1. How Green is My Valley? Tracking Rural and Urban Environmentalism in the Southern Appalachian Ecoregion.
- Author
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Jones, Robert Emmel, Fly, J. Mark, and Cordell, H. Ken
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTALISM ,ECOLOGICAL regions ,CITY dwellers ,ENVIRONMENTAL protection ,NATIONAL parks & reserves - Abstract
Research on the social bases of environmentalism in the United States has generally found that urban residents are more concerned about the environment than rural residents. Recent research suggests this may no longer be the case, particularly in specific settings or under certain conditions. This paper examines the issue by reviewing recent survey research on rural and urban environmentalism. Tests for significant differences between urban and rural inhabitants of the Southern Appalachion Ecoregion on cognitive and behavioral dimensions of environmentalism are also conducted using data obtained from 1,239 telephone interview. Findings are consistent with previous research showing that younger people, those with higher levels of environmentalism and political liberals generally express higher levels of environmentalism. However, no significant rural-urban differences were found on several indicators of environmentalism. A range of conditions that are rapidly changing the character and composition of the region may help to explain Why the findings do not conform to the general pattern of rural-urban differences. Overall, it appears that environmentalism has broadened its appeal in rural areas, especially in communities located near national and state parks, wildlife refuges, and other outdoor recitation sites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1999
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