This week’s Future Here Now focuses on a particular type of location: the future of rural places, especially in the U.S. Rural places have been stereotyped as backward and slow to progress for much of the last 200 years, but a closer look at history shows us that most rural places were as deeply impacted by the Industrial Era as cities were.
It’s hard to imagine a more industrial environment than a shaft ore mine, or a early iron furnace, or a modern commercial farm. And the people who moved to rural communities during their industrial height often came from the same countries and cities as the immigrants who powered the massive factories and mills that we associate with the height of the Industrial Era.
So rural people have been hardly static. Given what we know of the Fusion Economy and its demands and opportunities, what does the future of rural look like?
One thing we definitely know: it will look different from its past. Because it always has.
Try it On
Whether you grew up in a village or a city, on a farm or in a subdivision, we all learned assumptions about rural people very early on.
Think for a few minutes about some of the characteristics or assumptions, even stereotypes, that you have learned or encountered about rural people and rural communities. Are you inclined to think of rural people, on the whole, as technologically savvy? Resistant to change? Slow moving? Progressive?
Why do you think you were told that? How much do you think that your assumptions reflect reality?
What benefit might someone else have gotten from getting people like you to hold those kind of beliefs about rural communities?