Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Paul Robbins , Katie Meehan , Hannah Gosnell , Susan J. Gilbertz
ANO 2009
TIPO Artigo
PERIÓDICO Rural Sociology
ISSN 0036-0112
E-ISSN 1549-0831
EDITORA Sage Publications (United States)
DOI 10.1526/003601109789037240
CITAÇÕES 6
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-18
MD5 86c4ea48fde57d52e4356a0747c6ae41

Resumo

A vast and growing interdisciplinary research effort has focused on the rise of the so‐called New West, purportedly the product of regional socioeconomic, political, and ecological upheavals in states like Montana and Colorado. Reviewing the growing research on this problem in sociology, economics, geography, and conservation science, this article identifies four central questions at the core of this diverse scholarship. Our review demonstrates that none of these central questions has generated consensus conclusions and that there is untapped potential for more structurally robust analyses of the drivers and outcomes of rapid change in the region. Indeed, supporting other analyses that have called the consistency of the region into question, our survey suggests the ways in which this region is not unique, but largely reflective of larger scale socioecological forces playing out in similar ways around the postindustrial world. We conclude, therefore, with a series of crucial questions, which may be unanswerable by assuming the 'New West' as a coherent geography.

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