History of Rural Sociology
Rural sociology became prominent, during the late industrial revolution, in France, Ireland, Prussia, Scandinavia, and the US. As urban incomes and quality of life rose, a social gap appeared between urban and rural dwellers.
In the 1920s, Edmund deS. Brunner studied some 140 villages as director of the Institute for Social and Religious Research, he reported that as agriculture mechanized, farms were growing larger.
After World War II, modern rural sociology began to appear in France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, and the UK.
Key Topics in Rural Sociology:
See also: List of literature on rural sociology
American Agricultural Economic Association, country life movement, European Society for Rural Sociology, Galpin, Charles J, granger movement, Hibbard, Benjamin, Morrill Act, populist movement, Purnell Act of 1925, report of the commission on country life (1911), Rural Sociological Society, Taylor, Henry, Turner, Jonathan Baldwin, US Department of Agriculture, Warren, George
References