Roxby, P. M. Rural Depopulation in England During the Nineteenth Century and After, LXXI (1912), 174–90. (VIII, 3.)
“Rural Depopulation in Germany,” Scient. Amer. Suppl., LXVIII (1908), 243. (VII, 3.)
Smith, J. Russell. North America: Its People and Resources, Development, and the Prospects of the Continent as an Agricultural, Industrial, and Commercial Area (New York, 1925).
One of the best geographical discussions of the relation between country and city. (I, 1, 4; III, 2, 3, 4.)
Vandervelde, E. L’exode rural et le retour aux champs (Paris, 1903). (VIII, 3.)
Waltemath. “Der Kampf gegen die Landflucht und die Slawisierung des platten Landes,” Archiv für Innere Kolonisation, IX (1916–18), 12.
2. As a result of city life new forms of social organization have been developed which are foreign to the country. The family, the neighborhood, the community, the state have become transformed by city needs into new institutions with a different organization and with a different set of functions. The social processes that characterize rural life do not apply in the city. A new moral order has developed which is fast breaking down the precedents of an earlier epoch of civilization.
Bowley, A. L. “Rural Population in England and Wales: A Study of the Change of Density, Occupations, and Ages,” Jour. Royal Stat. Soc., LXXVII (1914), 597–645. (VII, 2; VIII, 2.)
Brunner, Edmund de S. Churches of Distinction in Town and Country (New York, 1923). (VI, 5.)
Busbey, L. W. “Wicked Town and Moral Country,” Unpop. Rev., X (October, 1918), 376–92. (X, 3.)