Deck 19: Rural Development

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Question
Which of the following is true about the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)?

A) They have failed to explicitly acknowledge rural poverty.
B) They deal with the complexity of rural poverty through overlapping goals.
C) They are the most successful attempts to deal with food scarcity.
D) They root their development programs in a basic understanding of the urban/rural divide.
E) They took great effort to bring small farmers in as stakeholders.
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Question
The 2008 spike in food prices resulted in which of the following?

A) Political protests against the rising costs of food and oil
B) Food riots
C) Increased livelihoods for most rural communities and farmers
D) Dominance of farmers in economic development
E) All of the above
Question
Which of the following might be recognizable as "rural"?

A) Forests
B) Farmlands
C) Mountain villages
D) Savannas
E) All of the above
Question
Which of the following is true about official development assistance targeting the rural sector?

A) It has continually increased in recent years and will continue to do so in the foreseeable future.
B) While it has increased since the 2008 food crisis, it remains far below past benchmarks.
C) It has stagnated in recent years, fluctuating one or two per cent up or down at most.
D) It has become increasingly tied to performance indicators.
E) It is non-existent.
Question
The 2008 food price crisis was linked to which of the following?

A) Population control measures
B) World Bank restrictions
C) Rapidly rising oil prices
D) Decreasing demand for agricultural products
E) Poor soil quality
Question
For national statistics services, urban populations are distinguished from rural ones based on which threshold levels?

A) Non-agricultural production
B) Population
C) Number of children per household
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
Question
Which of the following is an enduring material feature of "rurality"?

A) A relative abundance of natural capital
B) An objective degree of poverty
C) A durable trend towards urban migration
D) A stable set of class structures
E) An enduring lack of plenty
Question
Agricultural-based countries are where a contribution of agriculture to overall GDP growth is greater than 20 per cent and __________________.

A) an absence of sustained rural poverty
B) a relative balance between rural and urban societies
C) less than a 10 per cent urban migration
D) a strong presence of traditional authority
E) where rural poverty accounts for at least 60 per cent
Question
Which term refers to the social and material capabilities, assets, and activities required for a means of living?

A) Productivity
B) Well-being
C) Livelihood
D) Quality of life
E) Peasantry
Question
What would be the result if it could be shown that the "rural poor" were also "small farmers"?

A) It could be demonstrated that urban growth has come at the expense of rural growth.
B) Growth and equity concerns could be addressed in a single strategy of rural development.
C) Rural livelihoods could be causally linked to diversity.
D) The practice of "sharecropping" could be utilized to share risk.
E) Poverty could be linked to the hierarchical nature of land ownership.
Question
According to Malthus, which of the following was the ultimate constraint against population growth in early nineteenth-century Europe?

A) Insufficient technology
B) Disease
C) Poverty
D) Insufficient agricultural production
E) Land
Question
According to Marx, _____________ powers economic growth?

A) population growth
B) exogenous technological change
C) localized technological change
D) the streamlining of agricultural production
E) intensification
Question
Implementation of the "community development" approach tends to _________________.

A) polarize the social classes
B) accelerate agricultural development
C) create a new and large bureaucracy
D) streamline agricultural development
E) underestimate the importance of national governments
Question
Why was integrated rural development appealing to the World Bank?

A) It was thought to be more effective than piecemeal projects.
B) It ensured that funding would be directed to those who were most in need.
C) It combated the tendency for funding allocation to be politically motivated.
D) It targeted the most vulnerable members of society.
E) Piecemeal development had been successful elsewhere.
Question
Which of the following is true about "high-yielding" varieties of staple crops?

A) They allow farmers to buy seeds on a one-time basis.
B) They perform well under most conditions and are, therefore, indispensable to resource-poor farmers.
C) They are necessary to feed the world.
D) They are outperformed by traditional varieties under the prevailing conditions of most resource-poor farmers.
E) They are largely unavailable in the developing world.
Question
Participatory rural appraisal stresses the importance of which of the following?

A) Allowing everyone to participate in the decision-making process
B) Putting environmental concerns over economic ones
C) Sustainable development initiatives
D) Putting farmers first
E) Input from Northern experts on rural development projects
Question
Chambers's work on the multiple realities of rural poverty shows rural poverty is an outcome of not only financial and nutritional poverty but also ______________.

A) one's exclusion from political and institutional processes
B) one's exclusion from global markets
C) one's relationship to corporate power
D) one's exclusion in accessing people's rights
E) one's exclusion from agricultural technology
Question
Unlike the World Bank's Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers, what does a Sustainable Livelihoods approach do?

A) Focuses only on protecting and promoting subsistence farming
B) Argues that all rural poor are farmers first
C) Promotes industrialization in rural areas
D) Challenges the assumption that all rural poor are farmers
E) Adopts a "farming first" mentality
Question
How do cash crops potentially disrupt traditional gender roles in the Global South?

A) Cash crops require significantly more labour, which falls on women and children.
B) Cash crops create tension within village power structures.
C) While farming is often "women's work," cash crops are often appropriated by men.
D) While farming is a familial enterprise, cash crops are dominated by child labour.
E) Cash crops reinforce traditional gender roles in the Global South.
Question
Why is the gulf between rural and urban experiences widening?

A) Population and wealth grew more concentrated in urban areas
B) Due to the growth of the world population
C) Due to the growth of rurality
D) Wealth concentrated in the richest 1 per cent
E) Rural areas are less developed
Question
Why has the political order struggled to reconcile rural and urban priorities?

A) Globalization
B) Climate change
C) Corruption
D) The very different rural encounter with global challenges
E) Rural areas are less developed
Question
Where does the large majority of extremely poor people live?

A) In cities
B) In rural areas
C) In rural areas as well as in cities
D) Coastal cities
E) Asia
Question
How has development assistance for rural sectors declined?

A) The AFF's share of ODA in 2018 was 5.1 per cent, much less than the 17 per cent share it held in the early 1980s
B) The AFF's share of ODA in 2018 was 17.1 per cent, much less than the 20 per cent share it held in the early 1980s
C) The AFF's share of ODA in 2018 was 5.1 per cent, much less than the 17 per cent share it held in the early 2000s
D) The AFF's share of ODA in 2000 was 5.1 per cent, much less than the 17 per cent share it held in the early 1980s
E) It has not
Question
Which of the following is on outcome of multi-locationality?

A) Blurring the boundaries between rural and urban identities
B) Boosting the importance of remittance income from migrants as a force in rural development
C) Increasing national investment and international development assistance for rural development
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
Question
Rural communities and farmers do not benefit from rising commodity prices because ____________.

A) they do not use technology
B) they should go to big cities
C) the costs of selling outputs are also very high
D) the costs of purchased inputs are not high
E) the costs of purchased inputs are also very high
Question
What is the consequence of our reliance on capital-intensive, high-input, globalized agriculture?

A) Development theories
B) Pressure on soil, water, non-renewable energy sources, and land
C) Globalization
D) Urban poverty
E) Belts of rural poverty
Question
In the wake of the 2008-12 crisis, how does donor policy incoherence affect agricultural trade policy?

A) They have been used only for building infrastructure
B) They have become corrupted
C) It undermines the MNOs efforts to improve smallholder productivity, rural livelihoods, or gender equity
D) It improves smallholder productivity, rural livelihoods, or gender equity but not enough
E) It undermines broader-based efforts to improve smallholder productivity, rural livelihoods, or gender equity
Question
Why are issues about rural development or food security not important to policy agendas?

A) The lack of international agreements
B) Globalization
C) Climate change
D) The abundance of fast wins
E) The lack of easy wins
Question
What are the important issues on policy agendas instead of rural development or food security?

A) International fair trade
B) Labour or trade or to increasingly urgent topics like climate
C) Rural-urban gaps
D) Rurality
E) None of the above
Question
How can the apparently obvious division between rural and urban be described?

A) Amenable
B) As quite ambiguous
C) Equilibrated
D) Advanced
E) Promising
Question
Official development assistance is now more frequently targeted towards rural areas.
Question
It appears that the 2008 food crisis was a fluke and it is not likely to recur.
Question
The SDGs are an example of how rural poverty has been overlooked by development policy.
Question
China and India's grain consumption was a key cause of the 2008 food crisis.
Question
The relative isolation of rurality is a function of its lack of infrastructure.
Question
Recognizing heterogeneity within countries has important implications for equitable rural development and change.
Question
Livelihood analysis is based on the relationship between capital and context.
Question
The first incidence of restructuring rural communities is traced to the onset of the development era.
Question
According to Boserup, the innate "conservatism" of many rural dwellers prevents them from adopting new technologies.
Question
According to Schultz, traditional, small farmers could lead rural development with the right tools.
Question
The "community development" approach guided the US's development assistance programs in the 1950s.
Question
Global data evidences that in some instances "small" farms can be more productive than "large farms."
Question
The Green Revolution was a social movement designed to bring awareness to environmental issues.
Question
Rural reconstruction in pre-independence India demonstrated the possibility of local initiative.
Question
Participatory rural appraisal rejects top-down development strategies.
Question
Participatory rural appraisal is thought to establish strong ties with macro policy-making environments.
Question
The sustainable livelihoods approach to rural poverty reflects the multiple realities of rural poverty.
Question
The sustainable livelihoods approach to rural poverty focuses on "putting farmers first."
Question
The rural poor are all "small farmers."
Question
Just because the rural poor are engaged in farming does not mean they are interested in investing in means to improve their farms with new technologies.
Question
The sustainable livelihoods approach to rural poverty is useful for examining household power dynamics.
Question
The apparently ambiguous categorical divisions between "rural" and "urban" (or "local" and "global") may actually be quite obvious.
Question
National statistical services distinguish an urban area as typically containing a certain non-agricultural production base.
Question
National statistical services often define rural areas against urban areas as simply "not-urban."
Question
World Bank and the Food and Agriculture Organization hesitate to present aggregated data as if "rural" meant the same thing in all places.
Question
The lack of diversity of livelihoods found in rural areas distorts the notions that differentiate the urban from the not-urban.
Question
Rurality can be distinguished in terms of a relative abundance of natural capital.
Question
Rurality cannot be distinguished in terms of a relative isolation
Question
A "livelihood" partly represents the capabilities, assets (including both material and social resources) and activities required for a means of living only if applicable to specific kinds of rurality.
Question
The concept of sustainable livelihoods is particularly relevant to the rural context, where, for example, the seasonal fluctuations of climate drive the viability of different activities.
Question
Livelihood analysis leaves out how different types of capital are combined in a particular context.
Question
Population growth, urbanization, education, global climatie change, and structural adjustment do not play a role in activities geared toward making a secure livelihood.
Question
Discuss some of the responses to the 2008 food crisis.
Question
What are the four enduring material features of rurality?
Question
How does the World Bank categorize "rural worlds"?
Question
Describe the "sustainable livelihoods" approach to rural poverty and discuss its potential shortcomings.
Question
What is unique about Ester Boserup's analysis of rural transformation?
Question
Briefly describe the viewpoints of Thomas Malthus, Karl Marx, and Ester Boserup.
Question
How does Schultz view traditional small farmers and how did this shape rural development at the time?
Question
Briefly describe the two paradigm shifts in rural development thinking over the past 50 years.
Question
Describe the community development approach.
Question
Discuss the "integrated rural development" approach to change.
Question
Discuss the criticisms of the Green Revolution.
Question
What is Participatory Rural Appraisal?
Question
How do Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers impact rural poverty?
Question
Discuss the gender dimensions of household livelihoods.
Question
What are three problems with depicting rural development as synonymous with agricultural development?
Question
Why is it dangerous to equate agricultural development with rural development?
Question
Explain the phenomenon of "multi-locational households" and its implications.
Question
Why was the idea of an unending era of cheap food delusional?
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Deck 19: Rural Development
1
Which of the following is true about the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs)?

A) They have failed to explicitly acknowledge rural poverty.
B) They deal with the complexity of rural poverty through overlapping goals.
C) They are the most successful attempts to deal with food scarcity.
D) They root their development programs in a basic understanding of the urban/rural divide.
E) They took great effort to bring small farmers in as stakeholders.
A
2
The 2008 spike in food prices resulted in which of the following?

A) Political protests against the rising costs of food and oil
B) Food riots
C) Increased livelihoods for most rural communities and farmers
D) Dominance of farmers in economic development
E) All of the above
B
3
Which of the following might be recognizable as "rural"?

A) Forests
B) Farmlands
C) Mountain villages
D) Savannas
E) All of the above
E
4
Which of the following is true about official development assistance targeting the rural sector?

A) It has continually increased in recent years and will continue to do so in the foreseeable future.
B) While it has increased since the 2008 food crisis, it remains far below past benchmarks.
C) It has stagnated in recent years, fluctuating one or two per cent up or down at most.
D) It has become increasingly tied to performance indicators.
E) It is non-existent.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
The 2008 food price crisis was linked to which of the following?

A) Population control measures
B) World Bank restrictions
C) Rapidly rising oil prices
D) Decreasing demand for agricultural products
E) Poor soil quality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
For national statistics services, urban populations are distinguished from rural ones based on which threshold levels?

A) Non-agricultural production
B) Population
C) Number of children per household
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
Which of the following is an enduring material feature of "rurality"?

A) A relative abundance of natural capital
B) An objective degree of poverty
C) A durable trend towards urban migration
D) A stable set of class structures
E) An enduring lack of plenty
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
Agricultural-based countries are where a contribution of agriculture to overall GDP growth is greater than 20 per cent and __________________.

A) an absence of sustained rural poverty
B) a relative balance between rural and urban societies
C) less than a 10 per cent urban migration
D) a strong presence of traditional authority
E) where rural poverty accounts for at least 60 per cent
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
Which term refers to the social and material capabilities, assets, and activities required for a means of living?

A) Productivity
B) Well-being
C) Livelihood
D) Quality of life
E) Peasantry
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
What would be the result if it could be shown that the "rural poor" were also "small farmers"?

A) It could be demonstrated that urban growth has come at the expense of rural growth.
B) Growth and equity concerns could be addressed in a single strategy of rural development.
C) Rural livelihoods could be causally linked to diversity.
D) The practice of "sharecropping" could be utilized to share risk.
E) Poverty could be linked to the hierarchical nature of land ownership.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
According to Malthus, which of the following was the ultimate constraint against population growth in early nineteenth-century Europe?

A) Insufficient technology
B) Disease
C) Poverty
D) Insufficient agricultural production
E) Land
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
According to Marx, _____________ powers economic growth?

A) population growth
B) exogenous technological change
C) localized technological change
D) the streamlining of agricultural production
E) intensification
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
Implementation of the "community development" approach tends to _________________.

A) polarize the social classes
B) accelerate agricultural development
C) create a new and large bureaucracy
D) streamline agricultural development
E) underestimate the importance of national governments
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
Why was integrated rural development appealing to the World Bank?

A) It was thought to be more effective than piecemeal projects.
B) It ensured that funding would be directed to those who were most in need.
C) It combated the tendency for funding allocation to be politically motivated.
D) It targeted the most vulnerable members of society.
E) Piecemeal development had been successful elsewhere.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
Which of the following is true about "high-yielding" varieties of staple crops?

A) They allow farmers to buy seeds on a one-time basis.
B) They perform well under most conditions and are, therefore, indispensable to resource-poor farmers.
C) They are necessary to feed the world.
D) They are outperformed by traditional varieties under the prevailing conditions of most resource-poor farmers.
E) They are largely unavailable in the developing world.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
Participatory rural appraisal stresses the importance of which of the following?

A) Allowing everyone to participate in the decision-making process
B) Putting environmental concerns over economic ones
C) Sustainable development initiatives
D) Putting farmers first
E) Input from Northern experts on rural development projects
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
Chambers's work on the multiple realities of rural poverty shows rural poverty is an outcome of not only financial and nutritional poverty but also ______________.

A) one's exclusion from political and institutional processes
B) one's exclusion from global markets
C) one's relationship to corporate power
D) one's exclusion in accessing people's rights
E) one's exclusion from agricultural technology
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
Unlike the World Bank's Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers, what does a Sustainable Livelihoods approach do?

A) Focuses only on protecting and promoting subsistence farming
B) Argues that all rural poor are farmers first
C) Promotes industrialization in rural areas
D) Challenges the assumption that all rural poor are farmers
E) Adopts a "farming first" mentality
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
How do cash crops potentially disrupt traditional gender roles in the Global South?

A) Cash crops require significantly more labour, which falls on women and children.
B) Cash crops create tension within village power structures.
C) While farming is often "women's work," cash crops are often appropriated by men.
D) While farming is a familial enterprise, cash crops are dominated by child labour.
E) Cash crops reinforce traditional gender roles in the Global South.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
Why is the gulf between rural and urban experiences widening?

A) Population and wealth grew more concentrated in urban areas
B) Due to the growth of the world population
C) Due to the growth of rurality
D) Wealth concentrated in the richest 1 per cent
E) Rural areas are less developed
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
Why has the political order struggled to reconcile rural and urban priorities?

A) Globalization
B) Climate change
C) Corruption
D) The very different rural encounter with global challenges
E) Rural areas are less developed
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Where does the large majority of extremely poor people live?

A) In cities
B) In rural areas
C) In rural areas as well as in cities
D) Coastal cities
E) Asia
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
How has development assistance for rural sectors declined?

A) The AFF's share of ODA in 2018 was 5.1 per cent, much less than the 17 per cent share it held in the early 1980s
B) The AFF's share of ODA in 2018 was 17.1 per cent, much less than the 20 per cent share it held in the early 1980s
C) The AFF's share of ODA in 2018 was 5.1 per cent, much less than the 17 per cent share it held in the early 2000s
D) The AFF's share of ODA in 2000 was 5.1 per cent, much less than the 17 per cent share it held in the early 1980s
E) It has not
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following is on outcome of multi-locationality?

A) Blurring the boundaries between rural and urban identities
B) Boosting the importance of remittance income from migrants as a force in rural development
C) Increasing national investment and international development assistance for rural development
D) Both A and B
E) All of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Rural communities and farmers do not benefit from rising commodity prices because ____________.

A) they do not use technology
B) they should go to big cities
C) the costs of selling outputs are also very high
D) the costs of purchased inputs are not high
E) the costs of purchased inputs are also very high
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
What is the consequence of our reliance on capital-intensive, high-input, globalized agriculture?

A) Development theories
B) Pressure on soil, water, non-renewable energy sources, and land
C) Globalization
D) Urban poverty
E) Belts of rural poverty
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
In the wake of the 2008-12 crisis, how does donor policy incoherence affect agricultural trade policy?

A) They have been used only for building infrastructure
B) They have become corrupted
C) It undermines the MNOs efforts to improve smallholder productivity, rural livelihoods, or gender equity
D) It improves smallholder productivity, rural livelihoods, or gender equity but not enough
E) It undermines broader-based efforts to improve smallholder productivity, rural livelihoods, or gender equity
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Why are issues about rural development or food security not important to policy agendas?

A) The lack of international agreements
B) Globalization
C) Climate change
D) The abundance of fast wins
E) The lack of easy wins
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
What are the important issues on policy agendas instead of rural development or food security?

A) International fair trade
B) Labour or trade or to increasingly urgent topics like climate
C) Rural-urban gaps
D) Rurality
E) None of the above
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
How can the apparently obvious division between rural and urban be described?

A) Amenable
B) As quite ambiguous
C) Equilibrated
D) Advanced
E) Promising
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
Official development assistance is now more frequently targeted towards rural areas.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
It appears that the 2008 food crisis was a fluke and it is not likely to recur.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
The SDGs are an example of how rural poverty has been overlooked by development policy.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
China and India's grain consumption was a key cause of the 2008 food crisis.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
The relative isolation of rurality is a function of its lack of infrastructure.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Recognizing heterogeneity within countries has important implications for equitable rural development and change.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
Livelihood analysis is based on the relationship between capital and context.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
The first incidence of restructuring rural communities is traced to the onset of the development era.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
According to Boserup, the innate "conservatism" of many rural dwellers prevents them from adopting new technologies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
According to Schultz, traditional, small farmers could lead rural development with the right tools.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
The "community development" approach guided the US's development assistance programs in the 1950s.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
Global data evidences that in some instances "small" farms can be more productive than "large farms."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
The Green Revolution was a social movement designed to bring awareness to environmental issues.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Rural reconstruction in pre-independence India demonstrated the possibility of local initiative.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Participatory rural appraisal rejects top-down development strategies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Participatory rural appraisal is thought to establish strong ties with macro policy-making environments.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The sustainable livelihoods approach to rural poverty reflects the multiple realities of rural poverty.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
The sustainable livelihoods approach to rural poverty focuses on "putting farmers first."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
The rural poor are all "small farmers."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Just because the rural poor are engaged in farming does not mean they are interested in investing in means to improve their farms with new technologies.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
51
The sustainable livelihoods approach to rural poverty is useful for examining household power dynamics.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
52
The apparently ambiguous categorical divisions between "rural" and "urban" (or "local" and "global") may actually be quite obvious.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
53
National statistical services distinguish an urban area as typically containing a certain non-agricultural production base.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
54
National statistical services often define rural areas against urban areas as simply "not-urban."
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
55
World Bank and the Food and Agriculture Organization hesitate to present aggregated data as if "rural" meant the same thing in all places.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
56
The lack of diversity of livelihoods found in rural areas distorts the notions that differentiate the urban from the not-urban.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 89 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
57
Rurality can be distinguished in terms of a relative abundance of natural capital.
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58
Rurality cannot be distinguished in terms of a relative isolation
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59
A "livelihood" partly represents the capabilities, assets (including both material and social resources) and activities required for a means of living only if applicable to specific kinds of rurality.
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60
The concept of sustainable livelihoods is particularly relevant to the rural context, where, for example, the seasonal fluctuations of climate drive the viability of different activities.
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61
Livelihood analysis leaves out how different types of capital are combined in a particular context.
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62
Population growth, urbanization, education, global climatie change, and structural adjustment do not play a role in activities geared toward making a secure livelihood.
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63
Discuss some of the responses to the 2008 food crisis.
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64
What are the four enduring material features of rurality?
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65
How does the World Bank categorize "rural worlds"?
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66
Describe the "sustainable livelihoods" approach to rural poverty and discuss its potential shortcomings.
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67
What is unique about Ester Boserup's analysis of rural transformation?
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68
Briefly describe the viewpoints of Thomas Malthus, Karl Marx, and Ester Boserup.
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69
How does Schultz view traditional small farmers and how did this shape rural development at the time?
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70
Briefly describe the two paradigm shifts in rural development thinking over the past 50 years.
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71
Describe the community development approach.
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72
Discuss the "integrated rural development" approach to change.
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73
Discuss the criticisms of the Green Revolution.
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74
What is Participatory Rural Appraisal?
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75
How do Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers impact rural poverty?
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76
Discuss the gender dimensions of household livelihoods.
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77
What are three problems with depicting rural development as synonymous with agricultural development?
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78
Why is it dangerous to equate agricultural development with rural development?
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79
Explain the phenomenon of "multi-locational households" and its implications.
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80
Why was the idea of an unending era of cheap food delusional?
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