SCC-IRG Track 2: Overcoming the Rural Data Deficit to Improve Quality of Life and Community Services in Smart & Connected Small Communities
Iowa State University, Ames IA
Investigators
Abstract
Many small and rural communities in the United States are shrinking and evidence shows that this trend is unlikely to be reversed in many places. Previous research on rural decline has focused on observing these changes or promoting uncertain growth strategies to try to revive economic activity and reverse population loss. This project offers a different approach by encouraging communities to manage shrinkage rather than fight against it. The project team calls this approach rural smart shrinkage. The goal is to mitigate the negative effects of population loss on quality of life and community services. The team is developing and testing new educational resources and digital tools to support the implementation of strategies for rural smart shrinkage in a group of Iowa communities. The research team includes faculty and graduate students from the disciplines of architecture, art, community and regional planning, sociology, and statistics and professional staff at the Iowa League of Cities. The research objectives are to develop and test a rural smart shrinkage curriculum and assess its implementation in a group of Iowa towns. The team is using a prototype of a community information ecosystem that will increase small-town capacity for data utilization. Shrinking towns showing signs of decline since 1994 will be paired with similar mentor communities that are also losing population, but which have reported improving perceptions of quality of life in longitudinal polling over the same period. Many small communities experience a rural data deficit, defined as the absence of systematic local data collection and utilization of existing data in their decision making. The project seeks to overcome this deficit by designing new user-friendly methods to collect, analyze, and visualize data. To prepare local leaders to effectively use these new resources, the team is developing curricula to enhance local knowledge and skills in community visioning, project planning, and data analysis. This combination of smart shrinkage strategies, better data utilization, and leadership skills will help small and shrinking rural communities manage population loss and become more resilient. The project builds on strong foundations in three areas: rural demography and quality of life, smart shrinkage in European and American cities, and translational data science. This award reflects NSF's statutory mission and has been deemed worthy of support through evaluation using the Foundation's intellectual merit and broader impacts review criteria.
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