Rethinking Urban–Rural Dynamics Through the Lens of Social Geography

A special issue of Land (ISSN 2073-445X). This special issue belongs to the section "Urban Contexts and Urban-Rural Interactions".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 1 December 2026 | Viewed by 786

Special Issue Editors


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Guest Editor
1. Tourism & Geography Department, Faculty of Business and Tourism, The Bucharest University of Economic Studies, 030167 Bucharest, Romania
2. Institute of Geography, Romanian Academy, 050094 Bucharest, Romania
Interests: urban geography; economic geography; regional development

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Guest Editor
Human Geography and Regional Development Department, Institute of Geography, Romanian Academy, 023993 Bucharest, Romania
Interests: urban geography; population geography; local and regional development; socio-economic vulnerability to extreme events

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues,

With the acceleration of urbanization globally, urban–rural interactions and relationships have become prominent topics of interdisciplinary research, and the key concepts of ‘urban’ and ‘rural’ have been subjected to constant redefinition, moving away from dichotomic views to more inclusive and convergent understandings and interpretations. As such, the long-standing view on the urban–rural continuum has progressively been replaced by a blurring of boundaries that advances a wealth of concepts and research methods to make sense of the new hybrid forms and practices within the urban–rural nexus. Integral to these efforts, social geography has focused on the new hybrid landscapes and structures to gain critical insights into their social construction, driven by globalization, cultural exchanges, economic shifts, migration, technology and infrastructure. Placed at the ‘fringe’, ‘interface’, ‘in-between space’, studies have searched to capture diversified development models, blending mechanisms and patterns, and social mutations in the realm of emerging ‘hybrid geographies’. Despite advances in research dealing with the urban–rural interactions and relationships, fresh approaches are needed to grasp new forms of rurality and urbanity and their mutual interactions and dynamics.

The scope of this Special Issue encompasses social geography as an analytical tool fostering meaning-making beyond binary thinking on the urban and the rural. Focusing on hybrid structures, processes, contexts, and practices where the urban–rural space is a category in its own right, this collection aims to gather together papers that add nuance and emphasis to power distribution, the generation of (in)equality, and identity-building to lay foundations for sustainable futures. Power is key to understand the meanings attributed to these shared hybrid spaces rooted in social relations and economic practices that vary across time and space. With the blurring of boundaries between the urban and the rural, (in)equality and identity take on new meanings and forms that require further re-assessment and re-interpretation. Building on urban–rural interactions and relationships provides a framework with which it is possible to rethink sustainability and resilience through planning and policymaking. We invite manuscripts that engaging in quantitative or/and qualitative approaches tackle with the multidimensional urban–rural dynamics to enrich the theoretical and methodological framework and to better inform policy.

Relevant topics that underpin contributions to this Special Issue, which aims to encourage renewed conversation on the urban–rural nexus, may tentatively include the following areas of interest:

  • Multifunctional development pathways;
  • Lifestyle transitions and identity hybridization;
  • Governance of hybrid landscapes and communities;
  • Sustainability and resilience of hybrid territorial systems;
  • Pandemic, working patterns and urban-rural interactions;
  • Place and context-based policies.

Dr. Claudia Popescu
Dr. Bianca Mitricǎ
Guest Editors

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • urban–rural
  • hybridization
  • dynamics
  • functionality
  • identity
  • power relations
  • development
  • policy

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

28 pages, 6373 KB  
Article
Mitigating Urban-Centric Bias to Address the Rural Eligibility Discovery Lag
by Guiyan Jiang and Donghui Zhang
Land 2026, 15(4), 535; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040535 - 25 Mar 2026
Viewed by 421
Abstract
Urban sustainability depends on rural hinterlands, yet national-scale evaluation and AI screening often rely on urban-centric proxies, which can under-recognize remote villages where the evidence base is sparse. Using China’s national honored-village programme (N = 24,450) as a case, we examine how recognition [...] Read more.
Urban sustainability depends on rural hinterlands, yet national-scale evaluation and AI screening often rely on urban-centric proxies, which can under-recognize remote villages where the evidence base is sparse. Using China’s national honored-village programme (N = 24,450) as a case, we examine how recognition patterns change when data availability and observability are unequal across regions, with a focus on the Qinghai–Tibetan Plateau (QTP), where 923 honored villages account for only 3.78% of the national total. We interpret urban-centric proxy reliance as the tendency for recognition patterns to correlate with urban-linked observability signals (e.g., nighttime lights). In this study, discovery lag refers to situations where villages exhibit characteristics similar to historically recognized villages but remain unrecognized under the current honor regime due to uneven data availability and observability. Methodologically, we build a scene-aware predictive framework that integrates multi-source geospatial indicators and explicitly handles extreme imbalance and environmental heterogeneity to estimate recognition likelihood under the current honor regime, treating national honor lists as administratively produced recognition outcomes rather than objective measures of village value. The model highlights four high-probability nomination belts on the QTP and reveals a pronounced DEM–NTL decoupling: the median NTL of currently honored QTP villages is 0, suggesting that NTL-based urban proxies can fail in high-altitude, data-scarce contexts. Overall, the observed under-representation is consistent with uneven observability and institutional constraints within the current honor system, and the proposed framework provides a scalable diagnostic and screening tool for identifying villages with high predicted recognition likelihood and supporting more evidence-aware rural data collection. Full article
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