2012
DOI: 10.1016/j.jrurstud.2012.03.001
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Rural realities in the post-socialist space

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Cited by 40 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…320) . Thereby, the transition paradigm neglected the plurality, heterogeneity and asynchrony of post-socialist experiences and simultaneously portrayed differences as deviances from the West (Kay et al ., 2012;Stenning and Hörschelmann, 2008) . This benchmarking of Western norms positioned post-socialist countries as lagging behind, hence ran counter to postcolonial theory that aims to brush normative standard-settings against the grain .…”
Section: Overcoming the Mutual Silence: Decolonial Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…320) . Thereby, the transition paradigm neglected the plurality, heterogeneity and asynchrony of post-socialist experiences and simultaneously portrayed differences as deviances from the West (Kay et al ., 2012;Stenning and Hörschelmann, 2008) . This benchmarking of Western norms positioned post-socialist countries as lagging behind, hence ran counter to postcolonial theory that aims to brush normative standard-settings against the grain .…”
Section: Overcoming the Mutual Silence: Decolonial Conceptual Frameworkmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to their simultaneous material deprivation and territorial stigmatization, rural areas in post-socialist space are often treated as peripheries per se (Kay et al, 2012). As such a spatial hierarchy does not simply exist, but is actively made, the question arises how, by whom and with what consequences?…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Researchers working on post-socialist and post-industrial spaces have been calling for some time for a closer examination of these everyday experiences and responses to decline and marginalisation Kay et al, 2012;Morris, 2015) and have examined the diversity of strategies adopted to negotiate sociospatial change, both literally in the form of economic formal and informal practices and in terms of constructions of identity and place (Nagy et al, 2016;Hörschelmann and Stenning, 2008). Existing research has identified experiences of loss but also of continuing solidarity, belonging and comfort as examples of everyday resilience (Bonfiglioli, 2014;Morris, 2015) and have also noted more vocal attempts to turn a peripherality into a political resource: in their case study on workers in the Israeli periphery, Cohen and Aharon-Gutman (2014) show how "the broadcasted disempowerment of the periphery" could be turn into a "weapon of the weak" using its peripheral location and lack of alternative local livelihoods as a resource for the mobilisation of citizenship claims (Cohen and Aharon-Gutman, 2014: 598) analysis, based on a case study in post-industrial Estonia, particularly captures the heterogeneity of narratives of peripheralisation through a comparative analysis of generational cohorts, based on "common location in the social and historical process" (Mannheim, 1998: 168).…”
Section: Conceptualising Peripheralisation: Towards a Multiscalar Appmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In this article, we turn to the data on rural ageing from a dynamically changing, yet under‐researched, post‐socialist context (Burholt and Dobbs ; Kay et al ; Scharf et al . ).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%