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Johnson, Kenneth M. – Rural Sociology, 2011
In 2002, more American counties (985) experienced natural decrease than at any time in the nation's history. The incidence of natural decrease has diminished since then, but remains near record levels. It is most common in rural areas remote from metropolitan centers. Spatial concentrations exist in the Great Plains, Corn Belt, and East Texas,…
Descriptors: Incidence, Urban Areas, Rural Areas, Counties
Kandel, William; Henderson, Jamila; Koball, Heather; Capps, Randy – Rural Sociology, 2011
Rapid Hispanic population growth represents a pronounced demographic transformation in many nonmetropolitan counties, particularly since 1990. Its considerable public policy implications stem largely from high proportions of new foreign-born residents. Despite the pressing need for information on new immigrants in nonmetro counties and a…
Descriptors: Employment, Poverty, Income, Ownership
Slack, Tim – Rural Sociology, 2010
Researchers are increasingly recognizing space as a key axis of inequality. Scholars concerned with spatial inequality have called for special attention to issues of comparative advantage and disadvantage across space as well as the consideration of the subnational scale. This study draws on these ideas by examining the relationship between work…
Descriptors: Poverty, Employment, Metropolitan Areas, Labor Supply
Wollebaek, Dag – Rural Sociology, 2010
This article uses unique community-level data aggregated from censuses of associations to analyze growth and volatility in rural populations of grassroots associations. A qualitative comparative analysis (QCA) shows that the two main paths to growth were (1) centralization in polycephalous (multicentered) municipalities and (2) population growth…
Descriptors: Municipalities, Population Growth, Centralization, Comparative Analysis
Chi, Guangqing – Rural Sociology, 2010
The effects of highways on transforming human society and promoting population change have been investigated in several disciplines, including geography, sociology, economics, and planning. Currently, the primary highway construction activity in the nation is highway expansion; however, this expansion has not been the focus of much of the existing…
Descriptors: Population Trends, Civil Engineering, Performance Factors, Economic Impact
Gordon, Jason S.; Matarrita-Cascante, David; Stedman, Richard C.; Luloff, A. E. – Rural Sociology, 2010
Given increasing political and financial commitments to wildfire preparedness, risk policy demands that risk identification, assessment, and mitigation activities are balanced among diverse resident groups. Essential for this is the understanding of residents' perceptions of wildfire risks. This study compares wildfire-risk perceptions of…
Descriptors: Economic Development, Community Development, Land Use, Population Trends
Sonmez, Abdulkerim – Rural Sociology, 2008
This paper addresses two interrelated issues that have assumed major political significance in the handling of the Kurdish question in Turkey. The first is the impact of violence and resulting internal displacement in Eastern and Southeastern Turkey on rural-agrarian change. The second concerns the implications of the structural change and social…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Change, Human Geography, Population Trends
Cook, Christine C.; Crull, Sue R.; Bruin, Marilyn J.; Yust, Becky L.; Shelley, Mack C.; Laux, Sharon; Memken, Jean; Niemeyer, Shirley; White, B. J. – Rural Sociology, 2009
The purpose of this research was to explore and explain the role housing plays in rural community vitality. Community vitality refers to economic strength and social well-being. In spring 2002 we collected primary interview data from informants in 134 small rural communities in nine north-central states and identified related secondary data from…
Descriptors: Population Trends, Housing, Rural Areas, Community Characteristics

Rafferty, Milton D. – Rural Sociology, 1973
Population shifts and settlement changes in 2 townships, Buck Prairie Township and Linn Township (near Springfield, Missouri), which are of different agricultural potential and accessibility are examined. (NQ)
Descriptors: Land Settlement, Population Distribution, Population Trends, Rural Areas
Voss, Paul R.; Chi, Guangqing – Rural Sociology, 2006
In this paper we return to an issue often discussed in the literature regarding the relationship between highway expansion and population change. Typically it simply is assumed that this relationship is well established and understood. We argue, following a thorough review of the relevant literature, that the notion that highway expansion leads to…
Descriptors: Population Growth, Information Systems, Relationship, Civil Engineering

Kruegel, David L. – Rural Sociology, 1971
Descriptors: Demography, Metropolitan Areas, Population Trends, Social Attitudes
Recent Immigrant Settlement in the Nonmetropolitan United States: Evidence from Internal Census Data
Donato, Katharine M.; Tolbert, Charles M., II; Nucci, Alfred; Kawano, Yukio – Rural Sociology, 2007
In the 1990s, studies have documented widespread growth of immigrants in U.S. communities not known as common destinations in the past. This trend has fueled population growth in some nonmetropolitan areas and offset population decline in other areas. In this paper, we examine the implications of recent foreign born in-migration for rural America.…
Descriptors: Population Growth, Rural Areas, Counties, Immigrants

Ballard, Patricia L.; Fuguitt, Glenn V. – Rural Sociology, 1985
Examines interdecade growth of United States nonmetropolitan incorporated places for each decade since 1900. Shows four periods of growth and decline patterns: 1900-1930, continuous rural settlement and overall concentration; 1930-1940, depressed urban growth; 1940-1950, suburbanization and rural decline; and 1960-1980, deconcentration and village…
Descriptors: Community Size, Population Growth, Population Trends, Rural Areas

Wardwell, John M. – Rural Sociology, 1977
The reversal of relative growth rates of metropolitan and nonmetropolitan U.S. countries between 1970-75 is analyzed in the context of: metropolitan expansion; changing demographic composition; and preference for residential location. (Author/JC)
Descriptors: Demography, Population Growth, Population Trends, Rural Areas

Johnson, Kenneth M.; Beale, Calvin L. – Rural Sociology, 1994
More than 64% of U.S. nonmetropolitan counties gained population during 1990-92, compared to 45% in the 1980s. Nonmetro population continued to grow at a slower pace than the metropolitan population, but the gap was narrower than in the 1980s. Net migration gains accounted for 43% of total nonmetro population gain, 1990-92. (Author/SV)
Descriptors: Counties, Migration, Nonmetropolitan Areas, Population Growth