Citation: Le. Swanson, Rural policy and direct local participation: Democracy, inclusiveness, collective agency, and locality-based policy, RURAL SOCIO, 66(1), 2001, pp. 1-21
Citation: Cg. Chan et Gh. Elder, Family influences on the social participation of youth: The effects of parental social involvement and farming, RURAL SOCIO, 66(1), 2001, pp. 22-42
Citation: Jr. Goldberger, Research orientations and sources of influence: Agricultural scientists inthe US land-grant system, RURAL SOCIO, 66(1), 2001, pp. 69-92
Citation: Sg. Perz, From sustainable development to "productive conservation": Forest conservation options and agricultural income and assets in the Brazilian Amazon, RURAL SOCIO, 66(1), 2001, pp. 93-112
Citation: Ag. Mertig et Re. Dunlap, Environmentalism, new social movements, and the new class: A cross-national investigation, RURAL SOCIO, 66(1), 2001, pp. 113-136
Citation: Ag. Mertig, Downstream and upstream ecologists: The people, organizations, and ideas behind the movement, RURAL SOCIO, 66(1), 2001, pp. 149-151
Citation: M. Kimmel et Al. Ferber, "White men are this nation": right-wing militias and the restoration of rural American masculinity, RURAL SOCIO, 65(4), 2000, pp. 582-604
Citation: R. Liepins, Making men: The construction and representation of agriculture-based masculinities in Australia and New Zealand, RURAL SOCIO, 65(4), 2000, pp. 605-620
Citation: R. Woodward, Warrior heroes and little green men: Soldiers, military training, and construction of rural masculinities, RURAL SOCIO, 65(4), 2000, pp. 640-657
Citation: Le. Bloomquist, Caught in the middle: contradictions in the lives of sociologists from working-class backgrounds, RURAL SOCIO, 65(4), 2000, pp. 670-673