Governing the Rural in Interwar Europe

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1930s
agrarian modernization
Agrarian Question
Agricultural Exodus
agricultural infrastructure development
Agricultural Work Experience
Agro Pontino
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Category=NHD
Economy
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eq_history
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Ethno National Dimension
Europe
European countryside transformation
Feminist Women's Movements
Feminist Women’s Movements
Food production
German Government
Internal Colonization
Interwar
interwar social engineering
King Carol II
Land Reclamation
Massaie Rurali
Municipal Code
Non-family Workers
Peasant Parties
Post-1918 Agrarian Reforms
Public Administration
Reich Food Estate
Rural
Rural Exodus
rural modernization policy case studies
rural policy analysis
Rural Self-government
Rural World
Social Museum
Southern Dobrudja
transnational governance studies
Twentieth Century
Village Museum
Wood Processing Industries
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138696013
  • Weight: 566g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 03 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book examines how rural Europe as a hybrid social and natural environment emerged as a key site of local, national and international governance in the interwar years. The post-war need to secure and intensify food production, to protect contested border areas, to improve rural infrastructure and the economic viability of rural regions and to politically integrate rural populations, gave rise to a variety of schemes aimed at modernizing agriculture and remaking rural society. The volume examines discourses, institutions and practices of rural governance from a transnational perspective, revealing striking commonalities across national and political boundaries. From the village town hall to the headquarters of international organizations, local authorities, government officials and politicians, scientific experts and farmers engaged in debates about the social, political and economic future of rural communities. They sought to respond to both real and imagined concerns over poverty and decline, backwardness and insufficient control, by conceptualizing planning and engineering models that would help foster an ideal rural community and develop an efficient agricultural sector. By examining some of these local, national and international schemes and policies, this volume highlights the hitherto under-researched interaction between policymakers, experts and rural inhabitants in the European countryside of the 1920s and '30s.

Liesbeth van de Grift is Assistant Professor in the History of International Relations at Utrecht University.

Amalia Ribi Forclaz is Assistant Professor in International History at the Graduate Institute for International and Development Studies, Geneva.