Beyond Rural-Urban: Keeping up with Changing Realities

Publication language
English
Pages
10pp
Date published
01 Jan 2005
Type
Factsheets and summaries
Keywords
Food and nutrition, Food security, Urban
Organisations
International Food Policy Research Institute

The labels “urban” and “rural” fall far short of capturing the dynamism and diversi- ty of reality. Conjuring up visions of crowded cities and isolated countryside, they suggest separate worlds and ways of living. They mask the many ways urban and rural overlap and intertwine, as well as the variety of livelihood strategies within
urban or rural areas. Imagine, for instance, the diversity of conditions and connections along a continuum from the “very rural” to the “very urban”—from isolated farms to vil- lages and small towns to intermediate cities and regional centers surrounded by farmland to large cities, megacities, and their relentlessly growing peripheries.

 

?Policies built on presumptions of separateness or on traditional notions of urban and rural livelihoods diminish the possibilities for economic growth and poverty reduction. More effective policies will take the diversity of livelihoods along the continuum into account and also appreciate the differences among urban and rural areas and the links between them.
Focusing on the connections between urban and rural areas can help to reframe our understanding of development in these areas. We can see that rural and urban lives and livelihood strategies span rural and urban geographies in integrated and interdependent ways.With better understanding of the current reality of urban and rural areas and the connections between them, policies will better reflect the ways people actually live. Policies will take into account the different livelihood strategies, links, and localities that exist across “urban” and “rural.” And they will be able to promote synergies—such as market exchange—that benefit all, no matter where they live.