The Rural Review
An online journal produced in conjunction with the Rural Reconciliation Project.
Everhart: Foreign Investment in American Farmland
In The Dark Side of the Balloon: Restrictions on Foreign Investment in US Farmland, Sarah Everhart (Delaware Law) argues that legislators should shift their focus from preventing foreign ownership of US farmland to supporting domestic farmers’ access to farmland.
Brown & Mettler: Rural Politics in the US
In Rural Politics in the United States, authors Trevor E. Brown and Suzanne Mettler (both Government, Cornell University) survey recent literature on rural politics and recommend a broader lens to better understand the impact of place on voters. They discuss the current state of rural politics literature, how to measure place and rurality, the role of public opinion, and recommend a comparative approach for future rural studies.
Ume et al.: Women Smallholders Build An Agroecology Food System
In Women smallholders build an agroecology food system: the construction of empowerment and food sovereignty, Chukwuma Ume, Ernst-August Nuppenau, Stéphanie Domptail (all Agricultural Policy and Market Research, Justus-Liebig University Giessen), and Stefan Wahlen (Consumer Research, Communication and Food Sociology, Justus-Liebig University Giessen) investigate the relation between women smallholder farmers food systems and the global industrialization of agri-food systems.
Roundup: January 30, 2026
A periodic collection of recent research, analysis, and other notable rural items.
Hisey: Conservation Easement Policy in Canada
In Provincial Diffusion, National Acceptance: The Transfer of Conservation Easement Policy in Canada, author Forrest Hisey (Geography, Geomatics, and Environment, University of Toronto) surveys the development of conservation easement (CE) legislation development in Canada to understand the state of CE policy as well as policy diffusion methods leading to this development.
Reading List: Extracting Rural Narratives
A reading list of rural-related literature curated by the Rural Reconciliation Project. This collection explores how national mythmaking extracts and appropriates rural narratives for its own purposes.
Workshop Announcement: Concentrated Power and Rural Democracy
Call for Papers - Concentrated Economic Power and Rural Democracy - Interdisciplinary Workshop Hosted by Jessica Shoemaker and the Rural Reconciliation Project in Lincoln, Nebraska, in spring 2026.
Álvarez-Montoya et al.: Neo-Rurals and Tourism in Southern Europe
In Neo-Rurals and Tourism in the Context of Rural Crisis in Southern Europe. Case Study in the Sierra de Aracena (Andalusia, Spain), authors José Manuel Álvarez-Montoya and Esteban Ruiz-Ballesteros (both Social Anthropology, Psychology and Public Health, Universidad Pablo de Olavide, Spain) explore the influence of neo-rurals and tourism on a rural Spanish community to highlight how an influx of newcomers can benefit rural areas.
Roundup: December 12, 2025
A periodic collection of recent research, analysis, and other notable rural items.
Ryan & Chambers Armstrong: Buying Time
In Buying Time, authors Christopher J. Ryan, Jr. (Indiana Law) and Cassie Chambers Armstrong (Louisville Law) set out to consider how both access to legal representation and extended length of proceedings result in more favorable outcomes for tenants facing eviction proceedings and identify whether the same is true for rural communities.
Pruitt: The Economic Evolution of Newton County, Arkansas
In Consuming Newton County: A Short History, Lisa R. Pruitt (University of California-Davis Law) presents a history of economic evolution and the concomitant tensions between consumerism and conservation in rural Newton County, Arkansas. Tucked away in the Boston Mountains and the home of the Buffalo National River’s headwaters, Newton County is home to 8,000 residents and has long attracted the attention of nature conservation and recreational tourism groups alike.
Resource Highlight: A Legal and Interdisciplinary Research Guide for Rural America
Designed to support the work of law professors, scholars, and students working on issues of law and rurality in the US, this guide organizes otherwise disparate rural materials by source type and offers a comprehensive starting point for research. It may also serve as a helpful classroom resource.
Explore the Rural Review
Brief, objective summaries of new rural research across academic disciplines.
Collections of recent rural scholarship, news, and events.
Guest opinions, essays, research summaries, and other original content.
Original book reviews, creative reading lists, and further resources.
Summaries and announcements from recent programs and workshops.