The problems of providing essential services in a constrained
economic climate, and of conserving the rural environment whilst
protecting rural people, are of immediate importance. This book,
first published in 1979, was the first major piece of published
research on the topic of rural settlement planning. It examines in
detail the history and theory behind key settlement policies, and
their practical application within the British rural planning
system. Using Warwickshire and Devon as two very different case
studies, Paul Cloke measures the outcome of settlement planning and
discusses the wider implications of the 'concentration-dispersal'
debate. This reissue will provide essential background for students
of rural and social geography, and rural sociology and economics.
General
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