A rural urban linkage for sustainable livelihood is very important
Answers
Answer:
A basic definition of rural-urban linkages is that they consist of flows (of goods, people, information, finance, waste, information, social relations) across space, linking rural and urban areas. Perhaps a less descriptive definition is of the functional links between sectors (agriculture, industry and services).
Answer:
The classification that divides people into either 'rural' or 'urban' is often used when policies are being developed but is in fact misleading and unhelpful. Links exist between rural and urban locations in the same way that links exist between people and their activities.
These links are not only key components of livelihoods and of local economies, they are also 'engines' that drive economic, social and cultural transformations. Rural-urban interactions include:
Linkages across space (such as flows of people, goods, money, information and wastes), and
Linkages between sectors (for example, between agriculture and services and manufacturing).
Rural-urban interactions can also include 'rural' activities taking place in urban centres (such as urban agriculture) and activities often classified as 'urban' (such as manufacturing and services) taking place in rural settlements.
Our work seeks to:
Improve our understanding of how changing rural-urban interactions affect the livelihoods of low-income and vulnerable groups in both urban and rural settlements
Support the capacity of local institutions and governments to identify the opportunities and constraints for poverty reduction and regional development and to act on them
Help develop a dialogue between national and local governments to ensure a better integration between national macro-economic and sector-specific policies and local initiatives. Linkages at these levels support rural-urban linkages.
What is IIED doing?
Defining rural-urban linkages
This is explored in two special issues of the journal Environment & Urbanization:
Beyond the rural-urban divide (1998), including a guide to the literature on rural-urban interactions (all articles free to download)
Rural-urban transformations (2003) (all articles and a six-page Brief free to download)
Governance, migration and local economic growth in small urban centres
Small urban centres play an increasingly important role in rapidly urbanising nations. They can contribute to local economic growth and development. International migrants' remittances invested in construction and businesses outside the large cities attract internal migrants, and further contribute to processes of urbanisation.
Such rapid transformations often bring increases in inequalities and in environmental damages, so effective and accountable local governance systems are more necessary than ever.
Examples of this work can be found in a series of working papers on Pakistan, Philippines, China and Senegal.
This subject featured in a special issue of Environment and Urbanization: Migration and mobility (2010) (all articles and a six-page Brief free to download)
The role of urban centres in the development of their surrounding rural region, with special attention to agriculture
In many low- and middle-income nations, demand for food by urban households is more important than exports. This is especially true for small-scale family farmers in rural areas and the areas that surround urban settlements (peri-urban).
Urban centres and especially small towns can play an important role in linking rural food producers to urban consumers, but this requires supportive national policies and strategies. At the local level, it requires local governments that have financial and technical capacity and are accountable to their citizens.
This topic is explored in several working papers in our Human Settlements series and especially in two papers:
The urban part of rural development: the role of small and intermediate urban centres in rural and regional development and poverty reduction
Outside the large cities: the demographic importance of small urban centres and large villages in Africa, Asia and Latin America
Migration, mobility and climate change
This is an area of concern for the policy and research communities, and one where we need more evidence. We know that environmental change is likely to become an increasingly important factor in the distribution and mobility of people, but it is not the only one and in many cases it is not the most significant.
Our work aims to gather detailed information on the duration, destination and composition of various migrant flows – this is how we will be able to make sure that policies are fair and are addressing the impacts of climate change in the most effective ways.
This topic is explored in an article in Environment and Urbanization and in working papers on case studies in Senegal and Bolivia. The summary paper 'Not only climate change: mobility, vulnerability and socio-economic transformations in environmentally fragile areas in Bolivia, Senegal and Tanzania' draws on these two case studies and on work in Tanzania.
Additional resources
Between 2012 and 2016 IIED was a partner in the Rurban Africa project led by the University of Copenhagen on the links between cities and rural areas in Ghana, Cameroon and Tanzania.