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P1253814593nfhlw

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Cornelia Butler Flora Charles F' Curtiss Distinguished Professor of Agriculture and Sociology – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: P1253814593nfhlw


1
Rural-Urban Communication and Relationships A
Capitals Approach
Jan L. Flora Professor of Sociology and Extension
Community and Agricultural Sociologist,
ISU floraj_at_iastate.edu
2
Capital
  • Resources invested to create new resources over a
    long time horizon

3
Built Capital
Financial Capital
Natural Capital
Political Capital
Vital economy Healthy ecosystem Social equity
Cultural Capital
Social Capital
Human Capital
4
Convertibility of Capitals
  • To a degree, one capital can be invested to
    create another. For instance,
  • Social capital can be used to create political
    capital the organization of an advocacy group
    can result in a member of that group running for
    political office
  • Financial capital can be used to build human
    capital, as all of us who have financed our
    childrens college can attestor at least hope.

5
Human Capital
  • education
  • skills
  • health
  • self-esteem, self-efficacy
  •   The characteristics and potentials of
    individuals that are determined by the
    intersection of nature (genetics) and nurture
    (determined by social interactions and
    environment)

6
Source L. Eathington, SETA, 2006
7
Human Capital Goal Increased use of the skills,
knowledge and abilities of all local people
  • Identify capacities
  • Enhance capacities
  • Recombine capacities

Community Voices, Columbus Junction
8
Race/Hispanic Origin Iowa Change
19902000
9
White Population Pyramid 2000Iowa
One race only
10
Hispanic Population Pyramid, 2000Iowa
Of any race
11
Natural Capital
  • Air
  • Water
  • Soil
  • Biodiversity
  • Landscape
  • Natural capital provides possibilities and limits
    to human action.

12
Sustainable, healthy ecosystems with multiple and
equitable community benefits
  • Human communities plan and act in concert with
    natural systems
  • Ecosystems are used for multiple community
    benefits for all
  • Those with alternative uses of the ecosystem seek
    common ground
  • All residents have access to natural amenities

13
Rural-urban collaboration to preserve and enhance
natural capital
  • Andirondacks-NYC collaboration on water quality
  • Women, Land, and LegacyWomen landlords in Iowa

14
Results from the Women, Land and
LegacySMListening Sessions
Corrie Bregendahl, NCRCRD Carol Smith, NCRLC
15
Participants
  • 804 women participated
  • Representing 22 Iowa counties
  • Resident farmland owners versus absentee
    landowners
  • Cass County study 19 live a considerable
    distance from the land

16
Results
17
Results
  • Human capital, knowledge and health
  • Farming is a source of good health but also poses
    health risks.
  • Women view knowledge and learning as a way to
    achieve independence.
  • Women support new farmers, young farmers, and
    many farmers on the land.
  • Shared sense of identity (cultural capital)
  • Farming is the source of identify for women. It
    is home, heritage, spirituality, legacy.
  • Women value the family farm and spurn
    industrial control and ownership.

18
Results
  • Environmental issues (natural capital)
  • Women care about the environment and support
    policies that promote conservation through better
    farming practices.
  • Social relationships (social capital)
  • Women want to connect with other women and
    improve their support networks.
  • .

19
Cultural Capital
  • Cultural capital determines how we see the world,
    what we take for granted, what we value, and what
    things we think possible to change.
  • Cosmovision
  • Symbols
  • Ways of knowing
  • Language
  • Ways of acting
  • Definition of what is problematic

20
Cultural CapitalDifferent heritages are
maintained and valued
  • Cultural differences are recognized and valued.
  • Mechanisms to maintain ancestral languages and
    customs are in place
  • Communities are willing to take the time to
    understand and build on different ways of knowing
    and doing.

21
Rural-urban collaboration to preserve and enhance
cultural capital
  • We should look to new immigrants as potential new
    farmers.
  • Agritourism
  • Harrisdale in Cass County

22
Social Capital
  • The interactions among individuals that occur
    with a degree of frequency and comfort. Bonding
    social capital consists of interactions among
    like-minded people and bridging social capital
    consists of interactions among different kinds of
    social groups.
  • mutual trust
  • reciprocity
  • groups (organizations and associations)
  • collective identity
  • sense of shared future
  • working together for institutional change

23
Social Capital
  • Bonding
  • Tight, exclusive networks
  • Strong distinction between insiders and outsiders
  • Single answer focus
  • Bridging
  • Open and flexible networks
  • Permeable and open boundaries
  • Legitimization of alternatives

24
Improved community initiative, responsibility,
and adaptability
  • Shared vision that is developed by all community
    members
  • Building first on internal resources, including
    those of excluded groups
  • Looking for alternative, inclusive ways to
    respond to constant changes
  • Reaching out to others with different experience
    and knowledge
  • Asset-based change
  • Loss of the victim mentality

25
Percent Lacking Convenient Access to a
Supermarket or Supercenter in U.S. Counties, 2000
Starved for Access Life in Rural Americas Food
Deserts By Lois Wright Morton and Troy C.
Blanchard
(Hmong farmer selling to urbanite, farmers
market, Milwaukee, WI)
Central cities and many rural areas share the
common designation of local food deserts.
Building links between farmers and urban dwellers
through farmers markets and other direct food
programs can strengthen bridging social capital
and provide nutritious food to urban and rural
people.
26
PoliticAL Capital
  • Political capital is the ability of a group
    to influence standards, regulations and
    enforcement of those regulations that determine
    the distribution of resources and the ways they
    are used.
  • Organization
  • Connections
  • Voice
  • Power

27
Political CapitalGoal Increased voice and
influence
  • People are organized and work together
  • Excluded people come to know and feel comfortable
    around powerful people
  • The issues of excluded people are accepted as
    part of the political agenda

Community Voices, Sioux City
28
Rural-urban collaboration using political
capital to improve human capital
  • Woodbury County developed a program whereby
  • Farmers were provided subsidies to make the
    transition to organic
  • Public institutions such as schools and
    hospitals are required to buy locally whenever
    feasible
  • This should improve the diet of school
    children, nursing home residents, and hospital
    patients, and perhaps reduce obesity.
  • Is there a role for extension?

29
Financial Capital
  • savings
  • debt capital
  • investment capital
  • tax revenues
  • tax abatements
  • grants
  • Forms of currency used to increase capacity
    of the unit that accesses it. Financial capital
    is often privileged because it is easy to
    measure, and there is a tendency to put other
    capitals into financial capital terms.

30
Appropriately diverse and healthy economies
  • Low rates of poverty, including good jobs with
    benefits
  • Increased business efficiency with the surplus
    generated reinvested in human and built capital
  • Increased business diversity, including new
    enterprises by excluded people
  • Increase in the assets of rural and urban
    residents

31
Rural-urban collaboration in building a sound
economy while we combat global warming
  • Political capitalsending appropriate signals to
    the market and encouraging locally-controlled
    energy firms. Requires rural-urban
    collaboration.
  • Natural capitalmaintaining soil and water
    quality while we build an energy-based
    agriculture.
  • Human and social (institutional)
    capitalstraining scientists and conducting
    research that leads to positive economic
    outcomes. Encouraging entrepreneurship for new
    energy-saving technologies and applications.

32
Built capital
  • Sewers and water systems
  • Buildings
  • Machinery
  • Roads
  • Electronic communication
  • Human-constructed infrastructure used as
    tools for production of other capitals

33
BUILT CAPITAL
  • Physical infrastructure that enhances other
    community capitals because
  • It serves multiple users
  • It links local people together equitably
  • It links local people, institutions and
    businesses to the outside
  • It can be locally maintained and improved
  • It is energy efficient. We need building codes
    that encourage/reward construction of green
    buildings.

34
Built capital Housing Trust Funds
Alternative to urban sprawl
The rehabilitation of this house in Redfield was
completed through a partnership between Dallas
County Local Housing Trust Fund and Region XII
Council of Governments.
or this?
This?
(Photo West Des Moines Comm. Dev. Department.)
35
Built Capital
Financial Capital
Natural Capital
Political Capital
Healthy Ecosystem Vital Economy Social Equity
Cultural Capital
Social Capital
Human Capital
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