Lexington Books
Pages: 294
Trim: 6¼ x 9⅜
978-1-4985-2187-1 • Hardback • December 2015 • $133.00 • (£102.00)
978-1-4985-2188-8 • eBook • December 2015 • $126.00 • (£97.00)
J.I. Bakker is the 2014–2015 Stanley Knowles Distinguished Visiting Professor in Public Policy at Brandon University. He is member emeritus of the American Sociological Association and the Rural Sociological Society.
- Introduction: J. I. (“Hans”) Bakker
The Methodology of a New Political Economy: Studying the Global Rural-Urban Matrix- Alessandro Bonanno
Globalization and “Research Nationalism in Rural Sociology- Archibald (“Arch”) Haller and William (“Bill”) Haller
A Rural Sociologist and a Sociologist- Sonya Salamon
An Anthropologist in Rural Sociology- Douglas (“Doug”) Constance
The Doctors of Society: Making a Difference with Rural Sociology- Alex McIntosh
A Privileged Life- Anthony (“Tony”) Fuller
From Part-Time Farming to Multifunctionality: Reflections of a Social Geographer- Ken Bessant
Theorizing Community as Relational Social Life- Tom Sørensen, Robert Kleiner and Andreas Sørensen
Social Psychiatry on the Path of Rural Sociology: A Trip to the Lofoten Islands of Norway- Alexander (“Alex”) Stingl
The Rural Imaginary: Integrated Interdisciplinarity in the Study of the Political BioEconomy- Carol Jenkins
The Insights of Rural Sociologists: My Journey as a Professional Pedagogist- Conclusion: J. I. (“Hans”) Bakker
The New Political Economy Perspective
This book argues persuasively for the importance of rural society in the context of the urban world, together making up a system of historic struggles and transformations. A set of distinguished scholars of rurality review their careers to show how the personal is also the global. The reader will find intellectual connections all the way from the German Historical School to the tradition of Canadian political economy. Altogether, a combination of the world-historical past and the future of the socially-constructed environment.
— Randall Collins, University of Pennsylvania
This elegant volume brings together ten provocative essays by veteran scientists, combining elements of their personal lives with their life of scientific research and writing, under the skilled editorial hand of Prof. Hans Bakker, to advocate for a new perspective to understand the global urban-rural matrix of our contemporary life. They call for an interdisciplinary or transdisciplinary view of Planet Earth, our "shared lifeboat," so that we may more fully grasp and appreciate the interdependent web of existence, and our common destiny.
— John Johnson, Arizona State University