Politics and policies of rural authenticity / / edited by Pave Pospech, Eirik Magnus Fuglestad and Elisabete Figueiredo.
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Superior document: | Perspectives on rural policy and planning |
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TeilnehmendeR: | |
Place / Publishing House: | London ;, New York, New York : : Routledge,, [2022] ©2022 |
Year of Publication: | 2022 |
Language: | English |
Series: | Perspectives on rural policy and planning.
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Physical Description: | 1 online resource (213 pages) |
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Table of Contents:
- Cover
- Half Title
- Series Page
- Title Page
- Copyright Page
- Table of Contents
- List of Illustrations
- List of Contributors
- Chapter 1: Rural authenticity between commodification and populism
- Rural authenticity in a context of rising nationalist and populist sentiments
- Rising inequalities: the transformation of nations and centre-periphery relations
- The content of this book
- Note
- References
- Part I: Politics of rural authenticity
- Chapter 2: City and countryside in the imagining of nations
- Introduction
- Classic nation building
- Nation deconstructing
- Discussion
- Note
- References
- Chapter 3: Revisiting the politics of the rural and the Brexit vote
- Introduction
- The politics of the rural and electoral geography
- The rise and fall of rural protests
- From protest to populism in rural Britain?
- Frame continuity: rurality, populism and nationalism
- Trust, discontent and radicalisation
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 4: Populism of the dispossessed: Rethinking the link between rural authenticity and populism in the context of neoliberal regional governance
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 Populism of the dispossessed and neoliberal use of rural authenticity: conceptualisation
- 4.3 Methodological approach and database
- 4.4 The prime example of radical neoliberalisation: case study introduction
- 4.5 Setomaa "Yours Authentically": the institutionalisation of a rural authenticity regime
- 4.5.1 Rural authenticity as an answer to neoliberal calls
- 4.5.2 Dispossession as a result of a neoliberalisation of rural authenticity
- 4.5.3 Populism of those dispossessed by the rural authenticity regime
- 4.6 Conclusion
- Acknowledgement
- Notes
- References.
- Chapter 5: The Minister's tears and the strike of the invisible: The political debate on the "regularisation" of undocumented migrant farm labourers during the Covid-19 health crisis in Italy
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 Hegemonic and counter-hegemonic representations of Italian agri-food systems and farm labour
- 5.3 The health crisis and the debate on the "regularisation of the invisible" migrant workers
- 5.4 Populism as method: concluding remarks
- Acknowledgements
- Appendix: list of documents cited
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 6: Political and apolitical dimensions of Russian rural development: Populism "from above" and narodnik small deeds "from below"
- Introduction
- Populism "from above": Putin and typical, regional, populist leaders
- Populism "from below": rediscovery of the "theory of small deeds"
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 7: The feeling of being robbed
- Introduction
- It has been smouldering for a long time
- The cultural turn and a downscaled rural policy
- From social democratic order to neoliberal order
- Deregulating and new regulating hand in hand
- Sustainable development
- Ecological modernisation
- Environmental economics
- New regional policies
- The fight for survival is hardening
- Us and the others
- Notes
- References
- Part II: Policies of rural authenticity
- Chapter 8: #Proudofthefarmer: Authenticity, populism and rural masculinity in the 2019 Dutch farmers' protests
- Introduction
- Farming, authenticity and nationalism
- Protesting farmers as populist heroes
- The righteous anger of the farmer as a "real" man
- Conclusion
- Acknowledgement
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 9: Idyllic politics and politics of the idyll
- 9.1 Introduction: what is political about the rural idyll?
- 9.2 Idyll and anti-idyll
- 9.3 Kitsch or the second tear.
- 9.4 Hannah Arendt: defending disunity against harmony
- 9.5 Both sides of the garden fence: politics of the idyll
- 9.6 Conclusion
- Bibliography
- Chapter 10: Dystopia as authenticity: Changing ruralities in Icelandic cinema
- Introduction
- The film industry and social development in Iceland
- Icelandic urban and rural films
- Internal and external orientalism
- Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 11: Rural authenticity as cosmopolitan modernity?: Local political narratives on immigration and integration in rural Norway
- Introduction
- Immigration, integration and rurality
- Methods and analytical tools
- "It is good for us": a narrative of positive immigration and the resourceful immigrants
- "It has worked out very well": a narrative of successful integration
- "There will always be someone". A narrative of handling normalised incidents of xenophobia and opposition to immigration
- Concluding reflections
- Notes
- References
- Chapter 12: Dynamics of changes in the farmers' contestation in Poland in 1989-2018: On the way to rationality and an institutionalised model of collaboration
- Introduction
- Evolution of farmers' protests in Poland from 1989 to 2018
- Four models of interest representation
- Model of institutionalised collaboration and farmers' consciousness
- Discussion about the model of institutionalised collaboration in Polish agriculture
- Conclusion
- Notes
- Bibliography
- Chapter 13: Rurality: From the margins to the focus of interest
- The power of the market: consuming the countryside
- The men in ties: the rural and the urban
- Note
- References
- Index.