

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Published in: Journal of Rural Studies
ISSN: 0743-0167
Published: Elsevier BV 2024
Online Access: Check full text

URI: https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa67455
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Abstract: This review paper draws upon a wide range of diverse international sources to give a still relatively early assessment of the extent to which the COVID-19 pandemic stimulated a resurgence of counterurbanisation across much of the global North. Whilst it finds and argues that a ‘resurgence’ was apparent, it may not have been as strong or lasting as was suggested by media reports in particular. Indeed, numerous challenges to any such a resurgence are noted, drawn especially from recent reflections on the pandemic period. Nonetheless, any counterurban revival is seen as being significant more widely as it fits with a wider resurgent interest in ‘all things rural’ that pre-dated COVID-19 but was stimulated further by it. In contrast to the widely celebrated rural, the paper also notes how city life was often seen as unsatisfactory during the pandemic, not least because its usual underpinning by diverse everyday mobilities was strongly compromised. This condition stimulated, in particular, a turn to rural often more for pragmatic than idealistic reasons, such as for health and to have more freedom and space. Overall, the whole COVID-19 experience sits within a range of political questions about access to space centrally involving the rural.
Keywords: Counterurbanisation; COVID-19 pandemic; Rural resurgence; Global north rural; Urban-rural relations
College: Faculty of Science and Engineering
Funders: Swansea University
Start Page: 103378