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The Divides Within, and Between, Urban and Rural America [citylab.com]

 

Note: This is the first in a series of posts that will explore the myths and realities of America’s urban-rural divide. Here, we provide an overview of the series and of the data and methodology used. Future posts will cover population growth, jobs, wages, college graduates, and knowledge workers across America’s urban and rural communities.

The notion of a deep and enduring divide between thriving, affluent, progressive urban areas and declining, impoverished, conservative rural areas has become a central trope—if not the central trope—in American culture today. In May 2017, the Wall Street Journal proclaimed, “Rural America Is the New Inner City.” And ever since Donald Trump was elected president, the narrative of urban revitalization and rural decline has only gained steam.

But the reality is that this narrative fails to capture the full complexity of economic life in America. In fact, parts of rural America are thriving, even as other parts decline; just as parts of urban America continue to lose population and face economic decline as other parts make a comeback.

[For more on this story by Richard Florida, go to https://www.citylab.com/life/2...ural-america/569749/]

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I have lived and worked all over rural America in the Midwest and the only places that I know of that are not dying are in highly resort areas where very well to do people have expensive summer homes like Traverse City. These resort rural towns do not represent the horrific reality for most of us. My high school in rural Michigan saw its last class graduate in 2017. Our child suicide rates are off the charts.  Just 2 weeks ago, another teen took her life in a very small school district (a result of the uncontained and uncontrolled bullying and other childhood adversities of economic distress). School had only been open for a week.   

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