1. Berry, B. J. (1976). The counter urbanization process: urban America since 1970 (Vol. 11, pp. 17-30). Beverly Hills, CA: Sage Publications.
2. Biddulph, R. (2015). Limits to mass tourism’s effects in rural peripheries. Annals of Tourism Research, 50, 98-112.
3. Champion, A. G. (1989). Counter urbanization: the changing pace and nature of population de concentration.
4. Chi, G., & Marcouiller, D. W. (2013). In-migration to remote rural regions: The relative impacts of natural amenities and land develop ability. Landscape and Urban Planning, 117, 22-31.
5. Cloke, P. (2003). Knowing ruralities. Country visions, 1-13.
6. Cloke, P. (2006). Conceptualizing rurality. Handbook of rural studies, 18-28.
7. Cloke, P., Milbourne, P., & Widdowfield, R. (2001). Homelessness and rurality: exploring connections in local spaces of rural England. Sociologia Ruralis, 41(4), 438-453.
8. Frouws, J. (1998). The contested redefinition of the countryside. An analysis of rural discourses in the Netherlands. Sociologia Ruralis, 38(1), 54-68.
9. Green, G. P., Deller, S. C., & Marcouiller, D. W. (Eds.). (2005). Amenities and rural development: theory, methods and public policy. Edward Elgar Publishing.
10. Halfacree, K. (2007). Rural space: constructing a three-fold architecture. Handbook of rural studies, 44-62.
11. Halfacree, K. H. (1993). Locality and social representation: space, discourse and alternative definitions of the rural. Journal of Rural Studies, 9(1), 23-37.
12. Halfacree, K. H. (1995). Talking about rurality: social representations of the rural as expressed by residents of six English parishes. Journal of Rural Studies, 11(1), 1-20.
13. Isserman, A. M., Feser, E., & Warren, D. E. (2009). Why some rural places prosper and others do not? International Regional Science Review, 32(3), 300-342.
14. Jones, O. (1995). Lay discourses of the rural: developments and implications for rural studies. Journal of Rural Studies, 11(1), 35-49.
15. Lawrence, M. (1997). Heartlands or neglected geographies? Liminality, power, and the hyperreal rural. Journal of Rural Studies, 13(1), 1-17.
16. Leibert, T., & Wiest, K. (2016). The interplay of gender and migration in Europe's remote and economically weak rural regions: Introduction to a special issue. Journal of Rural Studies, (43), 261-266.
17. Lemke, J. L. (1995). Textual Politics: Discourse and Social Dynamics Taylor & Francis. Inc. Bristol, PA Google Scholar.
18. Marsden, T. (2003). The condition of rural sustainability. Uitgeverij Van Gorcum.
19. Massey, D. B., & Jess, P. M. (1995). A place in the world? Places, cultures and globalization.
20. Meijering, L., van Hoven, B., & Huigen, P. (2007). Constructing ruralities: The case of the Hobbitstee, Netherlands. Journal of Rural Studies, 23(3), 357-366.
21. Mormont, M. (1990). Who is rural? or, how to be rural: towards a sociology of the rural. Rural Restructuring. Global processes and their responses., 21-44.
22. Murdoch, J. (2003). Co-constructing the CHAPTER15 countryside: hybrid networks and the extensive self. Country Visions, 263.
23. Nelson, P. B. (2001). Rural restructuring in the American West: Land use, family and class discourses. Journal of rural studies, 17(4), 395-407.
24. Newby, H. (1980). Green and pleasant land? Social change in rural England. Penguin Books Ltd.
25. Paniagua, A. (2014). Rurality, identity and morality in remote rural areas in northern Spain. Journal of Rural Studies, 35, 49-58.
26. Phillips, M. (1993). Rural gentrification and the processes of class colonisation. Journal of Rural Studies, 9(2), 123-140.
27. Phillips, M., Fish, R., & Agg, J. (2001). Putting together ruralities: towards a symbolic analysis of rurality in the British mass media. Journal of Rural Studies, 17(1), 1-27.
28. Rye, J. F. (2006). Rural youths’ images of the rural. Journal of Rural Studies, 22(4), 409-421.
29. Saugeres, L. (2002). The cultural representation of the farming landscape: masculinity, power and nature. Journal of Rural Studies, 18(4), 373-384.
30. Silva, D. S., Figueiredo, E., Eusebio, C., & Carneiro, M. J. (2016). The countryside is worth a thousand words–Portuguese representations on rural areas. Journal of Rural Studies, 44, 77-88.
31. Smith, D. P. (2002). Extending the temporal and spatial limits of gentrification: a research agenda for population geographers. International Journal of Population Geography, 8(6), 385-394.
32. Stockdale, A., Findlay, A., & Short, D. (2000). The repopulation of rural Scotland: opportunity and threat. Journal of Rural Studies, 16(2), 243-257.
33. Svendsen, G. L. H. (2004). The right to development: construction of a non-agriculturalist discourse of rurality in Denmark. Journal of Rural Studies, 20(1), 79-94.
34. Van Dam, F., Heins, S., & Elbersen, B. S. (2002). Lay discourses of the rural and stated and revealed preferences for rural living. Some evidence of the existence of a rural idyll in the Netherlands. Journal of Rural Studies, 18(4), 461-476.
35. Verheij, R. A. (1996). Explaining urban-rural variations in health: a review of interactions between individual and environment. Social Science & Medicine, 42(6), 923-935.
36. Wilbur, A. (2014). Back-to-the-house? Gender, domesticity and (dis) empowerment among back-to-the-land migrants in Northern Italy. Journal of Rural Studies, 35, 1-10.
37. Woods, M. (2005). Contesting rurality: Politics in the British countryside. Ashgate Publishing Ltd.
38. Woods, M. (2009). Rural geography: blurring boundaries and making connections. Progress in Human Geography, 33(6), 849-858.
Send comment about this article