This report introduces, with an empirical focus on Sweden, the field of research that emerges when rural research and civil society research intersects. The texts in the report was presented at a conference titled Civil societies of rural areas and smaller towns in 2021. The report is intended as an introduction to current research on this theme and we believe it can be interesting reading for both those active within civil society organisations and those active within authorities, regions and municipalities who relate to rural civil society in their work.
The report opens with a chapter that gives an overview of how civil society research and rural research has developed over time and discusses the need of research in the intersection of these two fields, research that focuses on the civil societies of rural areas. The other chapters present current research on rural civil societies, the research included covers a wide spectrum of different methods and different theoreticial perspectives.
Following the introduction, the report presents research that describes differences and similarities in civil society engagement between urban and rural areas in Sweden, deals with how access to service also can affect trust in institutions and discusses the importance of emotions in relation to civil society engagement and community development. Furthermore, an overall picture of the state of knowledge about social innovation as a response to rural societal challenges is presented, with a particular focus on the role of civil society and its cooperation with other actors.
Based on a study of civil society projects financed with public funds one chapter discusses how these financial resources are transformed into intangible resources for the benefit of the local community. The report also contains chapters that discuss civil society’s alternative educational paths that start from places’ own conditions, social movements for sustainability in the Swedish-Sámi countryside, and a final chapter that discusses how citizenship is reshaped when residents in rural areas and smaller towns increasingly need to rely on civil society’s solutions in order to have access to local everyday services and basic infrastructure.