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Land and Community Crisis in Canada's Countryside
Sim, R. Alex Publisher: University of Guelph, Guelph, Canada Year Published: 1988 Pages: 230pp Price: $15.00 ISBN: ISBN 0-88955-128-6 Library of Congress Number: HT421.S55 1988 Dewey: 307.7'2'0971 Resource Type: Book
Sim's thesis is that rural society is overlooked due to urban dependence upon "great associations," economies of scale, and other socio-cultural institutions of unmanageable size.
Abstract: Rural sociologist and adult educator R. Alex Sim argues that we should go back to the land, again, and discover in rural society values and social organization necessary to surviving an increasingly urban future.
Sim's thesis is that rural society is overlooked due to urban dependence upon "great associations," economies of scale, and other socio-cultural institutions of unmanageable size. In a book intended for rural and, secondarily, urban lay readerships, Sim sketches where rural Canada has been sacrificed to the cult of bigness in agriculture, government, culture, business, social and religious practices.
Present among the one-third of Canadians living in town (communities under 10,000 pop.) and country is a new populism, and the cradle of economic co-ops, a community ethic and environmental holism. Sim writes: "Rural people may not be ready to challenge head on present trends and arrangements, but there is evidence of discontent and a striving toward action -- small beginnings, social innovations that are, in effect, pioneer pathways that others may be encouraged to follow.... A widespread cynicism toward political leadership and government policies may stimulate rural people to look to themselves for direction, rather than distant authorities."
Sim calls for decentralization, power-sharing with rural communities, and an appreciation of the new, less agriculturally dependent rural Canada on its own terms. The despoliation and depopulation of the countryside may be stemmed if social and economic planning is especially adapted to the rural, and if the social and cultural bounty of rural people is harvested. Sim closes by arguing for popular participation in decision-making structures, in a book as lyrical and reflective as it is concerned with trends and policy histories. Other books on rural Canada Sim recommends include Gerald Gold's St. Pascal: Changing Leadership and Social Change in a Quebec Community, and Ralph Mathews' There's No Better Place Than Here: Social Change in Three Newfoundland Villages.
[Abstract by Ulli Diemer]
Table of Contents
Preface
I. A Countryside Transformed When You Look, What Do You See? The Battered Rural Community Rurality Is Not the Opposite of Urbanity Land and Community: The Case of Farming The Parable of the Roses
II. The Culture of the New Countryside A Search for Identity Rural Culture Remembered Technology and the Good Life Rural Life - East and West Culture and Community Agraville Fairview Ribbonville Mighthavebeenville Etiquette in the New Neighbourhood
III. The Ways and Means of Community Life The Importance of Groups Vertical and Horizontal Organizations The Case of Justice The Case of Education The Case of Health The Case of Welfare The Case of Religion
IV. Towards Community Regeneration Strategies for the New Community The Political Option The Economic Option The Food and Land Option The Planning Option The Culture Option Getting There
Epilogue: Waiting for a Messiah References Index Acknowledgements
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