Reprint

Rural Land Use in China

Edited by
December 2023
456 pages
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9672-3 (Hardback)
  • ISBN978-3-0365-9673-0 (PDF)

This book is a reprint of the Special Issue Rural Land Use in China that was published in

Business & Economics
Environmental & Earth Sciences
Summary

Land use is the projection of human activities in space, and it has become an important insight into the transformation and reconstruction of human society and economy. Rural land use in China is undergoing rapid transformation driven by the rapid development of science and technology. Effectively grasping the change and transformation process of rural land use and its internal mechanism provides an important reference for revealing the inherent laws of China's rural development. Rural land use is closely related to the rural vitalization strategy and urban–rural integration in the new era. An in-depth study of China's rural land use and policy reform provides the basis of knowledge for formulating and optimizing urban–rural relations. This Special Issue focuses on the changes, effects, and regulation of rural land use in China, focusing on its main contradictions and solutions, building a cooperative network and sharing platform for rural land use research from a multidisciplinary perspective, and further deepening the theoretical innovation and practical application of rural land use research. We invited scholars from various disciplines to contribute to the Special Issue, especially with papers on the subjects of theoretical innovation, technological innovation, and practical innovation in this field.

Format
  • Hardback
License
© 2022 by the authors; CC BY-NC-ND license
Keywords
family farm; efficiency; DEA model; Tobit model; farm operation; influencing factors; soybean; production pattern; spatial agglomeration; policy implications; spatiotemporal changes; crop planting structure; black soil region; Northeast China; county-level; geographic characteristics; hollow village; actor–network; governance mode; operation process; appropriate tillage sand land; land survey; limiting factor; land evaluation; cultivated land protection; Green Transition of Cultivated Land-use (GTCL); Water-Land-Food-Carbon (WLFC); coupling coordination; land use change; rural settlements; spatial pattern evolution; land policy; China; different modes; land transfer; livelihood capital; difference-in-differences model; Land Certificated Program (LCP); farmland “stickiness”; land production function; property rights; agricultural policy; cultivated land multifunctionality; coupling coordination degree; spatial-temporal pattern; driving force; major grain-producing areas; northeast China; comprehensive land consolidation; pilot project; decision-making evaluation; farmers; social investors; non-agriculturalization rate; ecological risk; cultivated land change; landform; land management; increasing versus decreasing balance (IVDB); balanced quota; revenue; inverted U-shaped curve; Zhejiang province; territorial space; production–living–ecological space; spatio-temporal variation; eco-environment effect; driving force; territorial spatial pattern; eco-environmental quality; soil contamination; phytoremediation; passivation; farmer; questionnaire survey; paddy field; dryland; topographic gradient; landscape characteristics; land-use change; rural settlement; spatial distribution; scale distribution; morphological distribution; influencing factors; the metropolitan fringe area; Nanjing; farmland transfer; farmland function; income structure; rural household consumption; consumption structure; Yunnan Province; farmers’ land transfer behavior; herd effect; geo-network; the farmland right system reform; creditor rights; real rights; agricultural modernization; farmland transfer; labor migration; coupling coordination degree; spatio-temporal evolution; driving factor; China; family structure; heterogeneity; area of land transfer; Tobit model; rural–urban migration; rural development; land consolidation; income distribution; n/a