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Deprivation,poverty and marginalization in rural lifestyles in England and Wales
Institution:1. Department of Geography, University of Bristol, Aberystwyth, UK;2. Institute of Earth Studies, University of Wales, Aberystwyth, UK;3. Countryside and Community Research Unit, Cheltenham and Gloucester College of Higher Education UK;4. Division of Geography, Staffordshire University UK;1. Center for Sustainability and the Global Environment, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1710 University Ave., Madison, WI 53726, United States;2. Center for Integrated Agricultural Systems, College of Agricultural and Life Sciences, University of Wisconsin-Madison, 1535 Observatory Drive, Madison, WI 53706, United States;3. Indwe Trust NPC, 11 Forest Lane, Parklands, Cape Town, 7441, South Africa;1. School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, University of Leicester, Leicester, LE1 7RH, UK;2. School of Geography, Geology and the Environment, Keele University, Keele, ST5 5BG, UK;1. Institute of Geographic Sciences and Natural Resources Research, Chinese Academy of Sciences, 11A Datun Road, Chaoyang District, Beijing, 100101, China;2. Department of Urban Planning and Environment, School of Architecture and Built Environment, KTH Royal Institute of Technology, Sweden
Abstract:Research studies of the problems of rural life in Britain have often been based on concepts such as ‘deprivation’ or ‘disadvantage’. In this paper we explore the basis of these conceptualizations and note claims that they have been appropriated by government at local and central levels, suggesting that criticism of such appropriation should not lead to a neglect of material privation of opportunities caused by changes to the structure of rural life, brought about by economic restructuring, social recomposition and the political-economy of deregulation. Rather, we draw on studies of rural poverty to suggest that the changing material base of rural life has been accompanied by a range of discursive strategies which obscure rural problems and even filter them out altogether in the various constructions of idyll-ized rural life as the spatial expression of self-supporting, self-sufficient, happy, healthy and problem-free existence in a market place economy. Using some of the findings from the Rural Lifestyles research programme in England and Wales we discuss some of the different experiences of opportunity privation in rural areas, and some of the different ways in which cultural constructions of rural life can lead to a range of expectations from imagined rural geographies which are variously met and not met in day-to-day rural lifestyles. We suggest that rural problems are associated with a wide range of experiences of marginalization — economic, political, social, cultural — which cannot be mapped out according to normative or cultural expectations, but which occur differently at the intersection of material and experiential elements of rural lifestyles.
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