#rural-vs-modernity

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#remote-work
fromInc
1 week ago
Remote teams

Why Employees Are Giving Up Remote Work and Moving Back to Urban Centers

Remote teams
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Why employees are giving up remote work and moving back to urban centers

The pandemic-induced migration of workers from cities has reversed, with many returning due to tightening return-to-office mandates and evolving labor markets.
Remote teams
fromFast Company
2 days ago

Why employees are giving up remote work and moving back to urban centers

The pandemic-induced migration from cities has reversed, with workers returning to urban areas due to tightening return-to-office mandates and job availability.
Remote teams
fromInc
1 week ago

Why Employees Are Giving Up Remote Work and Moving Back to Urban Centers

The pandemic-induced migration of workers from urban areas is reversing as tightening return-to-office mandates draw employees back to major cities.
Remote teams
fromFast Company
3 weeks ago

Chasing the digital nomad dream? Beware of global current events

Remote work enables location flexibility, but geopolitical instability and safety concerns can quickly override the appeal of working from exotic destinations.
fromThe Conversation
3 days ago

AI's fluency in other languages hides a Western worldview that can mislead users a scholar of Indonesian society explains

The response was in Indonesian but shaped by values that centered individual autonomy over the consensus-building, social harmony and collective family dynamics that tend to matter more in Indonesian social life.
Philosophy
Data science
fromThe Walrus
3 days ago

Data Centres Are on Track to Wreck the Planet. Can We Stop Them? | The Walrus

Hyperscaled data centers consume massive power and water, raising concerns about their environmental impact.
Online Community Development
fromForbes
4 days ago

Rural America's Connectivity: Interstates, Broadband And Livability

The COVID pandemic reversed rural brain drain as telecommuting allowed skilled workers to return for affordability and livability.
OMG science
fromMail Online
5 days ago

Earth's population will peak at 12.4 BILLION in 2070s, experts predict

Earth's population could reach 12.4 billion by the late 2070s, exceeding sustainable limits.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
6 days ago

People who keep their circle small aren't antisocial. They genuinely learned that intimacy and popularity are opposing forces, even though loneliness occasionally shows up as the cost of admission - Silicon Canals

Intimacy and popularity are competing pursuits; small social circles reflect a natural structure of human relationships, not a failure of social development.
Agriculture
fromRealagriculture
6 days ago

A call to leadership

Collaboration in Canadian agriculture is essential to address existential threats and ensure effective policy solutions for food production.
NYC real estate
fromThe Atlantic
6 days ago

How to Keep the Suburbs Tenant-Free

The rise of corporate landlords is reshaping suburban housing, increasing rental options but facing potential legislative challenges.
California
fromAxios
1 week ago

Growth slows across U.S. counties as immigration plummets

International migration fell in 90% of U.S. counties from 2024 to 2025, significantly impacting populous areas.
Real estate
fromFast Company
1 week ago

The housing squeeze is quietly reshaping where Americans can live and work

Finding affordable housing is a significant challenge for various groups of renters in the U.S. economy.
fromPhilosophynow
4 days ago
Philosophy

The Collective City

Islamic philosophy invites plurality and coexistence, emphasizing the importance of dialogue and the acceptance of error in understanding.
fromThe New Yorker
2 weeks ago

China's Shifting Relationship to the Countryside

"You have this kind of alienation between the two generations. The younger ones are trying to get closer to nature, but in a way we might roll our eyes at."
London
Mental health
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

The loneliest people aren't those who lack social skills - they're the ones whose social skills are mismatched to their environment, like someone fluent in a language nobody around them speaks, which is why they can feel completely isolated in a room full of people - Silicon Canals

Loneliness can affect anyone, even those with good social skills, highlighting the importance of meaningful connections over mere social interaction.
Psychology
fromSilicon Canals
1 week ago

The real class divide isn't between rich and poor. It's between people who were taught the world will accommodate them and people who were taught to accommodate the world. Both are right about the world they grew up in. - Silicon Canals

Social fluency stems from early life experiences, not wealth, shaping expectations of how the world responds to individuals.
fromSilicon Canals
3 weeks ago

The worst and best thing about growing up in a small town is the same thing - nobody forgets who you were, which means you spend your 20s trying to escape the version of yourself that 600 people cemented when you were 14, and your 40s realizing that version might have been the most honest one - Silicon Canals

When you grow up in a place where everyone's known you since you were in nappies, you carry around hundreds of versions of yourself. Each person you meet has frozen you at a particular moment - the time you threw up at the school dance, your awkward phase when your voice was breaking, that summer you tried to reinvent yourself and failed spectacularly.
Digital life
Agriculture
fromRealagriculture
2 weeks ago

Policy Brief: Agriculture R&D through a critical infrastructure lens

Canada's public agricultural research infrastructure has declined significantly, with reduced AAFC funding shifting away from essential research site operations and maintenance.
Women in technology
fromRealagriculture
3 weeks ago

Changing conversations highlight evolving role of women in agriculture

The Advancing Women in Agriculture Conference has evolved to address mental health, resiliency, and workplace challenges, reflecting decades of progress in recognizing women's contributions to agriculture.
Online marketing
fromEntrepreneur
3 weeks ago

Your Secret Weapon in a World Starving for Human Connection

Human connection remains the decisive factor in customer trust and purchasing decisions, especially for high-stakes transactions, as automation and AI handle efficiency tasks.
fromArchDaily
3 weeks ago

Mobility Justice: Urban Equity in an Era of Innovation

Every city contains two transportation systems. One is the visible network of roads, rail lines, sidewalks, and bus routes mapped in planning documents. The other is the invisible geography of privilege and exclusion embedded within it: the neighborhoods that received highways instead of parks, the communities whose bus routes were cut, the sidewalks that abruptly end at the edge of a district.
Alternative transportation
History
fromWorld History Encyclopedia
3 weeks ago

What Defines a Civilization?

Civilization requires a writing system, government, food surplus, labor division, and urbanization, with Mesopotamia recognized as the birthplace of civilization due to its early city construction around 5400 BCE.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
3 weeks ago

Depaysement: Mental Health Impacts as the Environment Changes

Dépaysement describes disorientation and alienation from familiar home environments due to environmental change, causing significant mental health impacts that differ from homesickness.
Scala
fromMedium
4 weeks ago

We're still needed - at least for now

AI assistance can guide toward solutions but requires critical evaluation; mixing PlayJsonPlainImplicits resolved JsValue GetResult issues, while ChatGPT's Timestamp conversion suggestion risked unnecessary performance overhead.
Russo-Ukrainian War
fromwww.theguardian.com
4 weeks ago

My village has become deserted': how Russia's war is emptying its rural communities

Russia's war in Ukraine has devastated remote rural villages like Kerchomya, with about one-third of working-age men conscripted, leaving communities depopulated and essential services struggling to function.
Startup companies
fromYahoo Life
1 month ago

My city was filling up with digital nomads, so I converted my family home into a business

Hana Nguyen built a coworking business in Da Nang, Vietnam after discovering the concept through a foreign friend, starting in a hotel space before launching her own venture in her family home.
Miscellaneous
fromFast Company
1 month ago

Rural health's $50 billion tech transformation: Too fast to last

CMS's $50 billion Rural Health Transformation Program faces implementation challenges as states rush to deploy solutions without adequate understanding of rural community needs, risking wasted funds and unintended consequences.
Education
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

When the School Becomes the City: Community-Centered Projects in the Global South

School architecture functions as a catalyst for social transformation by creating multifunctional civic spaces that integrate education, culture, sports, and community engagement within urban territories.
Alternative transportation
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Rural Transportation Hubs: Infrastructure Design, Access, and Regional Mobility

Rural transportation hubs are vital national infrastructure anchors that require distinct architectural and operational models reflecting dispersed populations and freight-dominant needs, not urban replicas.
Philosophy
Society exists as a real entity distinct from individuals, comparable to how organs form a brain; denying society's existence while acknowledging individuals is logically inconsistent.
Digital life
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

The last generation that could be unreachable for an entire Saturday without someone assuming something was wrong didn't have better boundaries - they lived in a world where solitude was a default, not something you had to schedule, defend, and explain - Silicon Canals

Past generations weren't better at disconnecting; they lived in a world where constant availability was technically impossible, not a choice requiring justification.
Left-wing politics
fromSilicon Canals
1 month ago

There's a reason upward mobility feels impossible - I found the infrastructure that ensures it - Silicon Canals

Modern economic infrastructure systematically maintains wealth distribution across generations through credentialing, capital access, and hiring networks rather than rewarding merit and hard work.
UK news
fromwww.bbc.com
1 month ago

The families forced to move hundreds of miles for a home

London councils are relocating hundreds of people to deprived areas in north-east England due to housing shortages, leaving families struggling in unfamiliar towns without jobs or established support systems.
fromwww.theguardian.com
1 month ago

The digital colonization of flyover states': how datacenters are tearing small-town America apart

Amazon has sought a tax abatement that would see its datacenter exempt from paying property taxes for 30 years in exchange for the funding of local schools and infrastructure projects. The people up on city council are, for the most part, good people. They care about the community, [but] they have been taken advantage of by these companies.
Online Community Development
Miscellaneous
fromlrt.lt
1 month ago

From capital to countryside: a growing shift around Vilnius

Residents are leaving Vilnius for nearby districts due to lower housing costs and remote work flexibility, with Vilnius District and Trakai District receiving the most relocations.
Philosophy
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Neighbors, It's Time to Make a Stand

Universal conviction in one's own righteousness divides humanity, while accelerating evolutionary mismatch from our technology-created world remains our shared existential problem.
Real estate
fromThe Atlantic
1 month ago

High-End Construction Really Does Help Everyone

Expanding market-rate and subsidized housing can lower citywide prices by creating cascading vacancies that let lower-income households move into cheaper units.
#rural-economy
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

America Is Fraying, What Comes Next?

The air feels heavier. And the struggles are changing shape. Beyond my office walls, the world is shifting, and my clients sense the tremors. The things they once trusted, global order, democratic norms, and even their own personal safety, no longer feel solid. They feel brittle, as if one strong wind could bring it all down. And what they're sensing isn't imagined.
Relationships
fromThe Nation
2 months ago

At the Doorstep of Tomorrow

The war began the week of my 26th birthday. There was a lightness on that day, something born from what remained of our childhood. Sparks like candy, crackling in our mouths: colorful letters; laughter leaking out through voice notes; hearts adorning our text chats; an abundance of cake. But the days that followed are laid out like burnt matchsticks; once the first one was lit, the flames consumed the rest. The war spared nothing on the calendar; I have had no other birthdays since.
World news
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

Modern Culture Gave Us Everything-But We Still Feel Alone

We've always known we need each other-not just as partners, not just as parents and children, not just as friends who meet for coffee on a Tuesday, but as a community. We long to belong to a community of people where our names are known, our struggles are witnessed, and our absence is felt. Something in us has always understood this, even if we've lost the words for it; even if the culture around us has spent the last century insisting we're better off managing on our own.
Mental health
Arts
from48 hills
2 months ago

His suburban idylls teem with the 'uncanny magic of the exceptionally unexceptional' - 48 hills

Jonathan Crow’s American Realist paintings prioritize mood, composition, and color to evoke intuitive, music-like emotional responses that resist simple verbal definition.
fromNieman Lab
1 month ago

Many people who live in "local news deserts" don't feel deprived of local news, study finds

The industry's attempts to educate consumers "[seem] to largely have gone unheard," Amy Mitchell, then Pew's director of journalism research (she now heads the Center for News, Technology, and Innovation) said in a briefing at the time. "There's really a disconnect there between the public's knowledge and understanding about the industry and how it's functioning, compared with what we see in headlines day in and day out about budget cuts and revenue declines."
Media industry
fromArchitectural Digest
2 months ago

Designing When Your City Is Under Siege

Life doesn't pause for grief or fear. You might be going through something devastating but you're still packing lunches, still driving your kids to baseball practice, still showing up to work. One minute I find myself prepping for a whole home presentation and the next minute I'm checking the news, hoping and praying that no one has been killed on the streets today.
Design
Remodel
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

How Asia Built Schools in 2025: 5 Site-Sourced Rural Projects

Rural school projects prioritized local materials and procurement strategies to ensure durable, climate-resilient buildings against monsoon, high winds, and seismic risks.
Environment
fromFortune
1 month ago

Rural America's $23.6 billion wipeout: the drought that wouldn't quit | Fortune

Persistent Southern Plains drought stems from rising temperatures with repeated La Niña winters, depleted surface and groundwater supplies, and lingering economic impacts.
fromwww.kaltblut-magazine.com
2 months ago

The Rural Cut

The Rural Cut places vintage fashion in Lebanon's Bekaa Valley, among vineyards, open fields, and the animals that inhabit the land. As a Beirut-based stylist, I worked with a fully Lebanese team to create a shoot that feels authentic, where each garment and every frame reflects the textures, history, and rhythm of the rural landscape. Photography by Angele Basile / Instagram: @angelebasile Styling by Rinad Saad / Instagram: @rinaaaaddd
Fashion & style
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Moving Capitals Across Global Contexts: From Strategic Planning to Environmental Necessity

Across history, the relocation of capital cities has often been associated with moments of political rupture, regime change, or symbolic nation-building. From Brasília to Islamabad, new capitals were frequently conceived as instruments of centralized power, territorial control, or ideological projection. In recent decades, however, a different set of drivers has begun to shape these decisions. Rather than security or representation alone, contemporary capital relocations are increasingly tied to structural pressures such as demographic concentration, infrastructural saturation, environmental risk, and long-term resource management.
World news
fromInside Higher Ed | Higher Education News, Events and Jobs
2 months ago

Questions About Youth Perceptions of Access to American Dream

He began by characterizing what I had written as "fascinating," which could have meant a multitude of things coming from a teenager. He then explained that his eighth-grade English class included recent discussions about immigrant pursuits of the American dream. Accordingly, one major takeaway from those conversations with his teacher and peers was that many people come to the U.S. because it is perceived as a land of opportunity.
US politics
US news
fromwww.npr.org
2 months ago

How Americans feel about the economy and their spending habits

A relatively small group of well-off shoppers is driving a large share of consumer spending that sustains solid U.S. economic growth.
Media industry
fromPoynter
1 month ago

When local news disappears, people turn to social media feeds, influencers and gossip - Poynter

Residents in U.S. news deserts rely slightly more on social media and other nonjournalistic sources than on local news organizations for local information.
Relationships
fromSlate Magazine
2 months ago

Help! When People Find Out How I Grew Up, They Treat It Like an Idyllic Lifestyle. It's Much Darker Than That.

Growing up with unreliable utilities and remoteness included beauty alongside hard labor, isolation, limited medical access, and real hazards that make romanticizing off-grid living misleading.
fromCornell Chronicle
2 months ago

Maps offer neighborhood-level insight into American migration | Cornell Chronicle

That local exodus is documented by Cornell-led research that mapped annual moves between U.S. neighborhoods from 2010 to 2019 in detail 4,600 times greater than standard public data. Called MIGRATE, the new, publicly available dataset revealed that most of those displaced remained within the affected county - moves not captured in county-level public migration data aggregated every five years.
Data science
Design
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

Heritage Transformations, New Capital Cities, and Residential Innovations: This Week's Review

Adaptive reuse, landscape integration, and conservation strategies extend the life and cultural relevance of built environments amid material, infrastructural, and geopolitical challenges.
Arts
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 month ago

Is globalisation killing craftsmanship?

The rise of fast, cheap mass production erodes handmade crafts, threatening sustainability, cultural identity, and artisanal skills in a profit-driven global economy.
Real estate
fromArchDaily
2 months ago

What Informality and Incrementality Reveal About Sustainable Urbanism in India

Indian urban growth reveals an invisible order where informal settlements embody layered, enduring urban histories that call for reinterpretation rather than standardized correction.
Digital life
fromComputerWeekly.com
1 month ago

Urban digital twins - missing pieces and emerging divides | Computer Weekly

Digital twins enable broad decision-making across domains but struggle to model human behaviour and complex dynamics; AI can help yet introduces its own challenges.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

We Do Not Have the Luxury to Be Bystanders in a Hybrid World

Meanwhile, signs that the planet's health is worsening are unmistakable. Last year was among the warmest on record globally, with average temperatures far above long-term baselines and heat driving more extreme weather worldwide. In 2025, brutal heatwaves baked much of the Indian subcontinent with temperatures near 48 °C, stressing health systems and agriculture across India and Pakistan. Europe and the Mediterranean faced record wildfires and prolonged heat, forcing tens of thousands to evacuate and worsening drought conditions.
World news
fromThe Salt Lake Tribune
1 month ago

Opinion: Want more babies? Abolish commutes.

The Trump administration really wants Americans to have more kids. President Trump, the self-proclaimed " fertilization president," has called for a new " baby boom." Transportation Secretary Sean Duffy says communities with big families should get more government funds. The on-again-off-again Trump ally Elon Musk, father of at least 14, has warned that "civilization will disappear" if we don't get busy.
US politics
US news
fromwww.housingwire.com
2 months ago

Americans relocate less, favor nearby cities over long-distance moves

Americans are moving less over long distances and increasingly trade nearby cities within the same census region, favoring proximity to family, jobs, and familiar surroundings.
Relationships
fromHuffPost
1 month ago

You Might Be 'Choremancing' Without Even Realizing It

Choremancing blends everyday chores with dating, offering low-pressure, practical ways to test compatibility for busy modern singles.
Mental health
fromPsychology Today
1 month ago

What Does 'Care' Mean During Times of Social Instability?

Care is fluid and adaptive; emotional signals like anger, numbness, and fatigue indicate needs and limits, and individual care requires collective support for survival.
fromPsychology Today
2 months ago

The World Is Progressing and Making Men's Lives Challenging

Psychologists suggest that men-particularly white men, who historically did not face these challenges-are profoundly maladjusted to the highly multicultural society we live in today. Recent statistics suggest that white adult males are not doing well with the many challenging societal perils. Their frustration was on display during the last presidential election, with a significant shift in how young white men voted.
US politics
Agriculture
fromModern Farmer
2 months ago

Forest Farming: Why it Might Make Sense for Your Land - Modern Farmer

Agroforestry integrates small-scale farming with forestry to produce diverse crops, timber, and livestock benefits while working within existing forest ecosystems.
World news
fromwww.aljazeera.com
1 month ago

Prapti in Bangladesh

Prapti Taposhi participated in Bangladesh's 2024 student-led protests that ousted Prime Minister Sheikh Hasina and described memories and hopes for the new government.
Mental health
fromFortune
2 months ago

The midlife crisis is only getting worse in the US | Fortune

Middle-aged Americans experience higher levels of loneliness, depression, and cognitive decline than peers in many other modern nations.
Philosophy
fromArchDaily
1 month ago

When Do Buildings Begin to Matter? Rethinking Heritage in Local Time

Global heritage systems prioritize longevity and material authenticity rooted in European slow-growth models, disadvantaging rapidly changing cities where cultural time operates unevenly.
US politics
fromThe Atlantic
2 months ago

The Long-Term Benefit of Gentrifying Cities

Gentrification can increase economic opportunity for low-income residents, while poorly designed public-housing spending can worsen outcomes.
Agriculture
fromState of the Planet
2 months ago

Student Spotlight: Stuti Banga on India's Food System

Interdisciplinary, systems-level analysis reveals how agricultural policies (e.g., sowing-cycle shifts) can create unintended consequences like stubble burning and increased air pollution.
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