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Heffernan, W. D.; Nolan, M. F. – Rural Sociology, 1974
Consideration is given to the disparity between legislative "hopes" and research findings on rural industrialization in the U.S. (JC)
Descriptors: Correlation, Dropouts, Evaluation, Industrialization
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Rural Sociology, 1975
Descriptors: Community Attitudes, Dropouts, Federal Legislation, Industrialization
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Rural Sociology, 1975
The Nolan and Heffernan (1974) analysis of the Rural Development Act of 1972 (RDA-72) is discussed. (NQ)
Descriptors: Content Analysis, Dropouts, Economic Factors, Federal Legislation
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West, Jerry G. – Growth and Change, 1978
Manufacturing, mining, and recreation were studied to determine varying consequences of industrialization. Results seemed to indicate no superior type, but rather that the community, area, or region must decide what it wants to happen. (Author/KR)
Descriptors: Area Studies, Change Agents, Dropouts, Economic Change
McNeil, Stephen – American Indian Journal, 1978
We may be involved in a replay of the Indian genocide and dislocation characteristic of early U.S. history through the workings of international economics. This historical account briefly outlines the recent economic developments in the Brazilian Amazon, the effects that those policies have on the natives, and the United States' involvement in…
Descriptors: American Indians, Developing Nations, Dropouts, Economic Development
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Vio Grossi, Francisco – Convergence: An International Journal of Adult Education, 1980
Presents a critique of rural development trends in Third World countries. Analyzes the tensions and contradictions between the theory of adult education as a learner participation activity and the manipulative role it often plays in the maintenance of the status quo. (SK)
Descriptors: Adult Education, Developing Nations, Dropouts, Industrialization
And Others; Savage, V. Howard – Rocky Mountain Social Science Journal, 1974
This paper analyzes the economic development of Hays County, Texas, the site of Southwest Texas State University and indicates the important effect of that university's growth on the county, which might otherwise have stagnated. (JH)
Descriptors: Dropouts, Economic Development, Geographic Regions, Industrialization
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Flora, Cornelia Butler; Flora, Jan L. – Rural Sociology, 1977
The article presents (1) a theoretical perspective describing rural development in the People's Republic of China which allows for generalization and comparison to the other developing rural settings, and (2) four conceptual systematic variables, a concrete policy variable, and a series of illustrative propositions linking them. (NQ)
Descriptors: Bureaucracy, Communication (Thought Transfer), Dropouts, Foreign Countries
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And Others; Smith, Eldon D. – Journal of the Community Development Society, 1980
Information from a two-state statistical study provides a basis for evaluating the effectiveness of community programs to attract industry, plant site development, industrial bond financing, and improved support to schools. A linear probability model is used to estimate chances of success of such efforts. (JOW)
Descriptors: Community Development, Cost Effectiveness, Dropouts, Economic Development
Appalachia, 1977
With the help of grants for upgrading public facilities and with planning assistance, a small rural community in Alabama has succeeded in attracting 10 new industries and expanding 7. (Author)
Descriptors: Community Development, Dropouts, Futures (of Society), Industrialization
Ahmed, Wajihuddin – CERES, 1975
Peasant women are chained to their homes as child bearers and unpaid laborers working for their husbands. Employing women in rural industry would increase female status and decrease male dominance in the family. Also family size would shrink as women spend less time at home. (MR)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Dropouts, Employed Women, Industrialization
Presvelou, Clio – CERES, 1975
Rural women in developing countries usually produce food for home consumption. Since this food has no exchange value women engaged in subsistence agriculture rank low on the socioeconomic scale. Colonization which brings farm technology and education to men only further deteriorates women's status in agriculture. (MR)
Descriptors: Developing Nations, Dropouts, Employed Women, Industrialization
Beale, Calvin L. – Rural Development Perspectives, 1978
The structure of nonmetro employment has become increasingly diverse and decreasingly agricultural. The precise policy implications of these shifts are not self-evident, but the increasingly nonagricultural character of the rural economy is at the heart of the population turnaround. (Author/KR)
Descriptors: Dropouts, Economic Development, Employment Opportunities, Employment Patterns
Blanton, Bill – Appalachia, 1980
The consistent economic growth of the Georgia community is the result of careful planning over a long period. Successful community development efforts have resulted in a new regional library, an airport, a vocational technical school, an industrial park, and increased industrialization. (SB)
Descriptors: Community Development, Dropouts, Economic Development, Financial Support
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clinton, Charles A. – Human Organization, 1978
Data from Shiloh County's effort to improve quality of life for its residents lead to three conclusions: political intervention can convert private sector growth into a platform for rural development, exchanges between community and schools are not difficult to understand, and the ethnographer has a function in discovering local contexts to which…
Descriptors: Case Studies, Change Agents, Community Development, Dropouts