Attractiveness of Rural Areas for Young, Educated Women in Post-Industrial Society

2018-02-27
Attractiveness of Rural Areas for Young, Educated Women in Post-Industrial Society

Abstract

 

Most scholars of rural gender studies do not consider the essential changes in rural economy and life styles, defining rural areas as traditional and conservative. Research is still extremely fragmented into new problems facing the female population in rural areas, those arising from the changes in the lifestyle and the diversified income sources typical of post-industrial rural settlements. This article hence identifies several significant changes in economic and social life in rural areas dealing with the differences between the attractiveness of rural areas as living place for women in the industrial society of the 20th century and the post-industrial society of the 21st century. The empirical research presented here proves the relevance of post-industrial theory in a real-world environment by testing the validity of several stereotypical opinions about the motivation to live in Lithuanian rural areas from the position of young well-educated people. The analysis of the opinions of young well-educated women reveals that their motivation is rather different from the perceptions of what was important and motivating for finding good living places; these perceptions have otherwise been pointed out by many gender studies based on the industrial society framework. These findings are a call for implementation of new rural policy measures following the higher incidence of young females as rural entrepreneurs, family farm managers, professionals, and local community leaders.

 

Vidickienė, D. 2017. Attractiveness of Rural Areas for Young, Educated Women in Post-Industrial Society. Eastern European Countryside 23(1):171–190. ISSN 1232-8855. eISSN 2300-8717. DOI: 10.1515/eec-2017-0008 [Arianta; Baidu Scholar; BazHum; Cabell's Directory; CEJSH (The Central European Journal of Social Sciences and Humanities); Clarivate Analytics - Journal Citation Reports/Social Sciences Edition; Clarivate Analytics - Social Sciences Citation Index; Clarivate Analytics - Web of Science; CNKI Scholar (China National Knowledge Infrastructure); CNPIEC; EBSCO (relevant databases); EBSCO Discovery Service; EconBiz; ECONIS; Elsevier - Geobase; Elsevier - SCOPUS; Genamics JournalSeek; Google Scholar; Index Copernicus; J-Gate; JournalGuide; JournalTOCs; KESLI-NDSL (Korean National Discovery for Science Leaders); Microsoft Academic; Naviga (Softweco); POL-index; Primo Central (ExLibris); ProQuest (relevant databases); Publons; ReadCube; Research Papers in Economics (RePEc); SCImago (SJR); Sherpa/RoMEO; Summon (Serials Solutions/ProQuest); TDNet; Ulrich's Periodicals Directory/ulrichsweb; WanFang Data; WorldCat (OCLC)].

 

IMPACT FACTOR 2016: 0.722

CiteScore 2016: 0.61

SCImago Journal Rank (SJR) 2016: 0.347

Source Normalized Impact per Paper (SNIP) 2016: 0.261

 

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