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RSF: Growing Up Rural
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RSF: Growing Up Rural

How Place Shapes Life Outcomes
Editors
Shelley Clark
Sam Harper
Bruce Weber
Paperback
$29.95
Add to Cart
Publication Date
7 in. × 10 in. 238, 142 pages
ISBN
978-0-87154-763-7

About This Book

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Nearly 46 million Americans live in rural counties—areas with small populations that are often located far from large cities. Yet we know relatively little about how living in a rural area influences child and adolescent life trajectories and adult outcomes when compared to their urban counterparts. In this special double issue of RSF, sociologist Shelley Clark, epidemiologist Sam Harper, and agricultural economist Bruce Weber, and an interdisciplinary group of contributors look at the impact that growing up rural has across the lifespan, examining both the challenges and advantages of growing up in rural America.

The 15 articles in this double issue explore the effects of rural life on family, educational attainment, economic security, and health. Issue 1 looks at the impact of rural families and schools on children’s and adolescents’ educational aspirations and wellbeing. Jennifer Sherman and Kai A. Schafft find that while rural gentrification brings needed resources to struggling communities, it can also exacerbate educational inequality. Jessica C. Drescher and colleagues reveal that only modest differences in educational outcomes exist between rural and non-rural students. Ryan Parsons shows that rural students with college aspirations, particularly students of color, incur social and emotional costs in pursuing upward mobility not experienced by their urban counterparts, such as having to permanently relocate to more advantaged areas.

Issue 2 examines transitions to adulthood and the longer-term influences of growing up in rural areas on adults’ health and economic attainment. Emily Miller and Kathryn Edin find that low-income rural young adults have children and marry earlier than their peers, but achieve other markers of adulthood, such as leaving the parental home, more slowly and often only tentatively. Robert D. Francis shows that rural, working-class men employ various strategies to improve their employment opportunities that support their existing identities, such as obtaining credentials to be truck drivers or mechanics. For example, they pursue additional education and training in fields that will allow them to continue to hold traditionally masculine, working-class jobs, such as obtaining credentials to be truck drivers or mechanics. Evan Roberts and colleagues find that growing up on or moving to a farm were associated with better health outcomes. Emily Parker and colleagues find that rural residents who live in counties that receive a higher amount of federal funding and moved from their home county in adulthood were more likely to achieve higher educational attainment and earnings than those in counties that received less funding.

This issue of RSF provides a more nuanced understanding of the advantages and disadvantages of growing up in rural areas and how it shapes the life trajectories of rural Americans.

About the Author

SHELLEY CLARK is a Professor of Sociology at McGill University.

SAM HARPER is an Associate Professor of Epidemiology, Biostatistics, and Occupational Health at McGill University.

BRUCE WEBER is Emeritus Professor of Applied Economics at Oregon State University.

CONTRIBUTORS: Scott W. Allard, Nicole R. Bernsen, Catharine Biddle, Sarah Bowen, Kristina Brant, Mindy S. Crandall, Sarah Damaske, Jessica Drescher, Kathryn Edin, Sinikka Elliott, Robert D. Francis, Annie Hardison-Moody, Lisa A. Keister, DeAnn Lazovich, Jessica E. Leahy, Emily Miller, Alejandra Miranda, James W. Moody, Taryn W. Morrissey, Ashely R. Niccolai, Jason Park, Emily Parker, Ryan Parsons, Elizabeth Pelletier, Anne Podolsky, Wendy Rahn, Sean F. Reardon, Evan Roberts, Cassandra Robertson, Michael C. Rodriguez, Kai A. Schafft, Jennifer Sherman, Laura Tach, Gabrielle Torrance, Tom Wolff

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