37 results
Search Results
2. Fixability–Flexibility Relations in Sustainable Territorial Spatial Planning in China: A Review from the Food–Energy–Water Nexus Perspective.
- Author
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Shan, Liping, Zhang, Chuyi, Zhou, Tianxiao, Wu, Yuzhe, Zhang, Liang, and Shan, Jiaming
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REGIONAL development ,URBANIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE development ,DEVELOPING countries ,INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
Territorial spatial planning involves fixability and flexibility in different driving factors related to control and development orientation, and they play an important role in regional sustainable development, especially in developing countries such as China. With rapid urbanisation and industrialisation, China has been impacted by conflicts between development and protection in territorial space. To integrate the contradictions among different territorial spatial planning measures, planners and scholars have started to focus on studies regarding fixability–flexibility relationships and integration. However, the relationship between and integration of fixability and flexibility in territorial spatial planning have yet to be clearly summarised. This paper explores an innovative research direction for the fixability–flexibility relations in territorial spatial planning from a new perspective, the Food–Energy–Water Nexus, which is a dynamic and comprehensive framework for Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) studies. This paper covers the existing research on fixability and flexibility in territorial spatial planning. Moreover, after summarising the conflicts of fixability and flexibility, the dialectical relationship between and the integration of fixability and flexibility are researched. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
3. Reconfiguration of Cultural Resources for Tourism in Urban Villages—A Case Study of Huangpu Ancient Village in Guangzhou.
- Author
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Lin, Liying, Xue, Desheng, and Yu, Yi
- Subjects
URBAN tourism ,CULTURAL property ,HERITAGE tourism ,HISTORIC buildings ,CITIES & towns ,URBAN renewal - Abstract
In the course of China's rapid urbanization, rural places are brought into urban areas, forming semi-urbanization. These semi-urbanized sites suggest a dual urban–rural structure in their form and management. With the slowing down of urbanization, the Chinese government adopted heritage tourism to boost the local economy. Local historic buildings and cultural resources were regenerated and restored in this process. This paper aims at examining the role of heritage tourism in blurring the boundary of rurality and urbanity, boosting local economy, and revitalizing the areas with cultural-led development. In this paper, we analyzed the Huangpu Ancient Village's regeneration process. We argue that the Huangpu Ancient Village integrates local historical and cultural resources to boost the local economy, simultaneously adopting urban renewal and rural revival strategies. This paper contributes to the body of literature addressing villages in urban areas, breaking the duality of urbanity and rurality. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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4. Empirical Investigation of Cultivated Land Green Use Efficiency and Influencing Factors in China, 2000–2020.
- Author
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Yang, Bin, Wang, Ying, Li, Yan, and Mo, Lizi
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LAND use ,URBANIZATION ,AGRICULTURAL development ,ENVIRONMENTAL security ,SUSTAINABLE development ,NATURAL disasters - Abstract
The rapid industrialization and urbanization promote socioeconomic development, but also pose a certain threat to food and ecological security. Cultivated land green use efficiency (CLGUE) is an important indictor to comprehensively reflect the coordinated relationship between cultivated land utilization and ecological protection. Therefore, it is of great practical significance to explore CLGUE to guarantee efficient and sustainable utilization of cultivated land resources. This paper thus conducts an empirical investigation of 31 provinces in mainland China during 2000–2020, aiming to measure the CLGUE level using the Super-SBM model and explore its influencing factors based on panel regression model. The data, which were mainly derived from various statistical yearbooks, together with the reference dataset, were all accurate. The results show that the average CLGUE value in China exhibited a fluctuating upward development trend, with the highest efficiency value of 0.957 in 2020 and the lowest one of 0.853 in 2003. Northeastern China had the highest efficiency value, while Central China had the lowest efficiency value. The overall ranking of CLGUE in the four major regions from high to low is Northeastern, Eastern, Western, and Central China. Spatially, there are significant diversities in CLGUE across China, which means that differentiated measures need to be taken to improve the efficiency based on regional natural conditions and the socioeconomic level. The regression model indicated that the crop diversity index, GDP per capita, urbanization level, effective irrigation rate, and fiscal support for agriculture positively influenced the CLGUE, while the proportion of natural disaster area had a negative impact. The findings had important implications for improving the CLGUE and achieving sustainable agricultural development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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5. Analysis on the synchronized development between urbanization process and eco-efficiency through the sustainability lens.
- Author
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Li, Jiayu, Wei, Xiaoxuan, and Shen, Liyin
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SUSTAINABLE urban development ,SUSTAINABILITY ,URBANIZATION ,CITIES & towns ,SUSTAINABLE development ,COUPLINGS (Gearing) - Abstract
Urbanization and eco-efficiency are two interactive systems, contributing to sustainable urban development jointly. However, the synchronized development between them has not received sufficient attention. In light of this gap, this paper conducts an analysis on seeking the synchronized development between sustainable urbanization and eco-efficiency in the context of China. The aim of this study is to uncover the spatial and temporal performance of the synchronized relationship between urbanization process (UP) and eco-efficiency (EE) in a sample of 255 Chinese cities. To this end, entropy method, super efficiency SBM and coupling coordination degree model are employed to conduct the research analysis, covering the period of 2005 to 2019. The findings of this study reveal that (1) there is about 97% of the surveyed cities that exhibit a moderate level of coupling coordination between urbanization process and eco-efficiency (CC-UE). (2) Spatial disparities in the performance of CC-UE are evident, with cities in South and Southeast China demonstrating better CC-UE performance than their counterparts. However, this disparity has been gradually diminishing in recent years. (3) Local perspective presented an evident spatial autocorrelation within the 255 cities analyzed. These research findings provide valuable insights not only for the policy-makers and practitioners to adopt measures for achieving a synchronized development between urbanization process and eco-efficiency in the Chinese context, but also for further studies on sustainable development in the international context. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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6. Research on Functional Value Estimation and Development Mode of Green Infrastructure Based on Multi-Dimensional Evaluation Model: A Case Study of China.
- Author
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Zhang, Feng, Wang, Xintian, and Liu, Xiaojie
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GREEN infrastructure ,SUSTAINABLE development ,URBANIZATION ,NATURAL resources ,EXTRATERRESTRIAL resources ,CHINA studies - Abstract
With the rapid development of urbanization and industrial economy, urban green space and land resources have been squeezed. The problem of urban ecological environment pollution is becoming increasingly serious. With the concept of sustainable development, green infrastructure construction can not only improve the adverse effects of human activities on the urban ecological environment, it can also deal with the relationship between survival and development, economy and the environment, society, and resources. This paper used different provinces and regions of China as an example to construct a multi-dimensional evaluation model. The multi-function green infrastructure was evaluated quantitatively from three dimensions: economy, society, and ecology. The study results showed that the multifunctional development level of green infrastructure varies among different regions in China due to regional location, economic development, and natural resources. The development mode of green infrastructure in North China, South China, and Northwest China has changed from multi-functional weak and basic coordination to strong and coordinated development. Therefore, the multi-dimensional analysis of green infrastructure is helpful for systematically studying and evaluating the functional value of green infrastructure. It can be used to investigate the development models of green infrastructure in different regions, formulate green infrastructure development strategies, and provide countermeasures and suggestions for relevant government departments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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7. Spatial-Temporal Divergence and Driving Mechanisms of Urban-Rural Sustainable Development: An Empirical Study Based on Provincial Panel Data in China.
- Author
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Chao Wei, Zuo Zhang, Sheng Ye, Mengxi Hong, and Wenwen Wang
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RURAL-urban relations ,SUSTAINABLE development ,URBANIZATION ,CULTURAL maintenance - Abstract
China’s long-standing urban-rural dichotomy has led to a widening gap between urban and rural areas, posing a huge challenge to the sustainable development of Chinese society. This paper adopted the subjective-objective weighting method, coupled coordination degree model, and geographically weighted regression model to conduct urban-rural sustainable development research on 31 provincial administrative regions in China and discussed their spatial-temporal divergence and driving mechanisms during 2007–2018. The results showed that (1) the quality of both rural revitalization and new urbanization improved during the study period, and the gap between them showed a trend of increasing after fluctuations. Both of them had significant spatial and temporal divergence characteristics. (2) The urban-rural coupling coordination degree in China continued to increase during the study period and showed an overall pattern of “high in the east-west and low in the north and southwest”. The changes of relative development type indicated that new urbanization had far surpassed rural revitalization during the study period. (3) The coefficients of driving factors varied significantly in space, showing a hierarchical band distribution. Seven of the eight driving factors showed a strong positive correlation in the vast majority of regions. The results and suggestions of this research can further promote the organic combination of rural revitalization and new urbanization strategy, which is of great practical significance for narrowing the urban-rural gap and realizing sustainable urban-rural development. Likewise, it can be a reference for other developing countries around the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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8. Environmental Policy Simulation and Assessment under Rapid Urbanization: Case Study of Essential Area Policy in Shenzhen, China.
- Author
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Zhe Feng, Jiansheng Wu, Yang Gao, and Jian Peng
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LAND use ,LAND use & the environment ,URBANIZATION ,ENVIRONMENTAL policy ,LANDSCAPES ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The balance between overall economic growth and protection of the environment is an important research topic of urban sustainable development. In 2005, Shenzhen promulgated the regulations, Administrative Regulations of Shenzhen Municipality on the Essential Area for Protecting Ecology [abbreviated as essential area policy (EAP)], which limited development to protect ecology. In order to evaluate the effects of this policy, a computer model was used to simulate land-use change based on a land-use change survey dataset of Shenzhen, a typical rapid urbanization area, under four scenarios. The writers aimed at developing a clear understanding of not only the effects of land protection policies for urban ecosystems but of a well-grounded prospect for regionally coordinated development as well. Five landscape structure metrics were chosen to describe the landscape pattern, including (1) number of patches, (2) mean patch area, (3) landscape shape index, (4) aggregation index, and (5) contagion index. In calculating and comparing these landscape metrics, the results support the conclusion that facing pressure from urban sprawl, agroecological land, water, and other nature-dominated areas shrink to high-altitude regions, and many small landscape patches disappear altogether, especially in the mixed periurban region in each scenario. The rapid growth of construction zones causes landscape fragmentation and renders the shape of the urban landscape more regular and smooth. However, EAP can keep small land patches from being developed into built-up areas; improve the percentage of agroecological land, water, and other nature-dominated areas within protected zones; and impel the relocation of these kinds of land-use from outside to inside the zone. The EAP affects the landscape pattern by increasing the mean area of each patch and the number of patches. If EAP were implemented in 2008, the number of patches and the landscape shape index would be relatively higher, whereas the aggregation and contagion indices would be lower than those resulting from nonimplementation. If EAP were implemented in 2008 but abolished in 2013, the number of patches and the landscape shape index would decrease, while the aggregation and contagion indices would increase. In contrast, if EAP were implemented in 2013, the number of patches and the landscape shape index would increase, while the aggregation and contagion indices would decrease. Delimitation of the boundary of an essential area is a critical factor in designing an effective policy. This paper enables land planners to understand the effects of EAP and highlights its importance as a tool for policymakers and stakeholders. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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9. Understanding China's Urban Rainstorm Waterlogging and Its Potential Governance.
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Kong, Feng, Sun, Shao, Lei, Tianjie, Howard, Guy, Kazak, Jan K., Dąbrowska, Jolanta, and Bednarek, Agnieszka
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RAINSTORMS ,WATERLOGGING (Soils) ,URBAN growth ,METROPOLITAN areas ,SOCIAL participation ,URBAN policy ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Urban rainstorm waterlogging is one of the most important problems in urban development and a comprehensive embodiment of urban diseases. China is facing a severe risk of rainstorm waterlogging disasters, which is affecting sustainable development. Urban rainstorm waterlogging in China is caused by many factors, including natural factors and human factors, such as climate warming, unreasonable urban construction, inadequate upgrading of urban fortification standards, etc. Based on the analysis of the current strategies to deal with urban waterlogging around the world, including an increase in surface infiltration, and a reduction in runoff (and its various impacts), this paper holds that the connotation and goal of these measures are highly consistent with the construction of a sponge city in China. Based on the analysis of the problems, including construction of an urban rainwater recovery system, construction of urban rainwater storage facilities, and construction of data platforms faced by China's sponge city, this paper puts forward the guiding principles of promoting the construction of a sponge city. The guiding principles are to cooperate to deal with climate change and ecological civilization construction, to study the foreign experience, and to unite multiple subjects, integrate multiple elements, design multiple processes, form a joint force, and create an all-round response system to deal with urban rainstorm waterlogging. Then, this paper gives policy recommendations on how to deal with the urban rainstorm waterlogging disasters, which include improving the defense standards, encouraging social participation, popularizing the construction of sponge cities, perfecting the monitoring and early warning system, strengthening the scientific planning of cities, strengthening the ability of dealing with catastrophes in metropolitan areas, the overall planning of cross-regional responses, and enhancing the awareness of decision makers. Finally, this paper expounds the reference significance of urban rainstorm waterlogging control in China to the global audience. This paper explores the significance of comprehensively and scientifically understanding urban rainstorm waterlogging disasters, and provides support for long-term planning and high-quality construction of future safe cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
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10. Decoupling emissions of greenhouse gas, urbanization, energy and income: analysis from the economy of China.
- Author
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Wang, Tianqiong, Riti, Joshua Sunday, and Shu, Yang
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MATHEMATICAL decoupling ,URBANIZATION ,GREENHOUSE gases & the environment ,AIR pollution ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The adoption and ratification of relevant policies, particularly the household enrolment system metamorphosis in China, led to rising urbanization growth. As the leading developing economy, China has experienced a drastic and rapid increase in the rate of urbanization, energy use, economic growth and greenhouse gas (GHG) pollution for the past 30 years. The knowledge of the dynamic interrelationships among these trends has a plethora of implications ranging from demographic, energy, and environmental and sustainable development policies. This study analyzes the role of urbanization in decoupling GHG emissions, energy, and income in China while considering the critical contribution of energy use. As a contribution to the extant body of literature, the present research introduces a new phenomenon called “the environmental urbanization Kuznets curve” (EUKC), which shows that at the early stage of urbanization, the environment degrades however, after a threshold point the technique effects surface and environmental degradation reduces with rise in urbanization. Applying the autoregressive distributed lag model and the vector error correction model, the paper finds the presence of inverted U-shaped curve between urbanization and GHG emission of CO
2 , while the same hypothesis cannot be found between income and GHG emission of CO2 . Energy use in all the models contributes to GHG emission of CO2 . In decoupling greenhouse gas emissions, urbanization, energy, and income, articulated and well-implemented energy and urbanization policies should be considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
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11. Urbanization for rural sustainability – Rethinking China's urbanization strategy.
- Author
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Li, Yuheng, Jia, Linrui, Wu, Wenhao, Yan, Jiayu, and Liu, Yansui
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URBANIZATION , *CITIES & towns , *SUSTAINABLE development , *DEMOGRAPHIC change , *POPULATION geography - Abstract
China's rapid urbanization growth during the past decades which has highly promoted its affluence has induced various challenges for the countryside. The problem of rural decline of quite many villages which are suffering depopulation in turn challenges the urbanization sustainability in China. By way of in-depth historical and literature review, the paper finds distorted urban-rural relationship and the tendency of village decline owing to China's long time urban biased policy. By further investigating China's new-type urbanization strategy, the paper draws concerns about future rural development which is less mentioned in the plan. It calls for ruralization and actions to revitalize the countryside so as to be adapted to China's new-type urbanization plan. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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12. Build a people-oriented urbanization: China's new-type urbanization dream and Anhui model.
- Author
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Chen, Mingxing, Gong, Yinghua, Lu, Dadao, and Ye, Chao
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URBANIZATION ,CITIES & towns ,SUSTAINABLE development ,HOME prices ,COST effectiveness ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
Abstract Since 2014, the Chinese government has initiatednew-type urbanization under the guidance of 'the National New-type Urbanization Plan (2014–2020)', which embarks on a significant transformation of the model of urbanization in post-reform China. To understand the origin and outputs of this policy, this article demonstrates the context of China's new-type urbanization. The paper proposes a conceptual framework of new-type urbanization, which mainly includes four aspects: humanism, people-oriented urbanization; inclusivism, benefits sharing for urban and rural; sustainability, development without sacrifice of resources and environment; and harmonism, coordination. This is followed by an examination of the case of Anhui province, as a pilot province of China's new-type urbanization. Anhui has performed a lot of related work to promote citizenization of peasant workers and has made great progress on the reform of the household registration system. The study found that despite a special emphasis on people-oriented urbanization, the pressures and costs of citizenization of peasant workers are growing fast, accompanied by rising housing prices in cities. This insight suggests there are benefits and costs of promoting China's new-type urbanization. Despite the advantages of institutional innovation, the unexpected side effects such as rapid rising housing prices actually undermine the success of plan implementation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
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13. Predicting multiple land use transitions under rapid urbanization and implications for land management and urban planning: The case of Zhanggong District in central China.
- Author
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Wang, Lingzhi, Pijanowski, Bryan, Yang, Weishi, Zhai, Ruixue, Omrani, Hichem, and Li, Ke
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LAND management , *URBAN planning , *GEOGRAPHIC information systems , *ARTIFICIAL neural networks , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Abstract Numerous machine learning-based land change models have been presented by researchers over the last two decades. To date, however, far less have simulated multiple land use classes and specific land use subclasses at the same time. In some areas of the world, it is important to simulate both of these dynamics to understand fully the drivers and consequences of land change. One important example is the process of urbanization in China, as urban policies have been developed that guide urban expansion, rural protections, and urban subclass development. This paper presents a new model integrating geographic information systems (GIS) with artificial neural networks (ANNs) to predict multiple transitions among land use types and urban subclasses in the Zhanggong District of Ganzhou city in China. We show that the model produces satisfactory goodness of fit values-based on location, quantity and spatial configuration-between simulated and observed land use maps for 2015. Our simulated future maps produced by the model for 2020 and 2025 demonstrate that transitions from farmland and forest to urban will remain the main pathway of urbanization although we predict that the rate will slow after 2025. The goals of urban planning should be aligned with land use planning according to "Combining multiple laws and regulations" in China. Taking into account the current and future land use transitions will enhance the accuracy and timeliness of land use policy making and urban land planning. For the sustainable land use in Zhanggong District, we argue for a strengthened regulation of the land market by government and believe that planning officials should guide the spatial distribution of land supply actively. Furthermore, improving the production, living and ecological functions of land resources are the key points to optimize urban land use functions and the allocation of land resources. We discuss how our model can be adapted to other areas to benefit land use management and urban planning in China. Highlights • GIS and ANNs were used to predict multiple land use transitions and urban subclasses. • A case study demonstrates that the model performs relatively well validated with several measures for goodness of fit. • The simulated maps suggest that farmland and forest are the most common candidates for urban expansion. • The methodology can be adapted to other study areas to benefit land use management and urban planning in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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14. Study on the relationship between urbanization and fine particulate matter (PM2.5) concentration and its implication in China.
- Author
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Wu, Jiansheng, Zheng, Hongqian, Zhe, Feng, Xie, Wudan, and Song, Jing
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URBANIZATION & the environment , *PARTICULATE matter , *AIR pollution , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ENVIRONMENTAL protection - Abstract
Correlation between urbanization and environmental pollution is a major focus of study in geography, environmental science, and economics. Particulate matter is the primary pollutant of air pollution and made up of heavy metal, organic carbon and aromatic hydrocarbon and complicated chemicals. PM 2.5 are fine particulate matter with diameters that are less than 2.5 μm. The aim of this study on the relationship between urbanization and PM 2.5 concentration is to achieve a win-win situation of both economic development and environmental protection, which is of great significance to sustainable development in China. This paper uses PM 2.5 remote sensing data and statistical yearbook data from 2000 to 2011 to build four panel data models within the urbanization-PM 2.5 concentration Environmental Kuznets Curve (EKC) framework. The goal is to find out the correlations between PM 2.5 concentration and economic urbanization, population urbanization, and space urbanization. Furthermore, scenario simulations are set to predict when China will reach inflection point and achieve its target concentration. Results show that the relationship between economic urbanization and PM 2.5 concentration is an inverted N-shaped or inverted U-shaped curve. Most cities in East China have reached the second inflection point of inverted-N curve to step into the win-win stage while many cities in Middle China still need 10–15 years to arrive at the inflection point of the inverted-U curve. Therefore, China is under great pressure to prevent PM 2.5 pollution and pursue more targeted PM 2.5 -reduction policies for air quality improvement. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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15. New‑type urbanization construction, shift-share of employment, and CO2 emissions: evidence from China.
- Author
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Liu, Jiamin, Ma, Xiaoyu, Zhang, Jiaoning, and Zhang, Sisi
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EMPLOYMENT references ,URBANIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE development ,EMPLOYMENT ,PANEL analysis - Abstract
Providing diversified jobs for workers and achieving green development are important goals of the new-type urbanization construction (NTUC) in China. We constructed a difference-in-difference model to investigate the effect of the NTUC on the shift-share of employment (SSE), using panel data of 272 Chinese prefecture-level cities from 2005 to 2019. The relationship between the SSE and CO
2 emissions was explored. The results show that the NTUC effectively promotes the SSE and exhibits the significant regional and industry heterogeneity. In addition, the SSE under the NTUC pilot policy can effectively reduce CO2 emissions and presents the obvious regional and industrial differences. Promoting the industrial structure advancement and improving public services and digital levels can enhance the inhibitory effect of the SSE on CO2 emissions. Meanwhile, the SSE has an inhibitory effect on CO2 emissions in local regions but promotes the CO2 emissions in the neighboring regions. Finally, these findings provide an important decision-making reference for restructure employment and reduce CO2 emissions during the period of urban transformation and development. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2023
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16. Rural population change in China: Spatial differences, driving forces and policy implications.
- Author
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Liu, Zhen, Liu, Shenghe, Jin, Haoran, and Qi, Wei
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RURAL population ,DEMOGRAPHIC change ,URBANIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE development ,POPULATION geography - Abstract
With the fast process of urbanization, the size of the rural population in China has changed greatly in the past few decades. This paper analyzes the trend and spatial differences of rural population change and the driving forces of this process. The main findings are summarized as follows. First, the total rural population decreased after 1995, and the size and rate of decrease follow an accelerating trend. Second, the rural population change has obvious spatial differences: some regions experience dramatic rural population decline, while others experience growth. Third, the spatial difference of rural population change is closely related to economic factors, including the per capita GDP, urbanization level, and noneconomic factors, including the rural population size and fertility level. According to our findings, we suggest that the government pay more attention to rural population change and its impacts and that narrowing the regional development gap may be the most effective way to promote sustainable development of rural areas in less developed regions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
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17. Assessing the impact of green finance and urbanization on the tourism industry—an empirical study in China.
- Author
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Ip, Yunkit, Iqbal, Wasim, Du, Lijie, and Akhtar, Nadeem
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TOURISM ,SUSTAINABLE development ,TOURISM impact ,EMPIRICAL research ,SUSTAINABILITY ,URBANIZATION ,GREEN business - Abstract
There is a dearth of empirical studies looking at the link between green economic development and tourism in quantifiable terms. Using panel data from China's 30 provinces from 2005 to 2018, this study investigates the impact of green finance on China's tourism industry. Using renewable energy, income per capita, carbon emissions, and urbanizations as explanatory factors is also utilized. According to estimation, the findings reveal that green finance substantially impacts the tourism business. This positive effect is more pronounced in provinces where economic and social conditions are better, thus boosting the region's tourism industry. The same holds for income per capita, renewable energy, and environmental factors. In addition, urbanization has a negligible effect on the variable being studied. A further way to boost the growth of tourism is through the use of green finance. The empirical findings can benefit China's green financial planning and environmental sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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18. Spatiotemporal Analysis of the Coupling Coordination Degree between Haze Disaster and Urbanization Systems in China from 2000 to 2020.
- Author
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Ji, Jianwan, Tang, Zhanzhong, Wang, Litao, Liu, Wenliang, Shifaw, Eshetu, Zhang, Weiwei, and Guo, Bing
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HAZE ,REGIONAL development ,URBANIZATION ,REMOTE sensing ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Quantitative evaluation of the coupling coordination degree (CCD) between regional haze the disaster risk index (HRI) and urbanization development index level (UDI) is of great significance for the realization of regional sustainable development goals. Given the lack of the combination of remote sensing and statistical data to evaluate the CCD between two systems, the Chinese mainland's 31 provinces and autonomous regions were taken to evaluate their HRI and UDI by building index systems. Then, an entropy method and one improved coupling coordination model were used to calculate and analyze the spatiotemporal characteristics of CCD between HRI and UDI during 2000–2020. The results showed that: (1) From 2000 to 2020, the value of HRI in China showed a "W" type change trend with its value increased from 0.7041 in 2000 to 0.8859 in 2020, indicating that haze pollution level showed a fluctuating downward trend; (2) From 2000 to 2020, China's UDI values showed a gradual upward trend with its value increased from 0.1647 in 2000 to 0.4640 in 2020, with an average annual growth rate of 8.63%; (3) From 2000 to 2020, CCD values between HRI and UDI showed a fluctuating upward trend with its value increased from 0.5374 in 2000 to 0.7781 in 2020, with an average annual growth rate of 2.13%; the overall level of China's CCD had raised from low coordination to moderate coordination, and eastern coastal provinces had higher CCD values, while those of central and western provinces had lower CCD values; (4) HRI, UDI and CCD could be well fitted with the R
2 of 0.9869. Specifically, UDI had a higher contribution to improving the CCD than the HRI. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2022
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19. Assessment on the Urbanization Quality of China's Main Grain-Producing Areas under the SDGs.
- Author
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Geng, Fengjuan, Zhang, Jing, Miao, Changhong, Shang, Wenying, and Yuan, Liuyang
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URBANIZATION ,URBAN agriculture ,AGRICULTURAL development ,REGIONAL differences ,ENVIRONMENTAL quality ,ECONOMIC efficiency ,FOOD security ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
The Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by the United Nations in 2015 guide the important direction of high-quality urbanization in China's main grain-producing areas (MGPAs), and improving the quality of urbanization is also crucial to achieve the SDGs. China's MGPAs not only undertake the task of promoting urbanization but also of ensuring food security. The establishment of an index system based on SDGs can more effectively measure the urbanization quality of MGPAs. For the specific targets of the SDGs, this study established two sets of multidimensional indicator systems, whether including the goals of food and agriculture, and tracked the progress toward improving urbanization quality of China's MGPAs, including 128 prefecture-level cities, during 2010–2018. We found that the comprehensive urbanization quality and the index of economic efficiency, urbanization level, and environmental quality showed an upward trend with significant regional differences and spatial agglomeration distributions, but the level of agricultural development and urban–rural co-ordination have declined in recent years; the ranking and distribution of urbanization quality, including agricultural development, varied significantly, and the number of cities belonging to the good co-ordination mode decreased as some cities changed to a lower level; and urbanization that does not sacrifice the agricultural capabilities of MGPAs could improve urbanization quality and implement the SDGs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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20. Sustainable urbanization in China: A comprehensive literature review.
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Tan, Yongtao, Xu, Hui, and Zhang, Xiaoling
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SUSTAINABLE development , *URBANIZATION , *URBAN sociology , *RURAL sociology , *CULTURAL industries - Abstract
Over the last couple of decades, urban areas around the world have been engaged in increasing initiatives, practices and experiments with a view to achieving social, economic and environmental sustainability. Echoing these movements, sustainable urbanization has entered many policy agendas. In practice, various aspects including eco-environmental protection, land development, housing, policy, population growth and migration and energy utilization have been noted and discussed by different scholars. In the context of China, these terms/keywords are found in studies across different scales and types of cities, each of which would have implications for our understanding of theory relating to sustainable urbanization. In response, this paper reports on a comprehensive literature review of these studies of sustainable urbanization, and further explores three key areas including evaluation, innovative solutions and engagement of all stakeholders that will move forward sustainable urbanization process across cities in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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21. Urban land use change and regional access: A case study in Beijing, China.
- Author
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Deng, Yu and Srinivasan, Sumeeta
- Subjects
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URBAN land use , *TRAFFIC congestion , *AIR pollution , *URBANIZATION , *SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
In the recent past Beijing has experienced rapid development. This growth has been accompanied by many problems including traffic congestion and air pollution. Understanding what stimulates urban growth is important for sustainable development in the coming years. In this paper, we first estimate a binary auto-logistic model of land use change, using physical and socioeconomic characteristics of the location and its access to major centers within the city as predictors. We find that variables determining regional access, like time distance to the city center, the Central Business District (CBD), industrial centers, employment centers, and the transportation system, significantly impact urban land conversion. By using measures of access to predict land use change we believe that we can better understand the planning implications of urban growth not only in Beijing but other rapidly developing cities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
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22. Dynamic variations in ecosystem service value and sustainability of urban system: A case study for Tianjin city, China.
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Xue, Minggao and Luo, Yangmei
- Subjects
- *
ECOSYSTEM services , *SUSTAINABLE development , *INDUSTRIALIZATION , *URBANIZATION , *ENVIRONMENTAL impact analysis , *URBAN density - Abstract
Rapid urbanization and industrialization in China have seriously threatened the ecosystem and urban sustainability. This paper estimated the dynamic variations of ecosystem service value (ESV) in response to changes of land use/land cover (LULC) under rapid urbanization, and it analyzed their impacts on sustainability of urban system. Tianjin, the largest coastal city in China, was selected as the study area. The total ESV of Tianjin was approximately 8791.86 million Yuan in 2003, 7948.04 million Yuan in 2007, and 8378.53 million Yuan in 2011. By taking the total dynamic ESV as one of the key factors, we calculated the indexes of urban sustainability from 2003 to 2011. It was found that the dynamic variations of ESV in response to LULC changes had significant impacts on the sustainability of urban system. Therefore, in order to increase the capacity for urban sustainable development, there is an urgent need to lighten the heavy burden on the ecosystem through rational land use management during rapid urbanization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. Trade openness and urbanization impact on renewable and non-renewable energy consumption in China.
- Author
-
han, Jiabin, Zeeshan, Muhammad, Ullah, Irfan, Rehman, Alam, and Afridi, Fakhr E Alam
- Subjects
RENEWABLE energy sources ,URBANIZATION ,QUANTILE regression ,FREE trade ,SUSTAINABLE development ,ENERGY consumption - Abstract
China has witnessed significant growth in trade through vide range trade liberalization strategies and urbanization has also been entered in advanced stage. Based on these dynamics, how much energy consumption of both renewable and none renewable account for energy consumption in whole system is a point of higher attention for the researchers. To understand this salient emerging debatable concern, we investigate the impact of trade openness and urbanization effect on renewable and non-renewable energy consumption in China for the period 1990–2018. We apply the quantile regression technique for the analysis; our results show that trade significantly increases the non-renewable energy consumption in all quintiles while partially increasing renewable energy consumption. This shows that trade activities in production and export commodities heavily rely on non-renewable energy inputs instead of renewable energy inputs. Urbanization affects non-renewable energy consumption only in three quintiles, while its effect is insignificant in most of the quintiles. Similarly, urbanization does not affect renewable energy consumption as in almost all quantiles the coefficients are statistically insignificant. This implies that urbanization is one of the determinants of energy consumption in China. The empirical findings of this study suggest some policy recommendations; first, the government needs to implement certain regulations while expanding trade to minimize the negative effect of non-renewable energy consumption; besides government should provide incentives to industrial units and traders for using renewable energy which may help to attain long term sustainable development goals. The government should also put certain limitations on population moving from rural to urban destinations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Application of a hybrid Entropy–McKinsey Matrix method in evaluating sustainable urbanization: A China case study.
- Author
-
Shen, Liyin, Zhou, Jingyang, Skitmore, Martin, and Xia, Bo
- Subjects
- *
URBANIZATION , *SUSTAINABLE development , *URBAN policy , *DECISION making in economic policy , *MATRIX method (Indexing) , *LOCAL government - Abstract
Although urbanization can promote social and economic development, it can also cause various problems. As the key decision makers of urbanization, local governments should be able to evaluate urbanization performance, summarize experiences, and find problems caused by urbanization. This paper introduces a hybrid Entropy–McKinsey Matrix method for evaluating sustainable urbanization. The McKinsey Matrix is commonly referred to as the GE Matrix. The values of a development index (DI) and coordination index (CI) are calculated by employing the Entropy method and are used as a basis for constructing a GE Matrix. The matrix can assist in assessing sustainable urbanization performance by locating the urbanization state point. A case study of the city of Jinan in China demonstrates the process of using the evaluation method. The case study reveals that the method is an effective tool in helping policy makers understand the performance of urban sustainability and therefore formulate suitable strategies for guiding urbanization toward better sustainability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Examining the effectiveness of indicators for guiding sustainable urbanization in China.
- Author
-
Shen, Liyin and Zhou, Jingyang
- Subjects
- *
URBANIZATION , *SUSTAINABLE development , *ECONOMIC indicators , *DECISION making ,CHINESE politics & government - Abstract
The Chinese government is a promoting sustainable urbanization process to develop future cities, and various indicator systems have been introduced for guiding the sustainable urbanization practice. This paper examines the effectiveness of these existing indicator systems introduced in China. Nine sample indicator systems were collected and compared. Principal criteria selected to analyze the effectiveness of the nine samples was based on a literature review. This study reveals that the existing indicator systems have limitations for guiding sustainable urbanization practice and the differences between the various indicator systems present barriers for their effective application. It is found that no official department in China supervises the application of these indicators. The lack of a systematic method for establishing indicators is considered as a major reason for contributing to the limited effectiveness of these established indicators. There is a need to develop an effective method to supervise decision makers to establish and select effective indicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Identifying risk factors of urban-rural conflict in urbanization: A case of China.
- Author
-
Yu, Ann T.W., Wu, Yuzhe, Zheng, Bibo, Zhang, Xiaoling, and Shen, Liyin
- Subjects
- *
LAND resource , *URBANIZATION , *CONFLICT management , *BRAINSTORMING - Abstract
Urban and rural areas are two different yet coexisting systems. Developing countries such as China have been undergoing a rapid urbanization process. However, urbanization often causes competition for land resources between urban and rural areas, and such competition can result in conflicts between the two systems. To identify the risk factors of urban-rural conflict, this paper utilizes a research framework including content analysis, brainstorming and semi-structured interviews. The results indicated that the main risk factors between urban and rural areas comprise conflicts in property, resources and development. Suggestions are proposed to reduce the conflicts occurring between urban and rural areas during the urbanization process. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2014
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Strengthen Farmland Quality Construction and Build a Strong Foundation for Food Security.
- Author
-
Yang Yan and He Puming
- Subjects
- *
FOOD production , *FOOD security , *ARABLE land , *SUSTAINABLE development , *URBANIZATION - Abstract
As a carrier for food production, protection of arable land quantity and quality is the basis of quality and high yield agriculture. In recent years, with the acceleration of industrialization and urbanization, arable land red line is at risk, and the quality of arable land has been declining, which are not conducive to the sustainable development of agriculture, but also threaten " the food problem" of the country's 1.3 billion people. This paper attempts to analyze the current situation of arable farmland quality, reasons for the arable farmland quality decline and its impact on food security in China, and explore effective measures to improve the quality of cultivated land. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
28. The Impact of China's Urbanization Level on Household Consumption.
- Author
-
Lin LI and Yanlong ZHU
- Subjects
CONSUMPTION (Economics) ,URBANIZATION ,ECONOMIC globalization ,PUBLIC investments ,ECONOMIC expansion ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
In recent years, household consumption has continued to be in the depression, which has restricted the healthy and sustainable development of the economy. With the deepening of the level of economic globalization, the current trade frictions are increasing, and export difficulties are expanding. The government investment to stimulate economic growth is not sustainable. Promotion of household consumption is the only way to achieve economic transformation. An important reason for the insufficient consumer demand is the lagging urbanization. This article focuses on the impact of urbanization development on consumer demand, which analyzes the effect and level of urbanization on household consumption. Based on the international experience in the development of urbanization, we try to give reasonable and orderly policy recommendations to promote urbanization. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Evidence-informed urban health and sustainability governance in two Chinese cities.
- Author
-
PINEO, HELEN, KE ZHOU, YANLIN NIU, HALE, JOANNA, WILLAN, CATHERINE, CRANE, MELANIE, ZIMMERMANN, NICI, MICHIE, SUSAN, QIYONG LIU, and DAVIES, MICHAEL
- Subjects
SUSTAINABLE development ,URBANIZATION ,CLIMATE change mitigation ,ENVIRONMENTAL risk - Abstract
Sustainable development is best supported by intersectoral policies informed by a range of evidence and knowledge types (e.g. scientific and lay). Given China's rapid urbanisation, scale and global importance in climate mitigation, this study investigates how evidence is perceived and used to inform urban health and sustainability policies at central and local levels. Well-informed senior professionals in government/scientific agencies (12 in Beijing and 11 in Ningbo) were interviewed. A thematic analysis is presented using deductive and inductive coding. Government agency participants described formal remits and processes determining the scope and use of evidence by different tiers of government. Academic evidence was influential when commissioned by government departments. Public opinion and economic priorities were two factors that also influenced the use or weight of evidence in policymaking. This study shows that scientific evidence produced or commissioned by government was routinely used to inform urban health and sustainability policy. Extensive and routine data collection is regularly used to inform cyclical policy processes, which improves adaptive capacity. This study contributes to knowledge on the 'cultures of evidence use'. Environmental governance can be further improved through increased data-sharing and use of diverse knowledge types. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. China's wetlands loss to urban expansion.
- Author
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Mao, Dehua, Wang, Zongming, Wu, Jianguo, Wu, Bingfang, Zeng, Yuan, Song, Kaishan, Yi, Kunpeng, and Luo, Ling
- Subjects
WETLANDS ,URBANIZATION ,MARSHES ,LAND cover ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Abstract: Humans benefit from multiple ecosystem services of wetlands, but massive wetland loss has occurred worldwide due to rapid urbanization. To assess the problem, it is necessary to quantify the spatial extent of urbanization‐induced wetland loss. Here, we investigated the amount and pattern of wetland loss in China due to urbanization from 1990 to 2010, based on the China National Land Cover Database (ChinaCover). Our results show that, during these 20 years, China lost 2,883 km
2 of wetlands to urban expansion, of which about 2,394 km2 took place in the eastern regions (Northeast China, North China, Southeast China, and South China). The rate of urbanization‐induced wetland loss was 2.8 times higher between 2000 and 2010 (213 km2 year−1 ) than between 1990 and 2000 (75 km2 yr−1 ). Of all wetland categories, reservoirs/ponds and marshes suffered the most severe losses. Most of the wetland loss was due to the expansion of urban built‐up areas rather than industrial or transportation lands. Four hotspots of urbanization‐induced wetland loss in China were identified: the Beijing–Tianjin metropolitan region, the Yangtze River Delta, the Jianghan Plain, and the Pearl River Delta. Urbanization and industrialization continue to unfold in China for the next few decades, and the rapid expansion of small‐ and middle‐sized cities and urban traffic networks is expected to encroach on more wetlands. Although great efforts have been made towards wetland conservation in recent years, China must prevent more wetlands from being wiped out by urbanization if the country is to ahieve its sustainable development goals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Impact of Municipal Political Decision Maker's Tenure on Physical Urbanisation in China: A Empirical Study based on the Profiles of Secretaries of Municipal Party Committees.
- Author
-
CHENGZHI YIN and HAO SUN
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE development ,LOCAL government ,ADMINISTRATIVE & political divisions - Abstract
China's rapid urbanisation in the past 30 years has been a prominent issue in the world. However, few studies elaborate on the rapid spatial urbanisation from the perspective of local decision makers (in particular the Secretaries of Municipal Party Committees-the SMPCs). Local governors are always seeking promotions as they are in a competitive bureaucratic hierarchy. This research is, therefore, intended to explain the local decision-making driving force of spatial urbanisation by analysing the interaction between local decision maker's tenures and urban expansion. Based on the panel data of all 286 prefecture-level cities nationwide from 2000 to 2014, Stata 14.0 was applied to implement regression analysis. Research findings show that SMPCs have, in general, great incentives for promoting rapid urban development. Additionally, SMPCs who are transferred from other municipalities implement more rapid and larger-scale urban development than those who are locally promoted. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Examination of the Relationships between Urban Form and Urban Public Services Expenditure in China.
- Author
-
Chunming Bo, Hengzhou Xu, and Yong Liu
- Subjects
PUBLIC spaces ,URBAN planning ,URBANIZATION ,URBAN growth ,CITIES & towns ,MUNICIPAL services ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
This econometric study contributes to the ongoing debate about the costs and benefits of urban form by employing interdisciplinary means-urban planning, econometrics and public administration--to explore the relationship between urban form and urban public services expenditure. In China, particularly, rapid urbanization is accompanied by an increase of urban public services expenditure and a difference in efficiency, which undermines the promotion of urban public service development. The Chinese government has paid great attention to urban sustainable development and promoting urban public services performance; however, until recently there has been a lack of empirical studies exploring the relationship between urban public services expenditure and urban form. Thus, the present research aims to analyze this issue by using relevant indicators based on an econometric model. The results provide a promising basis for improving urban public services expenditure efficiency. Based on the urban area interpreted by remote sensing data and geographic information system, two urban form metrics, the compactness ratio and the elongation ratio, are selected and quantified to describe urban compactness and urban sprawl accurately. Panel data analyses are performed using a cross-sectional dataset of the 30 cities for the years 2007, 2010 and 2013 to assess the likelihood of association between indicators of urban form and urban public services expenditure, while controlling for other determinants, such as educational level, income per capita, degree of industrialization, and unemployment rate. The results indicate that urban elongation is positively correlated to per capita urban public services expenditure and urban compactness is insignificantly correlated to it. Thus, it is recommended that policymakers consider the relationship between urban form and public services expenditure as part of urban planning and on-going strategies to promote public service efficiency. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Spatio-Temporal Changes of Population Density and Urbanization Pattern in China (2000 - 2010).
- Author
-
Mao Qizhi, Long Ying, and Wu Kang
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Population distribution and their temporal variation are a direct proxy of urbanization. This study evaluates the population density variation of China between 2000 and 2010 at the township level by using the data of the fifth and sixth national population censuses. The urbanization patterns of China in 2000 and 2010 are depicted based on the population densities at various levels and the urbanization process of China between 2000 and 2010 is then analyzed through a comparative approach. It also tries to visualize the population density dynamics and urbanization pattern variations of China at the township level. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2016
34. Rural development led by autonomous village land cooperatives: Its impact on sustainable China’s urbanisation in high-density regions.
- Author
-
Zhu, Jieming and Guo, Yan
- Subjects
RURAL development ,URBANIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE development ,BUILT environment ,COOPERATIVE societies ,LAND use - Abstract
As a main rural initiative, village land shareholding cooperatives spearhead non-agricultural development in the interest of rural communities, and thus participate in urbanisation. Nanhai, Guangdong, is a case in illustration. The institution of land shareholding cooperatives gives rise to unique compartmentalised industrialisation and fragmented urbanisation in the context of high population density and small-area autonomous villages. Village cooperatives are mutated from economic corporations to welfare organisations, prompted by the collapse of village enterprises. Being averse to investment for long-term productivity, village cooperatives indulge in extracting short-term land rents solely. Extracting land economic rents created by urbanisation, village cooperatives generate environmental and social equality problems. High-density low-income countries, especially in Asia, are facing a great challenge as fierce competition for limited urban land resources without effective governance often results in an unfavourable form of urbanisation. Sustainable compact urbanisation needs to strike a balance between local autonomy and urban integrity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Dynamics of Urbanization Levels in China from 1992 to 2012: Perspective from DMSP/OLS Nighttime Light Data.
- Author
-
Bin Gao, Qingxu Huang, Chunyang He, and Qun Ma
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,METEOROLOGICAL satellites ,SUSTAINABLE development ,SOCIOECONOMICS ,SATELLITE meteorology - Abstract
The authenticity and reliability of urbanization levels measured by different indicators in China have not reached a consensus, which may impede our understanding of the process of urbanization and its impacts on the environment. The objective of this study was to describe a reliable method of estimating urbanization level based on the Operational Line-scan System (OLS) on the Defense Meteorological Satellite Program (DMSP) nighttime light data and to analyze the dynamics of urbanization levels in China from 1992 to 2012. We calculated the comprehensive urbanization level at the national, provincial, and county scales using a compounded night light index (CNLI) and compared the change rate of CNLI with those of the other two conventional urbanization level indicators, proportion of the nonagricultural population and proportion of built-up area. Our results showed that CNLI derived from the DMSP/OLS data set provided a relatively reliable and accurate measure of the comprehensive urbanization level in China. During the last two decades, China has experienced continued and rapid urbanization with large regional variations. The CNLI increased 3.12 times, from 1.72 x 10
-3 to 7.09 x 10-3 . The annual increases of CNLI in eastern provinces were much faster than those in western provinces. In addition, we found that the rates of change in these three indicators were consistent for most provinces with the exception of the four municipalities (Beijing, Tianjin, Shanghai, and Chongqing) and a few eastern coastal provinces (Jiangsu, Zhejiang, Fujian, and Guangdong). Because the imbalance among population growth, urban expansion and socioeconomic development may affect cities' sustainable development, we should pay more attention to these regions with large disparities between different indicators. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Greening China's Wastewater Treatment Infrastructure in the Face of Rapid Development: Analysis Based on Material Stock and Flow through 2050.
- Author
-
Hou, Wanxin, Tian, Xin, and Tanikawa, Hiroki
- Subjects
WASTEWATER treatment ,ECONOMIC development ,URBANIZATION ,WATER quality ,CARBON dioxide mitigation ,INDUSTRIAL ecology ,SUSTAINABLE development - Abstract
Wastewater treatment infrastructure (WWTI) construction in China has entered an accelerated stage of development in recent years as a result of rapid economic growth, urbanization, and the demand for improving water quality. As a result, a large amount of resources and materials will be allocated for the WWTI, and it is particularly important to find ways to reduce resource consumption effectively so that social dematerialization and sustainable development can be achieved. In this study, we employed the dynamic material flow model to estimate the material flows and stocks of WWTIs and the associated carbon dioxide (CO
2 ) emissions through 2050, considering effects of a rise in water consumption, a longer lifetime, and an increased material recycling rate. Our results indicate that material consumption in WWTIs will increase rapidly through 2025 to meet the needs of the increased volume of discharged wastewater as well as to overcome the shortage of existing wastewater treatment plants. In contrast with the moderate effects of rise in water consumption, prolonging the lifetime will greatly reduce material consumption in WWTI construction during the period 2030-2050, and approximately 60% of the total material input will be saved in the medium-lifetime scenario, compared with the short-lifetime scenario. Material output and CO2 emissions associated with WWTIs will be reduced by 87% and 37%, respectively, in the medium-lifetime scenario, compared with the short-lifetime scenario, under high-water-consumption growth. Our results highlight the great importance of pipeline construction and cement consumption in resource consumption associated with WWTI construction in China. Moreover, this study also examined the potential ways to reduce material consumption in WWTI construction in the context of the demand chain, the design, construction, operation and management, and demolition. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. New Urbanisation under Globalisation and the Social Implications in China.
- Author
-
Hu, Biliang and Chen, Chunlai
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,SOCIAL impact ,GLOBALIZATION ,SUSTAINABLE urban development ,ECONOMIC development ,URBAN poor ,RURAL development - Abstract
China launched a new urbanisation programme for the period of 2014-2020. The new urbanisation programme will produce positive impacts on China's social and economic development through focusing on integrated urban and rural development, creating city clusters and promoting sustainable urban development. However, the new urbanisation programme may also bring some new social and economic problems, like widening the gap in urban development between different regions in China, leading to the formation of a new urban poor class, based on the current design and implementation. To minimise the negative effect, we suggest to better deal with the relationships between market and government and between economic and social development in the process of urbanisation. We argue that the key is to allow the market to determine the flows of capital, land and people in the process of urbanisation so as to achieve a sustainable development of China's urbanisation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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