TY - JOUR
T1 - Busted amidst the Boom
T2 - The Creation of New Insecurities and Inequalities within Pennsylvania's Shale Gas Boomtowns
AU - Schafft, Kai A.
AU - McHenry-Sorber, Erin
AU - Hall, Daniella
AU - Burfoot-Rochford, Ian
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2017 by the Rural Sociological Society
PY - 2018/9
Y1 - 2018/9
N2 - In the middle of the first decade of this century new technological innovations enabled the extraction of natural gas through the use of hydraulic fracturing within gas-bearing shale and other unconventional energy reserves. As a consequence, many places, often in economically lagging rural areas, saw dramatic change as they were socially and economically transformed through rapid natural resource development. Although scholarship on so-called boomtown development has long explored social disruption associated with the sudden influx of workers and rapid economic development, this literature has tended to overlook the ways in which such development can create new poverty in the very midst of economic expansion. This article, through an examination of key informant interviews with low-income residents and human service providers within Pennsylvania's Marcellus Shale region, discusses the contradictory processes by which new insecurity and social exclusions may be created precisely as a consequence of economic expansion associated with rapid natural resource development.
AB - In the middle of the first decade of this century new technological innovations enabled the extraction of natural gas through the use of hydraulic fracturing within gas-bearing shale and other unconventional energy reserves. As a consequence, many places, often in economically lagging rural areas, saw dramatic change as they were socially and economically transformed through rapid natural resource development. Although scholarship on so-called boomtown development has long explored social disruption associated with the sudden influx of workers and rapid economic development, this literature has tended to overlook the ways in which such development can create new poverty in the very midst of economic expansion. This article, through an examination of key informant interviews with low-income residents and human service providers within Pennsylvania's Marcellus Shale region, discusses the contradictory processes by which new insecurity and social exclusions may be created precisely as a consequence of economic expansion associated with rapid natural resource development.
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U2 - 10.1111/ruso.12196
DO - 10.1111/ruso.12196
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85033229164
SN - 0036-0112
VL - 83
SP - 503
EP - 531
JO - Rural Sociology
JF - Rural Sociology
IS - 3
ER -