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Search Results (481)

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Keywords = contemporary China

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24 pages, 2338 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Evolution and Driving Mechanisms of CATL’s Investment Layout Based on GIS Spatial Analysis and OPGD Model
by Fanlong Zeng and Tingting Chen
World Electr. Veh. J. 2026, 17(4), 218; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj17040218 - 19 Apr 2026
Abstract
Power battery enterprises are a key link in the new energy vehicle (NEV) industry chain. However, studies analyzing the investment layout of power battery enterprises from a micro perspective are relatively scarce. This study takes Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Limited (CATL) as a [...] Read more.
Power battery enterprises are a key link in the new energy vehicle (NEV) industry chain. However, studies analyzing the investment layout of power battery enterprises from a micro perspective are relatively scarce. This study takes Contemporary Amperex Technology Co. Limited (CATL) as a case and employs various spatial analysis methods and an optimal parameter-based geographical detector (OPGD) to analyze the spatiotemporal evolution and driving mechanisms of its investment layout from 2020 to 2024. The results indicate that CATL’s investment center has shifted from Jiangxi to Hubei, and the spatial expansion axis has changed from a northwest–southeast to a southwest–northeast direction. The investment layout has evolved from a “one core with two secondary cores” structure to a “provincial dual core, multi-core outside the province” structure and, ultimately, to a nationwide networked pattern. By 2024, CATL’s investment network covered the southeastern coast, the Yangtze River Delta (YRD), the Pearl River Delta (PRD), central China, and southwestern regions. County-level spatial autocorrelation analysis shows that the investment agglomeration effect has continuously strengthened (with the global Moran’s I increasing from 0.006 to 0.025). High–high agglomeration areas gradually expanded from the southeastern coast to Xiamen and several provinces in central and western China, while high–low agglomeration areas, as early signals of investment diffusion, initially expanded and then contracted. The driving mechanism analysis reveals that fiscal support (q = 0.668), industrial structure upgrading (q = 0.585), tax burden (q = 0.543), and economic development (q = 0.536) are the primary factors driving investment layout, with significant synergistic effects between these factors. The synergy between industrial structure upgrading and clean energy supply stands out as particularly prominent. These findings contribute to optimizing the spatial layout of the NEV industry and promoting regional economic development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Storage Systems)
53 pages, 3625 KB  
Article
Zoonotic Barrier Disruption and the Rise of the Third Plague Pandemic: A One Health Analysis of 19th-Century Yunnan and the Emergence of Yersinia pestis Strain 1.ORI
by Raymond Edward Ruhaak, Victor Vasilyevich Suntsov and Li Yang
Zoonotic Dis. 2026, 6(2), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/zoonoticdis6020014 - 16 Apr 2026
Viewed by 201
Abstract
The Third Plague Pandemic originated in 19th-century Yunnan, China, yet the confluence of factors that enabled the pandemic strain Yersinia pestis 1.ORI to emerge and spread globally remains unclear. Using a One Health framework, this study investigates how human-driven ecological and socioeconomic changes [...] Read more.
The Third Plague Pandemic originated in 19th-century Yunnan, China, yet the confluence of factors that enabled the pandemic strain Yersinia pestis 1.ORI to emerge and spread globally remains unclear. Using a One Health framework, this study investigates how human-driven ecological and socioeconomic changes disrupted zoonotic barriers in Yunnan. We conduct an interdisciplinary historical analysis, triangulating evidence from Qing dynasty gazetteers, environmental reconstructions, and biological data on plague ecology, including host–vector dynamics, to model conditions for spillover and spread and to build a convergent, validated case. The analysis identifies a mid-19th-century convergence that created a high-risk interface: widespread deforestation from mining and agriculture, rapid population growth, increased synanthropic rat densities, and the turmoil of the Panthay Rebellion. Socioeconomic stressors—labour migration into mining valleys, currency devaluation undermining food security, and comorbidities such as malnutrition, heavy metal contamination, and opium use—may have further increased host susceptibility. This socio-ecological context catalysed spillover and establishment of the 1.ORI strain in commensal rat populations. The findings show the pandemic’s origin reflects spatiotemporal convergence rather than a single cause, while noting uncertainty in quantifying historical ecological and health parameters; the case offers a framework for assessing contemporary pandemic risks. It underscores how layered pressures operate across timescales. Full article
27 pages, 7094 KB  
Article
The Spatial Differentiation Pattern and Driving Factors of National Modern Agricultural Industrial Parks in China
by Cuifei Liu, Sunbowen Zhang, Yuxin Yang, Yuting Lin, Youcheng Chen, Zhidan Chen and Yongqiang Ma
Agriculture 2026, 16(8), 857; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16080857 - 12 Apr 2026
Viewed by 268
Abstract
National modern agricultural industrial parks are the core carriers for promoting agricultural modernization. Clarifying their spatial differentiation patterns is of great significance for revealing the efficiency of resource allocation and promoting coordinated regional development. Based on the data from 338 national modern agricultural [...] Read more.
National modern agricultural industrial parks are the core carriers for promoting agricultural modernization. Clarifying their spatial differentiation patterns is of great significance for revealing the efficiency of resource allocation and promoting coordinated regional development. Based on the data from 338 national modern agricultural industrial parks in China, this study uses methods such as the nearest neighbor index, Voronoi spatial statistics, and spatial autocorrelation to identify their spatial distribution characteristics, and adopts the XGBoost–SHAP model to explore the nonlinear effects of driving factors. The research found the following: (1) The parks exhibit a distinct “sparse west–concentrated middle–dense east” agglomeration pattern aligned with China’s Hu Huanyong Line agro–economic divide. (2) At the municipal level, four high-density cores emerged in central-eastern regions with “dual hot spots–gradient diffusion” characteristics. (3) Farmers’ professional cooperatives and transportation accessibility are the most consistent fundamental driving elements, reflecting the transition of the development momentum of contemporary agriculture from “resource dependency” to “circulation dependence.” Heterogeneity analysis shows elevation, cooperatives and rural income differentially drive agglomeration across regions, with elevation constituting a universal constraint. (4) While regional development and mechanization show adaptive synergy, excessive urbanization generates a distinct “non–agriculturalization” crowding–out effect on agricultural development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
14 pages, 2963 KB  
Article
New Record of Pipefish from the Coast of Mainland China with Phylogeography and Conservation Insights
by Xin Wang, Hao Luo, Shuaishuai Liu, Zhixin Zhang and Qiang Lin
Animals 2026, 16(8), 1161; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16081161 - 10 Apr 2026
Viewed by 170
Abstract
The evolutionary history and contemporary biogeography jointly shape the genetic architecture of marine species. This study investigates the phylogeny and population genetics of two closely related syngnathid fishes, Trachyrhamphus serratus and Trachyrhamphus longirostris. We report the first record of T. longirostris along [...] Read more.
The evolutionary history and contemporary biogeography jointly shape the genetic architecture of marine species. This study investigates the phylogeny and population genetics of two closely related syngnathid fishes, Trachyrhamphus serratus and Trachyrhamphus longirostris. We report the first record of T. longirostris along the mainland coast of China, with samples collected from Yantai, Kenting, Zhanjiang, and Beihai. Population genetic analyses reveal genetic differentiation within T. longirostris, which exhibits low levels of genetic diversity across all sampled populations compared to T. serratus. The star-like haplotype network and significantly negative neutrality test values collectively indicate a recent population expansion event in T. longirostris. This study offers important insights into the evolutionary dynamics and biogeographic patterning of syngnathid fishes, with clear implications for their conservation and management. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Population Genetics of Aquatic Animals)
22 pages, 18921 KB  
Article
Low-Carbon Design Strategies for the Renewal of Memorial Spaces in Traditional Settlements: A Case Study of Tangyue Village in Huizhou, China
by Zhenlin Xie, Renhang Yin, Yang Yang, Ke Xie and Xiangjun Dong
Buildings 2026, 16(8), 1475; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16081475 - 9 Apr 2026
Viewed by 285
Abstract
Tangyue Village in Huizhou, China, is renowned for its monumental Bao-family archway complex and well-preserved ancestral halls, which host and memorial activities embodying rich clan traditions and regional cultural identity. However, these traditional spaces face contemporary challenges, including functional obsolescence, high energy consumption, [...] Read more.
Tangyue Village in Huizhou, China, is renowned for its monumental Bao-family archway complex and well-preserved ancestral halls, which host and memorial activities embodying rich clan traditions and regional cultural identity. However, these traditional spaces face contemporary challenges, including functional obsolescence, high energy consumption, and limited sustainability. Focusing on the memorial spaces of Tangyue Village, this study explores low-carbon design strategies for their renewal by developing a comprehensive research framework that integrates multi-stakeholder demand analysis, weighting evaluation, case-based design, and performance verification. Initially, user needs were identified through semi-structured interviews and behavioral observations, followed by the application of the Fuzzy Kano (FKANO) model to classify and filter these requirements. Subsequently, a multi-level evaluation system was established, encompassing low-carbon performance, spatial functionality, cultural continuity, and community participation. The Decision-Making Trial and Evaluation Laboratory (DEMATEL) approach combined with the entropy weight method was then employed to determine the relative importance of each indicator. The results indicate that the organization of memorial spaces, the application of low-carbon materials, rainwater harvesting, and spatial accessibility represent key design priorities. Space syntax simulations conducted via DepthmapX further demonstrate that the optimized design significantly improves spatial accessibility, permeability, and vitality while enhancing the overall low-carbon performance. Ultimately, this study proposes practical low-carbon renewal strategies for memorial spaces in traditional settlements, offering a systematic approach that balances cultural heritage preservation with environmental sustainability. Full article
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23 pages, 6144 KB  
Article
A Study on Spatial Narrative Strategies of China’s National Industrial Heritage: The Case of Nantong Guangsheng Oil Mill
by Zhenyu Yang, Xiaohan Li, Qi An and Yifan Ma
Buildings 2026, 16(7), 1457; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16071457 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 358
Abstract
Addressing the prevalent issue of “physical preservation but spiritual silence” in the revitalisation of China’s national industrial heritage, this study proposes and empirically validates a “dual-track narrative” design framework that systematically translates cultural values into spatial experiences. The framework integrates a “figure–history” narrative, [...] Read more.
Addressing the prevalent issue of “physical preservation but spiritual silence” in the revitalisation of China’s national industrial heritage, this study proposes and empirically validates a “dual-track narrative” design framework that systematically translates cultural values into spatial experiences. The framework integrates a “figure–history” narrative, which crystallises historical lineage and symbolic spirit through spatial sequences, commemorative landmarks, and authentic remains, with a “scene–activity” narrative, which transforms former production spaces into dynamic, culturally vibrant stages through ecological restoration displays, industrial landscape transformation, and flexible activity implantation. Using Nantong Guangsheng Oil Mill as a single-case study, the research employs qualitative methods including archival analysis, field observation, and semi-structured interviews to examine how the dual-track framework operates in practice. The findings reveal that the “figure–history” narrative manifests in a walkable “time corridor” along the north–south axis, where architectural remnants from different eras are organised to materialise Zhang Jian’s industrial salvation ethos and the collective memory of generations of workers. Meanwhile, the “scene–activity” narrative activates underutilised spaces—such as the repurposing of acid treatment ponds into constructed wetlands and paved grounds into public stages—enabling ongoing cultural production, community interaction, and ecological healing. The study demonstrates that the dual-track framework bridges the historical and contemporary dimensions often treated separately in heritage practice, establishing a systematic “translation mechanism” from cultural decoding to design intervention. Theoretically, it contributes to industrial heritage research by integrating narratology, memory studies, heritage interpretation, and situationism into a coherent design methodology. Practically, it offers decision-makers evaluation criteria beyond the preservation-versus-development binary, provides designers with a mode of creative transformation grounded in material authenticity, and suggests to operators a content-driven, event-based model for sustaining heritage spaces. By spatialising and eventising narratives, the dual-track approach enables industrial heritage to function as a catalyst for cultural identity, social vitality, and economic sustainability, offering a transferable paradigm for the adaptive reuse of industrial heritage in contemporary urban contexts. Full article
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36 pages, 10058 KB  
Article
Sustainable Reinterpretation of Regional Cultural Symbols in Architectural Massing and Facade Design: Taking the New Campus of Yan’an University as an Example
by Xue-Rui Wang, Hong-Xia Yang, Ting Huang, Xin-Yan Chen and Byung-Kweon Jun
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3579; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073579 - 6 Apr 2026
Viewed by 415
Abstract
Against the backdrop of globalization and rapid urbanization, the weakening of regional cultural identity has emerged as a significant challenge in contemporary architectural practice, particularly within the context of large-scale campus development. University architecture must navigate the complex task of balancing functional demands [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of globalization and rapid urbanization, the weakening of regional cultural identity has emerged as a significant challenge in contemporary architectural practice, particularly within the context of large-scale campus development. University architecture must navigate the complex task of balancing functional demands with long-term cultural and social sustainability. However, the prevalence of homogenized architectural forms in many newly constructed campuses often undermines local distinctiveness, leading to diminished place identity and reduced social sustainability. In response, this study takes the Yan’an University new campus in China as a representative case to explore how regional culture can be sustainably integrated into campus architecture through spatial organization, typological strategies, and symbolic translation. The study employs qualitative analysis and a life-cycle perspective, integrating architectural semiotics and typological methods to construct a multidimensional analytical framework of “space–material–culture”. This framework is systematically applied to examine how the loess culture, revolutionary heritage, and folk art of Yan’an are translated and expressed in a contemporary context. The findings reveal that achieving cultural sustainability does not rely on direct imitation of historical forms but rather on an adaptive spatial framework, modular architectural typologies, and a performance-integrated material system, which together shape a resilient and organically evolving campus entity. Specifically, the design employs strategies such as “symbolic translation from archetype to type”, “dialogue between traditional materials and contemporary craftsmanship”, and “spatial translation from enclosed courtyards to open landscapes”. These approaches facilitate the organic embedding of regional cultural genes, promote the continuity of collective memory, strengthen local identity, and enable phased development throughout the campus’s life cycle. By extending the concept of sustainability from environmental performance to cultural continuity, social cohesion, and spatial adaptability, this study provides actionable design pathways and theoretical references for campus development in regions with profound historical backgrounds. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Tourism, Culture, and Heritage)
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23 pages, 21945 KB  
Article
From “Housing Security” to “Housing Quality”: The Common Implications of Japan’s UR Rental Housing Experience for China’s Affordable Housing and South Korea’s Public Housing
by Xue-Rui Wang, Ting Huang, Xin-Yan Chen and Byung-Kweon Jun
Buildings 2026, 16(7), 1412; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16071412 - 2 Apr 2026
Viewed by 321
Abstract
This study focuses on the commonalities and differences in the public housing systems of three East Asian countries, using Japan’s UR Rental Housing as a case study. It employs a composite methodology that integrates architectural typology and cross-cultural comparison, constructing theoretical linkages within [...] Read more.
This study focuses on the commonalities and differences in the public housing systems of three East Asian countries, using Japan’s UR Rental Housing as a case study. It employs a composite methodology that integrates architectural typology and cross-cultural comparison, constructing theoretical linkages within a three-dimensional framework of “social institutions–cultural context–spatial structure”. The research emphasizes three key dimensions: (1) The evolution of policy frameworks and their underlying socio-cultural drivers; (2) The spatial layout logic and functional concepts embedded in residential unit planning; (3) The transformation and inheritance of traditional residential values in contemporary housing design. The study strictly adheres to a progressive logic of “sample construction–type decoding–paradigm extraction–cross-domain comparison–theoretical feedback”. It begins by analyzing the core issues in the supply structure and spatial adaptability of affordable housing in China and South Korea. Next, it systematically examines the policy evolution and spatial design paradigms of Japan’s UR Rental Housing. Subsequently, it constructs a comparative analytical matrix for public housing in China, Japan, and South Korea, identifying transferable common experiences and pathways requiring localized adaptation. Finally, it proposes targeted recommendations across three dimensions, namely policy framework, spatial design, and community building: (1) At the policy level, a full lifecycle governance framework is advocated; (2) In spatial design, the principles of “compactness and efficiency” are emphasized, alongside enhanced flexibility and cultural relevance; (3) In community building, efforts are directed toward activating interpersonal connections and strengthening the social functional attributes of housing. This study emphasizes transnational comparability and knowledge transferability, aiming to provide practical insights for China’s affordable housing reforms and South Korea’s public housing modernization. It seeks to promote cross-national learning and collaborative innovation in the regional housing sector, offering both theoretical reference and practical pathways to realize the shared vision of “restoring housing to a human scale”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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17 pages, 352 KB  
Article
A Cultural Pathway to Addressing Contemporary Mental Illness: Construction and Healing Logic of the “Virtual Illness” Concept in Shamanism in the North of China
by Xiaoshuang Liu
Religions 2026, 17(4), 431; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040431 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 424
Abstract
Mental illness has become increasingly prominent in the modern individuation process in China. Correspondingly, contemporary shamanic practices in the north of China have gradually focused on mental issues and have constructed an indigenous concept related to them: “virtual illness.” Based on many years [...] Read more.
Mental illness has become increasingly prominent in the modern individuation process in China. Correspondingly, contemporary shamanic practices in the north of China have gradually focused on mental issues and have constructed an indigenous concept related to them: “virtual illness.” Based on many years of fieldwork conducted in the shamanic regions of the north of China, this study focuses on the healing practices of local shamans. By integrating theoretical resources on the “self” from sociology and shamanic studies, it explores the cultural practices and therapeutic logic formed by local shamans around the concept of “virtual illness” in addressing contemporary socio-psychological anxiety. Studies indicate that within the shamanic conceptual system of this region, prolonged mental distress is prone to possession by external malevolent spirits, thereby becoming a form of virtual illness. The healing process of possession-type “virtual illness” reflects the regional shamanic approach to explanation and intervention within a framework of a holistic self. This is manifested by attributing misfortune, such as failure and mental illness, to the possessed spiritual identity and conducting spiritual healing on the possessed spiritual identity, while encouraging individuals to maintain a positive and forward-looking state. Together, these actions build a positive psychological foundation for coping with mental illness, providing a unique response pathway to the mental illness triggered by the “individualized self.” Cultural healing practices in the north of China for mental illness not only adapt to the modern Chinese medical system and social context, but also offer a targeted cultural healing perspective for understanding mental illness phenomena in China’s individuation process, thereby promoting philosophical reflection on the concept of the “self.” Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Religion, Ritual, and Healing—2nd Edition)
15 pages, 1861 KB  
Article
Mitogenomic Analysis and Conservation Genetics of the Endangered Oriental Stork (Ciconia boyciana)
by Xiao-Die Chen, Yun-Yun Wang, Zhi-Min Xu, Lin Xiao, Chang-Hu Lu, Cheng-He Sun and Cheng-Zhi Li
Animals 2026, 16(7), 1077; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16071077 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 315
Abstract
Despite the endangered status of the Oriental Stork (Ciconia boyciana) on the IUCN Red List, a critical lack of contemporary mitochondrial genomic data from its core distribution areas in mainland China has hindered our understanding of the species’ long-term evolutionary stability [...] Read more.
Despite the endangered status of the Oriental Stork (Ciconia boyciana) on the IUCN Red List, a critical lack of contemporary mitochondrial genomic data from its core distribution areas in mainland China has hindered our understanding of the species’ long-term evolutionary stability and spatiotemporal variation. This study addresses this gap by sequencing and assembling the complete mitogenome (17,608 bp) of a contemporary individual from Hongze Lake, Jiangsu (PX682155), and conducting a rigorous comparative analysis against a historical reference sequence published 25 years ago in Japan (NC_002196). Our results demonstrate striking structural and functional conservation across a quarter-century span; the 13 protein-coding genes exhibit highly synchronized gene arrangements, base composition biases, and Relative Synonymous Codon Usage (RSCU) patterns, indicative of stringent purifying selection maintaining oxidative phosphorylation efficiency. While phylogenetic analysis reinforces its sister-group relationship with the White Stork (C. ciconia), significant length polymorphisms were identified within the D-loop control region, primarily driven by microsatellite repeat variations. These findings provide a vital genomic benchmark for mainland populations, offering high-resolution molecular markers essential for future large-scale assessments of geographic isolation and the refinement of targeted conservation strategies for this flagship wetland species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Animal Genetics and Genomics)
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21 pages, 765 KB  
Article
The Quiet Arts: Silence, Shadow, and Alternative Archives for Recovering Women’s Silenced Histories
by Tinka Harvard
Arts 2026, 15(4), 66; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts15040066 - 29 Mar 2026
Viewed by 399
Abstract
This article investigates how women’s relative absence from medieval textual archives can be reconsidered through the study of visual and material culture. Focusing on Mongol and Yuan China and read in relation to The Travels of Marco Polo, it argues that women’s artistic [...] Read more.
This article investigates how women’s relative absence from medieval textual archives can be reconsidered through the study of visual and material culture. Focusing on Mongol and Yuan China and read in relation to The Travels of Marco Polo, it argues that women’s artistic production functioned as a form of embedded counter-archive that preserves traces of participation obscured in narrative sources. Drawing on Black feminist epistemology as a heuristic framework and employing critical fabulation and poetic inquiry as analytical methods, the study interprets silence as a meaningful historical trace rather than a void, and considers silence not as absence but as a structured condition of archival production. Four case studies—Guan Daosheng’s literati bamboo painting, the handscroll tradition associated with Lady Su Hui, imperial phoenix embroidery, and Silk Road textile fragments—demonstrate distinct modes through which women’s presence becomes materially legible: mediated visibility, formal containment, infrastructural anonymity, and circulatory displacement. These “quiet arts” reveal how women’s labour and creativity persisted within and alongside patriarchal inscriptional systems even when textual attribution receded. In dialogue with the shadow silhouettes of contemporary artist Kara Walker, the article further situates these premodern archives within a broader visual language of absence and recovery. Rather than reconstructing lost biographies, it proposes a transdisciplinary method—integrating art history, feminist theory, theology, and poetic inquiry—for reading material culture as a site where historical silence becomes structurally legible. It proposes a transdisciplinary approach that expands art historical methods for interpreting gender, authorship, and archival silence in medieval visual culture. Full article
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35 pages, 25275 KB  
Article
KCY’s University-Campus-Planning Practice: “Compositionalism” and Its Sino-American Cross-Cultural Knowledge Pathway
by Bo Lv and Gang Feng
Buildings 2026, 16(7), 1345; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16071345 - 27 Mar 2026
Viewed by 353
Abstract
This study examines the campus-planning projects (1920–1937) of Kwan, Chu & Yang, Architects & Engineers (KCY), a major Chinese firm, against the backdrop of Sino-American cross-cultural knowledge transfer. It argues that their work exhibited a distinct compositional tendency derived from the partners’ U.S. [...] Read more.
This study examines the campus-planning projects (1920–1937) of Kwan, Chu & Yang, Architects & Engineers (KCY), a major Chinese firm, against the backdrop of Sino-American cross-cultural knowledge transfer. It argues that their work exhibited a distinct compositional tendency derived from the partners’ U.S. Beaux-Arts education and contemporary American planning theory. Through historical analysis and case studies of four university projects, this research examines how composition-based spatial unity engaged with specific Chinese site conditions. The results indicate that early projects negotiated irregular boundaries, while later ones grappled with complex topography, such as historic gardens and hills. Although often unrealized, these grand schemes embodied a scientific planning methodology and served as aspirational blueprints. This study concludes that compositional practice was a significant part of China’s architectural modernization, representing both a professional design approach and a cultural response to the quest for modernity and national identity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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30 pages, 8776 KB  
Article
Classification System and Characteristic Analysis of Cultural Route Landscapes in the Nanling Corridor: An Empirical Study on the Hunan–Guangdong Ancient Road
by Siying Zhang and Guoguang Wang
Land 2026, 15(4), 543; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040543 - 26 Mar 2026
Viewed by 404
Abstract
Cultural routes, an important concept in heritage conservation, represent an innovative paradigm that is reshaping the contemporary trajectory of cultural heritage research. The Nanling Corridor satisfies the four core criteria for cultural routes—temporal continuity, spatial distribution, cross-cultural attributes, and specific historical functional roles—and [...] Read more.
Cultural routes, an important concept in heritage conservation, represent an innovative paradigm that is reshaping the contemporary trajectory of cultural heritage research. The Nanling Corridor satisfies the four core criteria for cultural routes—temporal continuity, spatial distribution, cross-cultural attributes, and specific historical functional roles—and stands as a paradigmatic indigenous cultural route in China. Focusing on the Hunan–Guangdong Ancient Road—a core segment of the Nanling Corridor—this study integrates historical document analysis, representative sample field surveys, and a historical restoration method to systematically classify and characterize the ancient road’s landscape features. The study findings indicate that the Hunan–Guangdong border region within the Nanling area is endowed with a distinctive natural geographical setting and a complex socio-cultural context. Against this background, landscape elements are categorized into two primary clusters: those directly associated with the ancient road and those indirectly linked to it. The directly associated landscapes are further subdivided into four categories: the cross-territorial route, meso-scale hubs enabling land–water transfer, widely distributed micro-scale ancillary facilities, and intangible engineering techniques. The indirectly associated landscapes encompass four dimensions—military defense, population migration, commercial trade, and religious practice—each demonstrating unique landscape attributes while sharing homologous formative mechanisms. This study aims to provide a China-focused research reference for the international theory of cultural routes through the systematic study of the landscapes along the Hunan–Guangdong Ancient Road within the Nanling Corridor. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Natural Landscape and Cultural Heritage (Second Edition))
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27 pages, 5046 KB  
Article
Folk Beliefs in Hell as a Response to “Legal Pluralism”: Qing Dynasty Material Yuli as “Underworld Legal Codes”
by Ruofei Zhou
Religions 2026, 17(4), 414; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17040414 - 25 Mar 2026
Viewed by 523
Abstract
During the mid-to-late Qing Dynasty, the folk-belief text Yuli constructed a systematic “underworld legal code” via its image–text system, distinct from traditional religious karma and religious law. This study focuses on Yuli’s core image system, exploring its unique legal characteristics and social [...] Read more.
During the mid-to-late Qing Dynasty, the folk-belief text Yuli constructed a systematic “underworld legal code” via its image–text system, distinct from traditional religious karma and religious law. This study focuses on Yuli’s core image system, exploring its unique legal characteristics and social governance functions through an interdisciplinary approach integrating religious studies, art history, and legal history. Yuli transforms real judicial symbols, such as government offices and prison gates, into underworld visual elements, establishing the core legal principles of “correspondence between crime and punishment” and “universal equality” while reflecting contemporary legal thought. The formation of this “underworld legal code” is closely linked to the creative practices of Qing Confucian scholars, who utilized folk beliefs as a vehicle to disseminate secular legal concepts and respond to social demands for behavioral norms. The Yuli thus became the primary behavioral norm for its grassroots audience, who, due to low literacy, could not understand the formal laws of the Qing Dynasty, and guided them to refrain from criminal acts. Yuli’s “underworld legal code” not only supplemented the national legal system but also reflected the pluralistic pattern of social governance in late imperial China, providing crucial empirical support for the theory of legal pluralism. This study deepens the understanding of the interactive relationship between folk beliefs and legal order in traditional China, and further clarifies the unique mode of grassroots social governance in the Qing Dynasty. Full article
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20 pages, 990 KB  
Systematic Review
Global Review on Naegleria fowleri Cases: Contemporary Epidemiology, Diagnosis, Treatment and Outcomes
by Andreas Sarantopoulos, Annalisa Quattrocchi, Ioannis Kopsidas, Oliver A. Cornely, Danila Seidel, Itamar Grotto and Zoi Dorothea Pana
Infect. Dis. Rep. 2026, 18(2), 25; https://doi.org/10.3390/idr18020025 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 510
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) is a rare, fulminant, and often fatal central nervous system infection caused by the opportunistic free-living amoeba Naegleria fowleri. Although Naegleria species are widely present in freshwater and soil worldwide, human disease is associated specifically with pathogenic [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis (PAM) is a rare, fulminant, and often fatal central nervous system infection caused by the opportunistic free-living amoeba Naegleria fowleri. Although Naegleria species are widely present in freshwater and soil worldwide, human disease is associated specifically with pathogenic N. fowleri rather than the many nonpathogenic environmental species, and virulence may vary across N. fowleri isolates. This systematic review aimed to synthesize contemporary global data from 2000 to 2024 to identify recent trends in epidemiology, clinical presentation, diagnosis, treatment, and outcomes. Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted across PubMed, Scopus, and the Cochrane Library, identifying 58 eligible publications encompassing 66 individual cases. Results: Most reports originated from the United States, India, and China. The median patient age was 14 years, with 78% of cases occurring in males. Annual case reports increased from one per year (2000–2005) to over four per year (2020–2024), reflecting either a true rise in incidence or improved detection. Common presenting symptoms included fever, headache, and altered mental status. Diagnosis was confirmed via polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing or post-mortem biopsy in nearly one-third of cases. Treatment regimens varied, with amphotericin B and miltefosine being the most frequently used agents. Overall mortality was 83%, with survival strongly associated with early initiation of combination therapy. Pediatric patients had a higher survival rate (22%) compared to adults (7.1%). Conclusions: The findings highlight the need for heightened clinical awareness, especially in the context of climate-driven ecological changes that may expand N. fowleri’s geographic range. This review underscores critical gaps in surveillance and diagnostics and emphasizes the importance of a One Health approach to addressing emerging threats like PAM. Further research into novel therapeutics, rapid diagnostics, and global case reporting systems is urgently needed. Full article
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