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  1. Article: Land Use Change in the Cross-Boundary Regions of a Metropolitan Area: A Case Study of Tongzhou-Wuqing-Langfang

    Dai, Linlin / Zhan, Zixin / Shu, Yeshuo / Rong, Xiao

    Land. 2022 Jan. 19, v. 11, no. 2

    2022  

    Abstract: Since the 1980s, metropolitan areas have increased worldwide due to urbanization and regionalization. While the spatial integration of the labor and housing markets has benefitted the development of cities within metropolitan areas, they have also ... ...

    Abstract Since the 1980s, metropolitan areas have increased worldwide due to urbanization and regionalization. While the spatial integration of the labor and housing markets has benefitted the development of cities within metropolitan areas, they have also brought great challenges for land governance; this is particularly evident in cross-boundary regions due to the complex relations between the markets and the regulations and between governments at different levels. Extensive research has been conducted on the city-level analysis of socioeconomic integration, land use development, and urban governance within metropolitan areas; yet, it is insufficient for understanding the intricate interplay between the various forces in such regions. This study aims to reveal the dynamics of land use change from 1990–2020 and its driving forces in the recent decade in the Tongzhou-Wuqing-Langfang (TWL) region—a typical cross-boundary area between Beijing, Tianjin, and the Hebei Metropolitan Area—using Landsat imagery. We employed the land-use dynamic degree, kernel density analysis, principal component analysis, and multiple linear regression to explore the spatiotemporal patterns of land use change and its driving factors at the district/county level. The results show that the general land use changes from cultivated and forest land to urban and rural construction land across the region. The speed of the trend varies considerably over time between different areas as the land use policies and regulations of each local government change. The population growth and the tertiary and secondary industry growth are the main driving factors for the change in construction land across the whole TWL region, while the urbanization rate and fixed asset investment have different impacts across the cross-boundary region. The results suggest that expanding the integration of land use policies and regulations in the cross-boundary region is urgently required.
    Keywords Landsat ; assets ; case studies ; forest land ; governance ; industry ; land use change ; local government ; metropolitan areas ; population growth ; principal component analysis ; regression analysis ; urbanization ; China
    Language English
    Dates of publication 2022-0119
    Publishing place Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute
    Document type Article
    ZDB-ID 2682955-1
    ISSN 2073-445X
    ISSN 2073-445X
    DOI 10.3390/land11020153
    Database NAL-Catalogue (AGRICOLA)

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  2. Article: Gentle or rude? A study on China's publicity of epidemic prevention and governance of urban and rural areas based on anti-epidemic slogans.

    Hou, Yu / Wei, Tianxing / Zhan, Zixin / Wang, Fang

    Cities (London, England)

    2022  Volume 130, Page(s) 103901

    Abstract: COVID-19 has swept through the world, challenging countries' ability to respond to crises and their public governance. One of the difficulties of public governance in China is the knowledge gap caused by the urban-rural dual structure. This study takes ... ...

    Abstract COVID-19 has swept through the world, challenging countries' ability to respond to crises and their public governance. One of the difficulties of public governance in China is the knowledge gap caused by the urban-rural dual structure. This study takes anti-epidemic slogans in China, a traditional means of information governance as its research object in the context of COVID-19. Independent sample tests and cluster analysis were conducted to measure the knowledge gap between urban and rural residents in acquiring epidemic information, and compare the different slogans posted in urban and rural areas, as well as the feedback they received. Based on this, the study explores the different logic of urban and rural governance in China. The results show that, although slogans cannot convey the latest information, they can make the public aware of the severity of the epidemic. Urban residents were found to give lower evaluations to slogans, although they acknowledged that slogans had the effect of rendering an anti-epidemic atmosphere, whereas rural residents were more accepting of rude and threatening slogans and control measures. Slogans with scientific guidance were more likely to trigger changes in their awareness and behavior. The study is significant as it can be a reference for other regions' and countries' publicity work and governance approaches in the prevention and control of infectious diseases.
    Language English
    Publishing date 2022-08-18
    Publishing country England
    Document type Journal Article
    ISSN 0264-2751
    ISSN 0264-2751
    DOI 10.1016/j.cities.2022.103901
    Database MEDical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System OnLINE

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