"Culture clash" revisited: Newcomer and longer-term residents' attitudes toward land use, development, and environmental issues in rural communities in the Rocky Mountain West
Md. Smith et Rs. Krannich, "Culture clash" revisited: Newcomer and longer-term residents' attitudes toward land use, development, and environmental issues in rural communities in the Rocky Mountain West, RURAL SOCIO, 65(3), 2000, pp. 396-421
Many rural communities in the Rocky Mountain West with high amenity values
have experienced substantial in-migration in the 1990s. Popular media accou
nts and some social science literature suggest that newcomers have very dif
ferent values than longer-term residents regarding environment, growth, and
development issues, and that these differences are resulting in widespread
social conflict. We evaluate these "culture clash" and "gangplank" hypothe
ses using survey data from three rural communities in the Rocky Mountain We
st that are experiencing amenity-related in-migration. We examine attitudes
about environmental concern, population growth, economic development, and
tourism development. Results indicate that newcomers differ significantly f
rom longer-term rest dents on a number of sociodemographic dimensions, but
either there are no significant attitude differences between the two groups
, or, where difference exist, longer-term residents wish more strongly than
newcomers to limit population growth and development in their communities.
We offer explanations for why the results differ from media accounts and f
rom the earlier research observations and hypotheses.