From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt

For much of this century, the rural policies of Australian governments were directed at providing a viable social and economic base for rural communities and country towns. Policies which provided the conditions for stable growth in the agricultural economy, together with equitable levels of access...

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Main Authors: Tonts, Matthew, Jones, Roy
Other Authors: Paddison: R
Format: Journal Article
Published: Routledge 1997
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15823
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author Tonts, Matthew
Jones, Roy
author2 Paddison: R
author_facet Paddison: R
Tonts, Matthew
Jones, Roy
author_sort Tonts, Matthew
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description For much of this century, the rural policies of Australian governments were directed at providing a viable social and economic base for rural communities and country towns. Policies which provided the conditions for stable growth in the agricultural economy, together with equitable levels of access to services such as schools, hospitals and public housing, were seen as instrumental in the development of stable rural communities. More recently, however, the process of global economic restructuring, agricultural adjustment, farm amalgamation and rapid technological change, have contributed to the declining socio‐economic viability of many rural areas. This pattern of decline has been compounded over recent years by the emergence of state and federal government policies based upon the principles of ‘neoliberalism’. The emergence of this approach to rural policy has meant that state and federal governments have, increasingly, withdrawn from effective regional development strategies, rationalised the levels of public service provision, and devolved much of the responsibility for community well‐being to the local level. This paper critically reviews the changing governmental approaches to rural development, and reflects upon some of the outcomes of these policy changes in the wheatbelt of Western Australia.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-158232017-09-13T16:09:10Z From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt Tonts, Matthew Jones, Roy Paddison: R For much of this century, the rural policies of Australian governments were directed at providing a viable social and economic base for rural communities and country towns. Policies which provided the conditions for stable growth in the agricultural economy, together with equitable levels of access to services such as schools, hospitals and public housing, were seen as instrumental in the development of stable rural communities. More recently, however, the process of global economic restructuring, agricultural adjustment, farm amalgamation and rapid technological change, have contributed to the declining socio‐economic viability of many rural areas. This pattern of decline has been compounded over recent years by the emergence of state and federal government policies based upon the principles of ‘neoliberalism’. The emergence of this approach to rural policy has meant that state and federal governments have, increasingly, withdrawn from effective regional development strategies, rationalised the levels of public service provision, and devolved much of the responsibility for community well‐being to the local level. This paper critically reviews the changing governmental approaches to rural development, and reflects upon some of the outcomes of these policy changes in the wheatbelt of Western Australia. 1997 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15823 10.1080/13562579708721762 Routledge restricted
spellingShingle Tonts, Matthew
Jones, Roy
From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt
title From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt
title_full From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt
title_fullStr From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt
title_full_unstemmed From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt
title_short From State Paternalism to Neoliberalism in Australian Rural Policy: Perspectives from the Western Australian Wheatbelt
title_sort from state paternalism to neoliberalism in australian rural policy: perspectives from the western australian wheatbelt
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/15823