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Economics 4.4

Rural Britain's hidden crisis: Why voluntary groups now do the state's job

A new study of rural communities during COVID-19 reveals that government safety nets failed to reach remote areas, forcing charities and local organizations to fill the gaps. For policymakers and business leaders, the finding exposes a structural weakness: rural economies lack the institutional infrastructure to absorb future shocks.

Originaltitel: Rural lives during COVID-19: crisis, resilience and redistributing societal risk

Abstrakt

<p>This paper explores the redistribution and rescaling of societal risk in rural Britain during the COVID-19 pandemic, as one episode of the permacrisis. Drawing on empirical work in three contrasting areas of Scotland and England, we analyse individuals’ experiences of risk and of the institutions which offer them support in times of crisis (markets, state, voluntary and community organisations, and family and friends). Our findings reveal the unequal distribution of societal risk during the pandemic, exacerbated by a legacy of precariatisation and individualisation in the labour market and welfare reforms. Although the state acted to mitigate risk and financial hardship during the lockdown, it was often voluntary and community organisations that filled the gaps left by the inability of the state to reach effectively into rural areas. Social infrastructure and institutional capital are therefore central to the mitigation of vulnerability and societal risk. This raises important questions about the capacity of institutions to provide support in times of crisis to rural citizens. Unless there is societal pooling of risk through such institutions to ensure social protection and that nobody is disadvantaged by where they live, future episodes of the permacrisis are likely to exacerbate inequalities and vulnerabilities in rural communities.</p>

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