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Rural development in the third world

By: Material type: TextTextPublication details: London; Routledge; 1990Description: 123 pISBN:
  • 9780415015974
Subject(s): DDC classification:
  • 307.72091724 DIX
Summary: The rural landscape of the Third World is generally seen as one worked by the impoverished. Chris Dixon shows that this is an increasingly inaccurate picture. Wealth does exist, with the landed often maintaining life-styles comparable to their richest urban neighbours. And while land remains the basis of real wealth, the rural workforce is diversifying its activities away from agriculture becoming involved in a range of manufacturing, processing, trading and service industries. Yet still rural poverty persists, and the book illustrates just how difficult it is to assess the success of development initiatives adopted to eliminate it. This book provides a general introduction to the approaches, policies, and problems associated with Third World rural development. Its up to-date case studies illustrate development trends and their benefits to the poor and the national economy. It also explores ways of successfully engineering rural development in the light of lessons learned from both socialist and capitalist programmes. Rural Development in the Third World is relevant to students of geography, the environment and development issues. Chris Dixon is Principal Lecturer in the Department of Geography at the City of London Polytechnic.
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The rural landscape of the Third World is generally seen as one worked by the impoverished. Chris Dixon shows that this is an increasingly inaccurate picture. Wealth does exist, with the landed often maintaining life-styles comparable to their richest urban neighbours. And while land remains the basis of real wealth, the rural workforce is diversifying its activities away from agriculture becoming involved in a range of manufacturing, processing, trading and service industries. Yet still rural poverty persists, and the book illustrates just how difficult it is to assess the success of development initiatives adopted to eliminate it.

This book provides a general introduction to the approaches, policies, and problems associated with Third World rural development. Its up to-date case studies illustrate development trends and their benefits to the poor and the national economy. It also explores ways of successfully engineering rural development in the light of lessons learned from both socialist and capitalist programmes.

Rural Development in the Third World is relevant to students of geography, the environment and development issues.
Chris Dixon is Principal Lecturer in the Department of Geography at the City of London Polytechnic.

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