[1] Balfour, B., Fortunato, M. W., & Alter, T. R. (2018). The creative fire: An interactional framework for rural arts-based development. Journal of Rural Studies, 63, 229-239.
[2] Bennett, A., Ravikumar, A., &Paltán, H. (2018). The Political Ecology of Oil Palm Company- Community partnerships in the Peruvian Amazon: Deforestation consequences of the privatization of rural development. World Development, 109, 29-41.
[3] Berglund, K., Gaddefors, J., & Lindgren, M. (2016).Provoking identities: entrepreneurship and emerging identity positions in rural development. Entrepreneurship & Regional Development, 28(1-2), 76-96.
[4] Bolton, M. (2018).Using the Arms Trade Treaty to Address Pastoralist Conflict and Wildlife Crime in Kenya’s Marginalized Regions. Addressing Non-State Actors, 10.
[5] DeKeseredy, W. S. (2015). New directions in feminist understandings of rural crime. Journal of rural studies, 39, 180-187.
[6] Dong, B., Zheng, X., &Xie, C. (2016). Security organs as the centre assessing and preventing crime on a tourism destination island: case study of Gulangyu Island. Tourism Tribune, 31(4), 118-126.
[7] Donnermeyer, J. F. (2015). The social organisation of the rural and crime in the United States: Conceptual considerations. Journal of rural studies, 39, 160-170.
[8] Eddie, M., MimbiDr, L., Nembandona, P., &Mtshazi, S. (2018). Mobile Bullying Among Rural South African Students: Examining the Applicability of Existing Theories. The African Journal of Information Systems, 10(2), 1.
[9] Elis, R. J., & Liu, Y. (2018). Human Rights in the Context of Criminal Justice: A Study of Urban Crime. Open Journal of Political Science, 8(03), 305.
[10] Ezeuduji, I. O. (2017). Change management for sub-Saharan Africa's rural tourism development. Current Issues in Tourism, 20(9), 946-959.
[11] Holmes, G. (2016). Conservation crime as political protest. The Routledge international handbook of rural criminology, 309-315.
[12] Ihlanfeldt, K., &Willardsen, K. (2018). Local public services costs and the geography of development: Evidence from florida counties. Journal of Regional Science, 58(1), 5-37.
[13] Lim, S. H. (2018). Does Shale Energy Development Mean More Crime? The Case of the Bakken Oil Boom. Growth and Change, 49(3), 413-441.
[14] Lynch, M. J., Stretesky, P. B., & Long, M. A. (2018). Situational Crime Prevention and the Ecological Regulation of Green Crime: A Review and Discussion. The ANNALS of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, 679(1), 178-196.
[15] Mayer, A., Olson‐Hazboun, S. K., &Malin, S. (2018). Fracking fortunes: economic well‐being and oil and gas development along the urban‐rural continuum. Rural Sociology, 83(3), 532-567.
[16] Rasoolimanesh, S. M., Ringle, C. M., Jaafar, M., &Ramayah, T. (2017). Urban vs. rural destinations: Residents’ perceptions, community participation and support for tourism development. Tourism Management, 60, 147-158.
[17] Rasoolimanesh, S. M., Roldán, J. L., Jaafar, M., & Ramayah, T. (2017). Factors influencing residents’ perceptions toward tourism development: Differences across rural and urban world heritage sites. Journal of Travel Research, 56(6), 760-775.
[18] Rotarou, E. S. (2018). Does Municipal Socioeconomic Development Affect Public Perceptions of Crime? A Multilevel Logistic Regression Analysis. Social Indicators Research, 1-20.
[19] Rotarou, E. S. (2018). Does Municipal Socioeconomic Development Affect Public Perceptions of Crime? A Multilevel Logistic Regression Analysis. Social Indicators Research, 1-20.
[20] Ruddell, R., & Ortiz, N. R. (2015). Boomtown blues: Long-term community perceptions of crime and disorder. American Journal of Criminal Justice, 40 (1), 129-146.
[21] Sameem, S., &Sylwester, K. (2018). Crime during the business cycle: urban–rural differences. Applied Economics, 50(22), 2500-2508.
[22] Sameem, S., &Sylwester, K. (2018). Crime during the business cycle: urban–rural differences. Applied Economics, 50(22), 2500-2508.
[23] Scott, J., & Hogg, R. (2015). Strange and stranger ruralities: Social constructions of rural crime in Australia. Journal of rural studies, 39, 171-179.
[24] Shaw, M. (2016). Smuggling networks to Europe: A spectrum from organised to disorganised crime. Freedom from Fear, 2016(12), 51-56.
[25] Somerville, P., Smith, R., &McElwee, G. (2015). The dark side of the rural idyll: Stories of illegal/illicit economic activity in the UK countryside. Journal of rural studies, 39, 219- 228.
[26] Streimikiene, D., &Bilan, Y. (2015). Review of rural tourism development theories. Transformations in Business & Economics, 14(2), 21-34.
[27] Von Essen, E., & Allen, M. P. (2017).Reconsidering illegal hunting as a crime of dissent: Implication for justice and deliberative uptake. Criminal Law and Philosophy, 11(2), 213-228.
[28] Votruba‐Drzal, E., Miller, P., & Coley, R. L. (2016).Poverty, urbanicity, and children's development of early academic skills. Child Development Perspectives, 10(1), 3-9.
[29] Winkler, R., Deller, S., & Marcouiller, D. (2015). Recreational housing and community development: A triple bottom line approach. Growth and Change, 46(3), 481-500.
[30] Yarwood, R. (2015). Lost and hound: The more-than-human networks of rural policing. Journal of rural studies, 39, 278-286.