2021
DOI: 10.18402/resci.2021.07.04
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Spatial differentiation and hierarchical collaborative zoning of rural homestead withdrawal potential:A case study of Yicheng City, Hubei Province

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Cited by 3 publications
(3 citation statements)
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“…In contrast, the built-up area underwent a remarkable expansion, increasing from 30,406.19 km 2 to 49,772.63 km 2 , marking an astonishing growth of 63.69% [96]. This discrepancy can largely be attributed to local government policies that promoted population urbanisation alongside land urbanisation, driven by the dual goals of GDP growth and maximising land revenue incentives [97,98]. Additionally, the high-speed urbanisation's demand for population mobility and the pressure to achieve notable political performance inadvertently led to the inflation of a real estate bubble (the real-estate bubble is a type of economic bubble that occurs periodically in local or global real estate markets and typically follows a land boom [99]), highlighting the complex nature of urbanisation during this period.…”
Section: From Land Expansion To Sustainable Urban Growthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In contrast, the built-up area underwent a remarkable expansion, increasing from 30,406.19 km 2 to 49,772.63 km 2 , marking an astonishing growth of 63.69% [96]. This discrepancy can largely be attributed to local government policies that promoted population urbanisation alongside land urbanisation, driven by the dual goals of GDP growth and maximising land revenue incentives [97,98]. Additionally, the high-speed urbanisation's demand for population mobility and the pressure to achieve notable political performance inadvertently led to the inflation of a real estate bubble (the real-estate bubble is a type of economic bubble that occurs periodically in local or global real estate markets and typically follows a land boom [99]), highlighting the complex nature of urbanisation during this period.…”
Section: From Land Expansion To Sustainable Urban Growthmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The proportion of PUP increased from 41.76% to 54.77% from 2004 to 2014, an increase of 13.01%, while the built-up area increased from 30,406.19km 2 to 49,772.63km 2 , a significant increase of 63.69% [73]. Though the rapid development of the urban population inevitably took up considerable land resources, the main reason was that the local government pushed population urbanisation through land urbanisation due to the worship of GDP and the influence of land revenues [74,75]. Furthermore, the demands of population movement and the pressure of political performance led by the high-speed urbanisation resulted in the real estate bubble.…”
Section: Implementations Of Land Policiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is mainly due to the rapid development of the suburban economy, which attracts the employment of the migrant population, resulting in frequent rental activities, the development of tourism in some villages in the mountainous areas, and the increase in rural entertainment. (Yang et al, 2019;Kong et al, 2021). Therefore, this section focuses on the impact of household behavior characteristics on the production function of rural housing land.…”
Section: Figurementioning
confidence: 99%