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529 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. 8 (1993)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0529 and id is 1 raw text is: PREFACE

After reading these articles, I hope you are like the amazed teacher who
asked his student, How many seconds in the year? and was given the
answer, Twelve: January 2nd, February 2nd.. . . This volume is designed
to kill some myths and stretch some views about the tussle that is occurring
in rural America.
Put simply, rural America is shifting to a different paradigm, from geogra-
phy to community. The rustic image of the rugged yeoman working the soil
is fading. Rising is a new image of complex multiplex networks that link
individuals into regional communities that target the world as a market for
their services. This is not happening easily or painlessly, but it is happening.
Rurality used to be agriculture. Society used to be agriculture. Some 200
years ago, 95 percent of the jobs were rural. They were needed to provide
basic sustenance and to support the 5 percent of the jobs that were filled by
lawyers, doctors, politicians, newspaper editors, and other soft-service occu-
pations. Now the percentages are reversed. Less than 5 percent of American
jobs are needed in production agriculture to provide food for the 95 percent
of the nation's people involved in industry, management, and services.
The growth of agricultural productivity has been utterly astounding.
President Lincoln in the 1860s charged a few agriculture scientists to provide
seeds and knowledge to America's farmers. The result has been a concerted
knowledge machine that has conducted research, developed technology, and
extended practice to millions of farmers. In the late 1700s, T. R. Malthus
wondered if we could control science to sustain 1 billion people. Today, 200
years later, world agriculture provides for almost 6 billion people. To a great
degree, it has been rural American agricultural enterprise and its worldwide
technological extension that supports the added 5 billion people.
But the wealth and security from want that agriculture has provided has
undermined rurality. The talent that typified the Grange, the development
of community and conservation to improve production, has been eroded by
the success of agriculture. Expanding metroplexes, extended roads and air
routes, and instantaneous communication became possible because fewer
jobs were needed to work the fields for food. Agriculture's success removed
investment from rural communities and placed it into other ventures that
eroded the very communities that nurtured agriculture.
Now the remaining rural base has awakened to reassert the underlying
value of community, systems of symbiosis. Failing rural towns, fewer jobs,
and out-migration of youths have forced what is left of rural America to
rethink its mission. Two events have already occurred. One is that rural
America no longer considers agriculture, forestry, or mining to be its primary
economic mainstay. Second, energetic business, academic, and government

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