Objective. Government policy has long linked resource production with economic development in surrounding rural communities. The purpose of this article is to examine how the USDA Forest Service's (USFS) resource-based, rural development policies have shifted due to economic restructuring and environmental challenges to the "management" of nature. Methods. Historical data was gathered on USFS timber harvests and policies toward forest-dependent communities. Data was also gathered through interviews and participant-observation on a USFS-supported, locally planned ecotourism project. Results. USFS rural development policies have shifted from predominantly providing federally determined, sustained timber harvests in the industrial era to increasingly emphasizing local, amenity-based entrepreneurship and economic diversification in the post-industrial era. Conclusions. USFS rural development policies and resource production have been de-coupled. However, amenity-based development may depend both on amenity migrants and sustained commitment from external sources to support local initiative, given limited entrepreneurship in rural areas long dependent on high-wage extraction and manufacturing.
Journal article
The new economy and the forest: rural development in the post-industrial spaces of the rural Alleghenies
Social Science Quarterly, Vol.84(4), pp.963-978
2003
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- The new economy and the forest: rural development in the post-industrial spaces of the rural Alleghenies
- Creators
- Deborah Che - Western Michigan University
- Publication Details
- Social Science Quarterly, Vol.84(4), pp.963-978
- Publisher
- Wiley-Blackwell Publishing, Inc.
- Identifiers
- 1731; 991012821894802368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Business, Law and Arts; School of Business and Tourism; The Hotel School
- Language
- English
- Resource Type
- Journal article