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El. knyga: Towards Sustainable Rural Regions in Europe: Exploring Inter-Relationships Between Rural Policies, Farming, Environment, Demographics, Regional Economies and Quality of Life Using System Dynamics

Edited by (University of Aberdeen, Scotland), Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by , Edited by
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The long subtitle specifies the areas of research undertaken by a team of agricultural and rural economists and economists with other specialties, planners, policy advisors, and development specialists, under the auspices of a project (identified as the TOP-MARD project) sponsored by the European Union. Lead editor John M. Bryden (Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute, Oslo; emeritus, U. of Aberdeen, Scotland), the other six editors provide overview essays detailing a new approach to rural development policies and the theory and methodology of studies exploring inter-relationships among multiple significant factors. Sixteen chapters in all offer detailed results of the research project and implications for policy. Annotation ©2011 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

Recenzijos

"Towards Sustainable Rural Regions in Europe is a highly suggested reading for policy-makers and scholars interested in rural development and, more generally, rural areas. The authors and editors view rural development as a whole-embracing phenomenon that touches every aspect of human life." International Journal of the Commons, Constantine Iliopoulos, Agricultural Economics Research Institute, Athens, Greece

List of Figures
xi
List of Tables
xv
Foreword xix
Acknowledgments xxi
1 A New Approach to Multifunctionality, Sustainable Rural Development, and Analysis of Policy Outcomes
1(21)
John M. Bryden
Amaia Arandia
Liam Dunne
Karlheinz Knickel
2 Exploring Inter-Relationships between the Multiple Functions of Farming, the Development of Rural Regions, and Policies: Theory and Methodology
22(30)
John M. Bryden
Thomas Dax
Sophia Efstratoglou
Tom Johnson
Karen Refsgaard
3 Overview of the Regions Studied: A Context Analysis
52(30)
Karen Refsgaard
Arild Spissqy
Atilla Jambor
4 Multifunctionality in Agriculture and Rural Development: An Empirical Analysis Based on Survey Data from Eleven European Regions
82(32)
Karlheinz Knickel
Kerstin Lehmann
Melanie Kroeger
5 Developing and Adapting the POMMARD Model
114(17)
Tom Johnson
Sara Alva Lizarraga
Karen Refsgaard
Thanassos Kampas
Demetris Psaltopoulos
Gemma Frances
6 Future Policy Scenarios
131(18)
Kenneth J. Thomson
John M. Bryden
Demetris Psaltopoulos
7 Farming, Multifunctionality and Regional Development in a Remote Rural Region: Trikala, Greece
149(14)
Sophia Efstratoglou
Demetris Psaltopoulos
Elias Giannakis
Athanasios Kampas
Christos Papadas
8 What Agrarian Policy for an Extensive Agricultural Area: The Case of Bergueda, Spain
163(15)
Lourdes Viladomiu
Gemma Frances
Jordi Rosell
9 Multifunctionality and Development in a Typical Agricultural Region: Bacs Kiskun, Hungary
178(14)
Tibor Ferenczi
Attila Jambor
Krisztina Fodor
10 Rural Development and Multifunctionality in a Region with Unlimited Demand for Labour The Norwegian Case Study
192(22)
Karen Refsgaard
Arild Spissqy
11 The Wetteraukreis in Germany A Metropolitan Countryside Area that Connects the Urban and the Rural
214(15)
Karlheinz Knickel
Susanne Von Muenchhausen
Melanie Kroeger
Holger Bergmann
12 Agriculture and Tourism in a Remote, Sparsely Populated Area Caithness and Sutherland, Scotland, UK
229(13)
Holger Bergmann
Kenneth J. Thomson
13 Comparing the Outcomes of CAP Policy Reform Scenarios: Analysis of POMMARD Results and DEA Analysis
242(33)
Tibor Ferenczi
Kenneth J. Thomson
John M. Bryden
14 Implications for Policy
275(11)
Kenneth J. Thomson
John M. Bryden
15 Accommodating Multifunctionality in Policy Frameworks: Implications for Research
286(16)
Luka Juvancic
Thomas Dax
Karlheinz Knickel
Maria Giuseppina Eboli
16 Multifunctionality, Sustainable Territorial Development and Rural Policies in Europe Some Concluding Reflections
302(19)
John M. Bryden
Sophia Efstratoglou
Tom Johnson
Tibor Ferenczi
Karlheinz Knickel
Karen Refsgaard
Kenneth J. Thomson
Contributors 321(8)
Glossary 329(2)
References 331(18)
Index 349
John M. Bryden is Research Professor with the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute (NILF) in Oslo, President of the International Rural Network, and founding member of the International Comparative Rural Policy research consortium. He is Emeritus Professor of Human Geography at the University of Aberdeen where he formerly co-Directed the Arkleton Centre for Rural Development Research and held the Chair of Human Geography from 1995 to 2004.



Sophia Efstratoglou is Emeritus Professor at the Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Development of the Agricultural University of Athens, Greece.



Tibor Ferenczi was Jean Monnet Professor, and recently independent expert, at Corvinus University of Budapest, Hungary, in the Department of Agricultural Economics and Rural Development.



Karlheinz Knickel was Managing Director of the Institute for Rural Development Research at J W Goethe University Frankfurt and Head of the Department of Sustainable Development, Global Change and Multifunctionality of Rural Areas before joining the Information Directorate in the New Zealand Ministry for the Environment in 2008.



Thomas G. Johnson is the Frank Miller Professor of Agricultural and Applied Economics at the University of Missouri, Columbia, USA. He is also professor in the Harry S Truman School of Public Affairs and a founding member of the International Comparative Rural Policy research consortium. 



Karen Refsgaard is a senior researcher at the Norwegian Agricultural Economics Research Institute in Norway.



Kenneth J. Thomson is Professor Emeritus, University of Aberdeen, UK and Visiting Professor, Countryside & Community Research Institute, University of Gloucestershire, UK.