Tianchuang in National Parks of China: Its Concept, Causes, and Consequences
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Concept of Tianchuang
3. Causes of Tianchuang
3.1. Policy Background: Spatial Overlaps and Functional Conflicts from Planning
3.2. Three Approaches to Resolving Functional Conflicts: Withdrawal, Boundary Adjustment, and Tianchuang-Setting
- (1)
- Withdrawal refers to removing the existing human activities from the land parcels and converting its original usage to ecological usage, normally by the way of ecological relocation and usage restrictions. In this way, the national park boundaries and ecological red lines remain unchanged, and the management responsibility remains assumed by the national park. Withdrawal is generally applied in core protection zones, fit for areas having serious conflicts between ecological protection and human activities, but also having relocation feasibility and ecological restoration potential [39]. In practice, the feasibility of withdrawal depends on the financial capacity, local acceptance, and relocation conditions [40]. For example, in 2024, the Ministry of Natural Resources responded to the Suggestion on Overlapping Areas of Ecological Protection Red Lines and Permanent Basic Farmland in National Parks and Other Protected Areas [41], proposing that permanent basic farmland in core protection zones should be retained as general farmland and cultivation gradually withdrawn to restore ecological functions. Overall, withdrawal targets areas without significant value but with conflicts in management and ecological function threatened (the “one-with-two” areas). For example, low-quality farmland scattered in general control zones of national parks can take the approach of withdrawal.
- (2)
- Boundary adjustment refers to removing specific areas from national park boundaries or changing land use. In this way, both the areas’ space and management responsibilities will be fully separated from the national parks, and local governments will take the responsibilities [42]. This approach applies to areas that are clearly defined, spatially contiguous, and have long-term stable usage. These areas are normally at the edge of national parks’ boundaries and will be excluded during the official boundary delineation of the national park. For instance, the Response specifies that permanent basic farmland which is concentrated, spatially contiguous, stably used, and located out of core protection zones can be removed away from the national park. Additionally, quantity and quality balance of farmland can be achieved through additional allocation. Generally, areas without significant protection value, having no great ecological impacts or management conflicts (the “two-with-one” areas [41]), can be legally adjusted out. The advantage of the boundary adjustment approach is not involved with resident relocation, land use change, or large administrative costs. The disadvantage of this approach might involve insufficient supervision, ecological degradation, and disruption of ecological connectivity and functional integrity [43,44].
- (3)
- Tianchuang-setting refers to maintaining the current land usage, management responsibilities temporarily not incorporated into unified management, leaving governance to local governments until conditions are suitable for future integration. Tianchuang-setting applies to areas deep within park boundaries, with complex land tenure, concentrated populations, and are currently incapable of withdrawal or boundary adjustment. Tianchuang commonly includes permanent basic farmland, township settlements, and infrastructure dense regions. For example, some permanent basic farmland and cropland in national parksmay be temporarily retained and integrated later when the conditions are appropriate.
4. Consequences of Tianchuang
- (1)
- Ecological Consequences
- (2)
- Institutional Consequences
- (3)
- Social Consequences
5. Discussion
- (1)
- Formed in China, Tianchuang was temporarily retained under original usage and excluded from unified management because of planning conflicts, frequent human activities, and complex land tenure. Essentially, Tianchuang represents a transitional strategy under a centralized governance system to balance ecological protection objectives with local development needs during rapid boundary delineation [58]. In the United States, inholdings originated from a historical transition of land policy from “transfer” to “retention”. Large-scale land transfers in the 19th century had left private and state-owned parcels, which became enclosed by national park boundaries after park establishment. Given strong property rights and limited federal funds, the federal government could not compel acquisition of these parcels. The integration of these parcels relied on market tools (purchases and land exchanges) and were incomplete [59]. In Australia, co-managed at Uluru-Kata Tjuta originated from the recognition of indigenous land rights. In 1985, the land ownership of Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park was returned to the Anangu people and co-managed with the government through long-term leases and formalized agreements. Rooted in colonial legacies and Indigenous movements, it institutionalized cultural recognition and land-rights legitimacy [60]. In Nigeria, the GGNP enclaves originated from the traditional migratory pastoralism of the Fulani herders, who established camps locally. When the protected area was established, some camps were retained through negotiations between the state and local chiefs, forming de facto enclaves. With limited national finances and regulatory capacity, governance gradually relied on the traditional “chief–family–camp” structure and external international project support, evolving into a negotiated governance model prioritizing social stability [61].
- (2)
- Governance In China, Tianchuang follows a government-led model, where the central government sets policies and boundaries, and local authorities implement them, balancing community interests through categorized management and transitional compromises [62,63]. In the United States, inholding management exhibits a dual-track governance model, where the federal government enforces top-down ecological protection via land acquisition, eminent domain, or land-use regulations, while the local governments regulate private development from the bottom-up using planning, density control, and design review, balancing ecological protection with property rights [64]. In Australia’s Uluru-Kata Tjuta National Park, co-management is practiced. The Anangu, as landowners, hold a majority of seats on the board and jointly govern with the park authority. Community members also participate directly in ecological and tourism management through projects such as the Mutitjulu Mala Rangers, achieving a combination of rights and responsibilities [65]. In Nigeria, GGNP enclave governance reflects a bottom-up negotiated approach [66]. The Fulani communities maintain order using traditional governance structures, while the state and NGOs intervene through project collaboration and educational programs.
- (3)
- Challenges: In China, Tianchuang are faced with concentrated populations and infrastructure, complex land tenure, imperfect compensation, and withdrawal mechanisms, making policy implementation and local coordination difficult. Unclear responsibilities and insufficient coordination weaken protection enforcement and exacerbate community trust crises. In the USA, the main issues of inholdings are fragmented property rights and high acquisition costs, slowing integration; differences in state and local policies further complicate management, and ongoing private development in some areas undermines ecosystem integrity [59,67]. In Australia, the co-management of Uluru-Kata Tjuta are faced with the challenge of balancing the sacredness of indigenous culture with tourism development. The community livelihoods depend on external funding, while Anangu and Parks Australia still have divergences in governance responsibilities [68]. In Nigeria, GGNP enclaves are faced with conflicts between state and local community in terms of land tenure and governance rights. Local groups view enclaves as traditional lands with clear family ownership and usage rules, and the division of power between federal and local authorities, combined with diverse land tenure, makes central policies prone to conflict with local customs [69].
6. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Category | Specific Connotation |
|---|---|
| Problems arising from land-use planning conflicts | Due to land-use planning conflicts or historical legacies, areas retain specific functions not ecologically coherent with the overall protected area [26,27,28]. |
| Fragmentation phenomena | Within or at the edges of protected areas caused by boundary adjustments or changes in land function due to development projects or human activities [29]. |
| Method for balancing development and protection | Transitional areas between ecological protection and economic development [25], allowing indigenous communities or moderate development while being restricted by ecological policies and infrastructure to ensure ecological functions are not compromised [30]. |
| Three Zones | Three Lines | Original Competent Authority (Former) | Delineation Criteria |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ecological Space | Ecological Protection Red Line | Ministry of Environmental Protection, National Development and Reform Commission | Ecological importance and ecological sensitivity |
| Agricultural Space | Permanent Basic Farm land | Ministry of Land and Resources | Farmland quality and agricultural productivity |
| Urban Space | Urban Development Boundary | Urban–Rural Development, Ministry of Land and Resources | Existing built-up areas, future population, economic targets |
| Three Approaches | Applicable Conditions | Specific Changes | Authorities | Governance Priority |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Withdrawal | ① Significant conflicts between ecological protection and human activities ② Relocation feasibility ③ Ecological restoration potential | No change in the boundary; ecological relocation and land-use restrictions | National park authority | Ecological protection |
| Boundary Adjustment | ① Near the boundary ② Clear, concentrated, contiguous, and stable land-use functions | Adjust the national park boundary to formally exclude the area | Local government | Development |
| Tianchuang-setting | ① Deep inside the park, complex land ownership ② Concentrated population ③ Infeasible for immediate withdrawal or boundary adjustment | Retain within the boundary, temporarily not incorporated into unified management | Locally led with national park participation | Balance (future integration) |
| Dimension | China (Tianchuang) | USA (Inholding) | Australia (Uluru-Kata Tjuta Co-managed Community) | Nigeria (GGNP Enclaves) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Formation | Follow the “Three Zones and Three Lines” delineation practice to address parcels with frequent human activities and functional conflicts. | Private/state lands enclosed by parks after 19th-century transfers, preserved due to property rights and limited federal funds. | Land rooted in colonial legacy and indigenous rights recognition. | Camps retained through negotiation, shaped by Fulani pastoral traditions and limited state resources. |
| Governance | Government-led model | Dual-track model | Co-management model | Bottom-up negotiated model |
| Challenges | Complex tenure, dense population, weak compensation, unclear responsibilities, poor coordination, trust deficit. | Fragmented property rights, high acquisition costs, state–local policy differences, ecological threats. | Tension between cultural sacredness and tourism; reliance on external funds; governance disputes. | Federal–local conflicts, ancestral land claims, overlapping tenures vs. customary rules. |
| Prospects | Gradual reintegration into unified governance | Slow market-based integration | Strengthening Indigenous governance | Negotiated governance with multi-party collaboration. |
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Tao, R.; Li, T.; Zhang, X. Tianchuang in National Parks of China: Its Concept, Causes, and Consequences. Land 2025, 14, 2275. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112275
Tao R, Li T, Zhang X. Tianchuang in National Parks of China: Its Concept, Causes, and Consequences. Land. 2025; 14(11):2275. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112275
Chicago/Turabian StyleTao, Rong, Tianjiao Li, and Xujiao Zhang. 2025. "Tianchuang in National Parks of China: Its Concept, Causes, and Consequences" Land 14, no. 11: 2275. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112275
APA StyleTao, R., Li, T., & Zhang, X. (2025). Tianchuang in National Parks of China: Its Concept, Causes, and Consequences. Land, 14(11), 2275. https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112275

