This article is about rural development. This theoretical concept encompasses the perspective of neo-endogenous development, i.e. a developmental idea rooted in the assumption that two different types of resources should be utilised side by side: internal resources, unique for a particular community, and external resources, offered by the state, non-governmental organisations and supranational institutions and organisations. The combination of two major types of knowledge plays an important role in this mechanism: so-called external, expert knowledge contributed by experts and representatives of the said institutions and local knowledge, contributed by members of the local community and based on experience and tradition. The main idea of the article is that only the combination of both types of knowledge will guarantee success, i.e. specific change. This process is empirically illustrated by a case study of the reintroduction of the 'Polish red cow' in one of the local administrative districts of the Malopolska voivodeship. This study was conducted in 2005 by a group of sociologists from the Jagiellonian and Lódz Universities within the framework of the CORASON Project.