正文
(《
单身母亲如何评估和应对农村边缘地区的生活?对社会和空间劣势相互作用的洞察》)
Sylvia Keim-Klärner, Josef Bernard, Anja Decker
Multiple Paths of Influencing Factors of College Students' Intentions of Returning Home for Employment from the Perspective of Configuration: A fsQCA Approach
(《从构型视角看大学生返乡就业意向的多路径影响因素:一种模糊集定性比较分析(fsQCA)方法》)
Jianmeng Ye, Yuangang Zhang, Yi Chen, Yanzi Zhang
Securing a Future in Nonmetropolitan Areas: Community and Family Influences on Young Adults’ Intentions to Stay for Employment
(《在非大都市地区确保未来:社区和家庭对年轻人留乡就业意向的影响》)
Ha Young Choi, Karen Z. Kramer
Does Increasing Ethnic Diversity Challenge the Rural Idyll? An Analysis of Frames on Ethnic Diversity in Relation to Rurality in the Flemish Written Press (Belgium)
(《种族多样性的增加挑战了乡村田园生活吗?一项关于比利时佛兰芒书面媒体中种族多样性与乡村关系的框架分析》)
Willemien Van Damme, Pascal De Decker, Hans Leinfelder
“It's On All the Time in Our House:” Police Scanners and Everyday Rural Life
(《“它在我们家一直开着”:警用扫描仪与农村日常生活》)
Michael Branch
Amenity Migration and Community Wellbeing in Washington's Kittitas County Post-COVID-19 Pandemic
Alexander Theophilus, Jessica Ulrich-Schad, Courtney Flint, Emma Epperson
Amenity migration in the Intermountain West is a rapidly evolving process that has greatly impacted wellbeing in many rural communities over the past several decades. While the impacts of amenity migration have been discussed through both individual community case studies and cross-community comparative analysis, there is an ongoing need for research that continues to build upon our understanding of amenity migration's effects on individual and community wellbeing. Remote and hybrid work opportunities, expanded during the COVID-19 pandemic, have allowed for an increasing number of people to live part or full-time in highly desirable rural locations, particularly those proximate to larger urban areas. In this paper, we discuss the historical and current trends of amenity migration in Kittitas County, proximate to Seattle, Washington, on the eastern slope of the Cascade Mountains. Drawing upon perspectives shared in 80 interviews with key informants and community members about community wellbeing in three towns, we discuss the implications of amenity migration for the perceived quality of life of both longer-term residents and newer community members. Additionally, the setting and scope of this research allows for comparison between high-amenity rural communities with larger recreation economies, and adjacent less—amenity-based rural communities. Findings indicate that amenity migration continues to evolve and impact community wellbeing, primarily via community cultural changes and socioeconomic and housing inequality. However, there are nuanced geographical and longitudinal differences in the impacts of amenity migration. Additionally, participants perceived an increase in amenity migration patterns and impacts in the years following the COVID-19 pandemic. To conclude, we discuss ongoing and potential initiatives that may help support community wellbeing, as well as possibilities for further improvements in policy and planning to equitably increase the quality of life for all residents.