Bringing Rurality Back to Planning Culture
Michael Hibbard, Kathryn I. Frank
Abstract
The vast majority of the world’s land area is rural, yet rurality is routinely marginalized in planning. Urban bias is tacit and under-problematized, so the challenges facing rural areas and the importance of those challenges for society as a whole are not much reflected in planning scholarship or practice. We interrogate the urban bias and its implications for rural planning through the lens of planning cultures, using a content analysis of prominent and recent texts to shed light on the nature and implications of urban bias. Finally, we suggest ways to “bring the rural back” into twenty-first-century planning.
Topics & Concepts
RuralityScholarshipSociologyUrban planningRural areaLand-use planningGeographyEnvironmental planningPolitical scienceLand useEconomic growthEngineeringCivil engineeringEconomicsLawRural development and sustainabilityUrban Planning and GovernanceAgricultural Economics and Policy