The values and beliefs of ‘rural folk’ as constructed (by both rural and urban residents) as distinct and different, and defined by particular mixes of economic exploitation, land uses, and densities; Halfacree in P. Cloke, M. Goodwin and B. Mooney, eds (2006) suggests a threefold and entwined structure for analysing rurality: rural localities (how places are shaped by spatial practices and processes, often linked to production or consumption); formal representations of rurality (often dominated by hegemonic interests); and everyday lives of the rural (how agents perform, practise, and experience rurality). Try Woods (2010) PHG 34, 6, 835.