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Keywords = rural China

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23 pages, 444 KB  
Article
Livelihood Capital, Risk-Bearing Capacity, and Land Transfer-Out Decisions: Evidence from China
by Junfeng Zhang, Feng Cheng, Xiaowei Xu, Jiancheng Ding, Ling Mei, Mingqiang Li and Xiong Zhang
Land 2026, 15(5), 737; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050737 (registering DOI) - 26 Apr 2026
Abstract
Farmers’ land transfer-out decisions involve weighing benefits against risks. However, existing studies tend to examine the separate effects of livelihood capital or risk perception on land transfer, overlooking whether and how risk-bearing capacity mediates the relationship between livelihood capital and transfer-out decisions. Moreover, [...] Read more.
Farmers’ land transfer-out decisions involve weighing benefits against risks. However, existing studies tend to examine the separate effects of livelihood capital or risk perception on land transfer, overlooking whether and how risk-bearing capacity mediates the relationship between livelihood capital and transfer-out decisions. Moreover, most research treats land transfer-out as a simple binary choice (transfer or not), ignoring that farmers also decide to whom to transfer—a choice that affects both risk and return. This study investigates the effects of livelihood capital and risk-bearing capacity on these decisions, drawing on 2021 China Land Economy Survey data. Logistic regression and mediation models are employed to assess both direct and indirect impacts. The results indicate that natural and financial capital represent the most binding constraints on farmers’ livelihood capital. Higher levels of livelihood capital increase the likelihood of land transfer-out, with this effect operating partly through enhanced risk-bearing capacity. When selecting a transfer object, farmers with greater livelihood capital show a preference for village collectives over other farmers, cooperatives, or enterprises—a choice reflecting a trade-off between expected returns and perceived risks. Risk-bearing capacity partially mediates the effect of livelihood capital on the choice of village collectives and other farmers, but does not play a mediating role in transfers to enterprises or cooperatives. These findings suggest that policies designed to facilitate land transfer-out should consider not only the enhancement of farmers’ livelihood capital endowments but also the strengthening of their risk-bearing capacity. China still needs to strengthen the organizational framework for rural land transfers and improve the rights protection mechanisms for such transfers. This will reduce the risks associated with land transfer-out for farmers, encourage more proactive and market-oriented decision-making, and ultimately improve land transfer efficiency. Full article
21 pages, 1894 KB  
Article
Measuring Spatial Heterogeneity and Obstacle Factors of Urban–Rural Integration Development in Zhejiang Province, China
by Yanfei Zhang, Peijin Zhang, Zhangwei Lu, Yaqi Wu and Zhonggou Chen
Land 2026, 15(5), 732; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050732 (registering DOI) - 25 Apr 2026
Abstract
Using panel data from 11 prefecture-level cities in Zhejiang Province (2014–2023), this study applies the entropy method, spatial autocorrelation analysis, and an obstacle-factor diagnosis model to examine the spatiotemporal evolution, regional disparities, and constraints on urban–rural integration. The results show a steady upward [...] Read more.
Using panel data from 11 prefecture-level cities in Zhejiang Province (2014–2023), this study applies the entropy method, spatial autocorrelation analysis, and an obstacle-factor diagnosis model to examine the spatiotemporal evolution, regional disparities, and constraints on urban–rural integration. The results show a steady upward trend in urban–rural integration alongside significant regional disparities. This reveals a complex pattern marked by the coexistence of convergence and divergence. Spatially, a clear “northeast–high, southwest–low” pattern is observed, with local adjustments within a stable framework, reflecting a “stable core and entrenched low-value areas.” Spatial agglomeration is characterized by “dual-core agglomeration with a predominantly non-significant periphery,” dominated by homogeneous “high–high” and “low–low” clusters, with no statistically significant spatial outliers. Obstacle factor diagnosis indicates markedly uneven constraining effects across subsystems, with spatial integration exhibiting the highest degree of obstacles. The composition of primary obstacle factors is highly stable, and obstacle structures differ significantly across city tiers. These findings elucidate the spatiotemporal evolution and core constraints of urban–rural integration in Zhejiang, offering a theoretical and decision-making basis for advancing high-quality urban–rural integration in the region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Contexts and Urban-Rural Interactions)
22 pages, 2739 KB  
Article
The Impact of Long-Term Care Insurance Payment Modes on Healthcare Utilization and Expenditures Among Middle-Aged and Older Adults in China
by Xinfang Li, Mingqiang Li and Zhihui Li
Healthcare 2026, 14(9), 1157; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14091157 (registering DOI) - 25 Apr 2026
Abstract
Objectives: This study examines how different benefit payment modes under China’s long-term care insurance (LTCI) program influence healthcare utilization and medical expenditures among middle-aged and older adults. Specifically, it compares the effects of in-kind benefits and mixed benefits on healthcare service use [...] Read more.
Objectives: This study examines how different benefit payment modes under China’s long-term care insurance (LTCI) program influence healthcare utilization and medical expenditures among middle-aged and older adults. Specifically, it compares the effects of in-kind benefits and mixed benefits on healthcare service use and financial burden. Methods: This study uses data from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS) from 2011 to 2018, focusing on middle-aged and older adults with functional limitations. Exploiting the staggered implementation of LTCI pilot programs across 14 cities, a difference-in-differences (DID) approach is employed to estimate the causal effects of different benefit payment modes on healthcare utilization and expenditures. Heterogeneity analyses are conducted to explore differences between rural and urban populations. Results: The results indicate that the in-kind benefit mode significantly reduces inpatient visits, total medical costs, and out-of-pocket expenditures. By contrast, the mixed benefit mode shows only a modest reduction observed mainly in outpatient visits. Heterogeneity analysis further reveals that in-kind benefits are particularly effective in reducing healthcare utilization and medical expenditures among rural residents, while urban residents experience higher reductions in out-of-pocket spending. Conclusions: These findings highlight the importance of benefit design in shaping the effectiveness of LTCI policies. Prioritizing service-based benefits may improve healthcare system efficiency and reduce financial burdens among older adults. The results provide policy-relevant insights for optimizing LTCI benefit design in China and other aging societies. Full article
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11 pages, 700 KB  
Article
Myopia Prevalence Among 6–17 Years Students in Rural Areas of Seven Provinces of China
by Xue Li, Huayu Zhang, Xiao Fang, Xiaodi Wu, Qian Gan, Yingying Huang, Qian Zhang, Hao Chen and Jinhua Bao
J. Clin. Med. 2026, 15(9), 3261; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcm15093261 - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Estimate the prevalence of myopia among children aged 6–17 years in county and rural areas across seven geographically diverse provinces of China, and identify demographic, behavioral, and geographic factors associated with myopia, with particular focus on urban–rural and ethnic differences. Methods [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Estimate the prevalence of myopia among children aged 6–17 years in county and rural areas across seven geographically diverse provinces of China, and identify demographic, behavioral, and geographic factors associated with myopia, with particular focus on urban–rural and ethnic differences. Methods: A multi-stage stratified cluster sampling design was employed. Seven provinces were randomly selected, one from each of seven geographical regions of China (Southeast, North, Central, South, Southwest, Northwest, and Northeast). In each province, one rural county was randomly chosen. Within each county, one urban survey site (county town) and one rural survey site (village) were selected. From each site, one primary school and one junior high school were included. In each school, approximately 20 ± 2 students per grade (grades 1–9) were recruited. Uncorrected visual acuity and non-cycloplegic autorefraction were measured. Multivariable generalized linear mixed models (GLMM) with random intercepts at the class level were used to identify factors associated with myopia, accounting for the cluster sampling design. Results: The overall myopia prevalence was 42.9% (urban 49.6%, rural 36.0%). In the multivariable GLMM, educational stage was the strongest risk factor (grades 7–9 vs. 1–3: OR = 5.54). A significant district × ethnicity interaction was found only for Mongolian children: rural residence was strongly protective (OR = 0.19) compared to Han (OR = 0.65), and the ethnic advantage disappeared in county towns. Only 14.2% of myopic students had adequate correction. Conclusions: In conclusion, myopia is highly prevalent and severely under-corrected in rural China. Educational pressure is the main risk factor, and the rural protective effect is strongest in Mongolians but erodes with urbanization. Urgent public health actions, including vision screening, affordable spectacles, and lifestyle preservation, are needed to address this growing burden. Full article
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22 pages, 326 KB  
Article
Analysis of the Impact of Fiscal Revenue and Expenditure on China’s Grain Production Using Panel Double-Kink Regression Model
by Yueyi Chen, Xin Chen, Paravee Maneejuk and Woraphon Yamaka
Agriculture 2026, 16(9), 944; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16090944 - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
This study examines whether the relationship between provincial fiscal revenue and expenditure measures and grain production in China is nonlinear. Using a balanced panel of 31 provinces from 2007 to 2021, we analyze major revenue-side and expenditure-side fiscal instruments, including the cultivated land [...] Read more.
This study examines whether the relationship between provincial fiscal revenue and expenditure measures and grain production in China is nonlinear. Using a balanced panel of 31 provinces from 2007 to 2021, we analyze major revenue-side and expenditure-side fiscal instruments, including the cultivated land occupation tax, value-added tax, agricultural insurance subsidies, agricultural loan interest subsidies, rural minimum living security subsidies, education expenditure, and transportation infrastructure expenditure. To identify regime-dependent changes in estimated associations, we employ panel kink and double-kink regression models with endogenously estimated kink points. The results suggest that the estimated relationships are intensity-dependent rather than constant. The cultivated land occupation tax exhibits a kinked relationship with grain production, with a more positive association beyond a certain level. Agricultural insurance subsidies display a double-kink pattern, with the strongest positive estimated association concentrated in an intermediate range of the subsidy measure. Rural minimum living security subsidies are positively associated with grain production at lower levels, but this association weakens and may become negative after the estimated kink point. Overall, the findings suggest that the relationship between fiscal variables and grain production depends not only on policy direction but also on the levels of the fiscal measures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
26 pages, 971 KB  
Article
Digital Technology Empowering Agricultural Green Transformation and Low-Carbon Development in China
by Wenwen Song, Yonghui Tang, Yusuo Li and Li Pan
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4254; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094254 (registering DOI) - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
Under the coordinated implementation of the “dual carbon” goals and digital rural development strategy, digital technology has become a critical support for solving key problems in agricultural carbon reduction and advancing the green and low-carbon transformation of agriculture. Based on panel data from [...] Read more.
Under the coordinated implementation of the “dual carbon” goals and digital rural development strategy, digital technology has become a critical support for solving key problems in agricultural carbon reduction and advancing the green and low-carbon transformation of agriculture. Based on panel data from 31 provincial-level regions in China from 2010 to 2023, this study uses the fixed-effect model, mediating the effect model and threshold effect model to systematically examine the impact and transmission mechanism of digital technology on agricultural carbon emission intensity. The results show that: (1) Digital technology markedly lowers agricultural carbon emission intensity, and this conclusion remains steady after endogeneity correction and robustness checks. (2) Digital technology reduces emissions through two core channels: enhancing environmental regulation to constrain high-carbon behaviors via precise monitoring, and improving agricultural socialized services to promote intensive production and lower the adoption threshold of low-carbon technologies. (3) The emission reduction effect of digital technology exhibits a threshold characteristic related to agricultural industrial agglomeration, with the marginal effect of emission reduction showing an increasing trend as the agglomeration level rises. (4) The carbon reduction effect of digital technology shows obvious heterogeneity across grain production functional zones. The inhibitory effect is significant in major grain-producing areas and grain production–consumption balance areas, but not significant in major grain-consuming areas. (5) The carbon reduction effect also presents heterogeneity under different topographic relief conditions. The effect is significant in low-relief areas but not significant in high-relief areas, because complex terrain restricts the construction of digital infrastructure and large-scale application of digital technologies, which further reflects the regulatory role of natural geographical conditions. Accordingly, this paper proposes to strengthen the empowering role of digital technology in the green transformation of agriculture, attach importance to regional coordination and differentiated policy design, and comprehensively improve the capacity of agricultural carbon emission reduction and sequestration. Therefore, it is imperative to strengthen the enabling role of digital technology in the green transformation of agriculture, attach importance to regional coordination and differentiated policy design, and comprehensively enhance the capacity of agriculture for carbon emission reduction, sequestration and sustainable development. Full article
23 pages, 970 KB  
Article
How Does Rural Digitalization Affect the Resilience of the Swine Industry? A Sustainable Development Perspective
by Gangyi Wang and Xing Zhang
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4251; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094251 (registering DOI) - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
Understanding the impact of rural digitalization on the resilience of the swine industry is crucial to promoting its transformation toward efficient and low-carbon production. However, existing research has not yet clarified how rural digitalization influences the resilience of the swine industry, and there [...] Read more.
Understanding the impact of rural digitalization on the resilience of the swine industry is crucial to promoting its transformation toward efficient and low-carbon production. However, existing research has not yet clarified how rural digitalization influences the resilience of the swine industry, and there is a particular lack of discussion regarding potential nonlinear relationships. Based on panel data from 30 Chinese provinces for the period 2011–2023, we employed the entropy method to measure the level of rural digitalization and the resilience of the swine industry. Two-way fixed-effects, mediation, and threshold models were adopted to empirically examine the relationship and underlying mechanisms. The findings indicated that rural digitalization significantly enhances the resilience of the swine industry, and this finding remained robust after multiple robustness checks and endogeneity treatments. This effect is primarily mediated by two pathways: industrial-scale expansion and industrial agglomeration. Additionally, well-designed environmental policies and higher rural household incomes can strengthen the beneficial effect of rural digitalization on industrial resilience. Heterogeneity analysis further reveals that the positive influence is stronger in regions with poor transportation infrastructure and in central and western China, where digitalization effectively strengthens the industry’s shock resistance and adaptive capacity. This study offers meaningful implications for policymakers seeking to accelerate rural digitalization and promote high-quality development of the swine industry in the digital age. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Digital Transformation and Sustainable Growth)
27 pages, 3448 KB  
Article
Spatial Reconfiguration of the Metropolitan Fringe Areas Under Policy Evolution—Taking Guangming District of Shenzhen as an Example
by Hongzhang Lin, Desheng Xue, Benshuo Wang and Bo Wang
Land 2026, 15(5), 717; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050717 - 24 Apr 2026
Abstract
With the accelerating processes of globalization and urbanization, metropolitan fringe areas—situated at the intersection of urban expansion and rural transformation—have become critical focal points in urban geography, regional economics, and urban–rural planning. Within the context of China’s new urbanization strategy and the national [...] Read more.
With the accelerating processes of globalization and urbanization, metropolitan fringe areas—situated at the intersection of urban expansion and rural transformation—have become critical focal points in urban geography, regional economics, and urban–rural planning. Within the context of China’s new urbanization strategy and the national “dual circulation” framework, the role of policy evolution in shaping spatial development has become increasingly significant. Specifically, in metropolitan fringe zones such as Shenzhen’s Guangming District, the complex interplay between overlapping policies and local path dependencies has generated a distinctive logic of spatial restructuring. Taking this area as a case study, this research investigates the influence of national policies on regional evolution and spatial reconstruction. The findings demonstrate that, under sustained policy guidance, Guangming District has experienced a three-stage process of spatial restructuring, characterized by a dynamic and tightly coupled relationship between policy instruments and spatial forms across different developmental phases. Full article
24 pages, 3061 KB  
Article
Innovation in Land Supply System During Rural Reform: Selection Mechanisms for Market Entry and Expropriation
by Xiao Teng, Zhenjiang Shen, Jiaxuan Chen, Jinming Jiang, Min Wang, Chen Chen, Fang Wu and Yamato Yuya
Land 2026, 15(5), 712; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050712 - 23 Apr 2026
Viewed by 89
Abstract
In the context of China’s rapid urbanization and rural land marketization reforms, the entry of rural collectively owned commercial construction land into the market (ERCCCLM) coexists with the traditional government-led land expropriation, forming a dual land supply system. China’s dual-structure land ownership system—where [...] Read more.
In the context of China’s rapid urbanization and rural land marketization reforms, the entry of rural collectively owned commercial construction land into the market (ERCCCLM) coexists with the traditional government-led land expropriation, forming a dual land supply system. China’s dual-structure land ownership system—where urban land belongs to the state and rural land to rural collectives—aims to balance land market allocation efficiency with government regulation for public interests. However, significant differences exist between the two patterns in terms of revenue distribution, risk-bearing, and institutional constraints. Consequently, stakeholders including rural collective economic organizations, farmers, local governments, and development companies face dilemmas in selecting land supply patterns, thereby limiting land resource allocation efficiency. The research employs multidimensional economic analysis to systematically compare the ERCCCLM and land expropriation patterns, establishing a land supply pattern selection mechanism with land market price and compensation for expropriation as key variables. First, the expenditure and revenue of stakeholders in both patterns were clarified based on relevant documents, and investment revenue models were constructed. Second, through comparative analysis of revenue formation mechanisms across land supply patterns and sensitivity analysis of multi-scenario calculations, the land market price and compensation for expropriation are identified as key variables determining economic revenue. The findings indicate that when the land market price exceeds compensation for expropriation, ERCCCLM generates higher economic revenue for the rural collective economic organization and farmer. Conversely, when the land market price is equal to or lower than the compensation for expropriation, land expropriation provides more stable revenue. The land expropriation and ERCCCLM examined in this research represent a unique land expropriation and utilization system exclusive to China. The proposed selection mechanism improves land market distribution efficiency and informs policy discussions on optimizing land supply patterns, ensuring a balance between market efficiency and stakeholder equity. Full article
33 pages, 1106 KB  
Article
Farmland Scale and Technical Efficiency in Chinese Agriculture: A Land Transfer Cost Perspective
by Huaichao Zhang and Tingting Li
Land 2026, 15(5), 711; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050711 - 23 Apr 2026
Viewed by 62
Abstract
This study investigates the relationship between farmland scale and technical efficiency. Using a household-level dataset from 10 provinces in China, we employed a flexible Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA) model to simultaneously estimate technical efficiency and evaluate its relationship with farmland scale. The results [...] Read more.
This study investigates the relationship between farmland scale and technical efficiency. Using a household-level dataset from 10 provinces in China, we employed a flexible Stochastic Frontier Analysis (SFA) model to simultaneously estimate technical efficiency and evaluate its relationship with farmland scale. The results show that the average technical efficiency scores for the full sample, wheat, rice, and maize are 0.677, 0.708, 0.733, and 0.669, respectively, indicating substantial potential for improving China’s agricultural production efficiency. Furthermore, an inverted U-shaped relationship exists between farmland scale and technical efficiency; technical efficiency initially rises and subsequently declines as farmland scale increases. Additional analysis reveals that this inverted U-shaped relationship is moderated by the marginal cost of land transfer. Specifically, a lower marginal cost of land transfer corresponds to a larger optimal farmland scale. The marginal cost of land transfer was captured by proxy variables, including the relief degree of land surface, the slope degree of land surface, and the development level of the village-level land rental market. We conclude that flatter terrain and a better-developed land rental market lead to a larger optimal farmland scale for rural households. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Land Use Policy and Food Security: 3rd Edition)
17 pages, 1912 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Patterns and Drivers of High-Quality Development in China’s Rural Tourism
by Haotian Sui and Jiaqi Yan
Systems 2026, 14(5), 460; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14050460 - 23 Apr 2026
Viewed by 141
Abstract
With the rapid expansion of rural tourism in China, high-quality development has become a key concern for academics and policymakers. Existing studies have focused primarily on economic and industrial growth, with limited attention paid to development quality from the perspective of resident well-being. [...] Read more.
With the rapid expansion of rural tourism in China, high-quality development has become a key concern for academics and policymakers. Existing studies have focused primarily on economic and industrial growth, with limited attention paid to development quality from the perspective of resident well-being. Using panel data from 30 Chinese provinces from 2012 to 2022, this study establishes a multidimensional evaluation framework for high-quality rural tourism. We employed the entropy weight method, Theil index, and quadratic assignment procedure analysis to examine its level, regional differences, and driving factors. The findings revealed that: (1) the overall level of rural tourism development remained relatively low but rose steadily from 0.064 (2012) to 0.150 (2022) (134.38% cumulative growth), driven by supply-side improvements and demand-side expansion. (2) Pronounced regional inequalities existed: eastern provinces had higher overall levels but larger internal gaps, whereas central/western provinces had lower overall levels but smaller internal differences, with intra-regional disparities accounting for over 66% of the national inequality. (3) The tourism market and transportation were universal key drivers, but the underlying mechanisms differed: the ecological environment exerted greater influence in the east, while public services and living standards were more critical in the central/western regions. By incorporating resident well-being into a systemic analytical framework, this study reconceptualizes high-quality rural tourism as an adaptive socio-ecological system shaped by multilevel interactions among the economy, society, and the environment. The results provide empirical evidence and systemic governance insights for promoting balanced and sustainable rural tourism development. Full article
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27 pages, 5573 KB  
Article
Spatiotemporal Characteristics and Obstacle Factors of Digital–Green Synergy Development in Rural China
by Xingcui Liu and Zhiheng Shi
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4135; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084135 - 21 Apr 2026
Viewed by 146
Abstract
Digital–green synergy development is a critical pathway for promoting comprehensive rural revitalization and high-quality development. Using panel data from 31 Chinese provinces spanning 2012 to 2023, we employ the global entropy weight method, a coupling coordination degree model, kernel density estimation, and an [...] Read more.
Digital–green synergy development is a critical pathway for promoting comprehensive rural revitalization and high-quality development. Using panel data from 31 Chinese provinces spanning 2012 to 2023, we employ the global entropy weight method, a coupling coordination degree model, kernel density estimation, and an obstacle degree model to systematically analyze the spatiotemporal evolutionary characteristics and obstacle factors underlying this synergy, aiming to provide a scientific basis for regionally differentiated comprehensive rural revitalization. The findings reveal that: (1) Both digitalization and greenization have improved steadily, though the growth rate of greenization lags behind that of digitalization. The level of digital–green synergy development, although initially low, shows continuous growth. (2) Spatially, digital–green synergy development exhibits a pattern of eastern leadership, central catching-up, western transition, and northeastern stagnation. (3) Nationally, the absolute disparity in digital–green synergy development continues to widen, indicating growing polarization. Regionally, the eastern region exhibits multipolarization, the central region shows bipolarization, while the western and northeastern regions display no significant polarization trends. (4) Production digitalization and living greenization are the primary constraints hindering synergy. Based on these findings, we propose targeted policy recommendations to facilitate deeper integration between rural digitalization and greenization, supporting decision-makers in advancing digital–green synergy development. Full article
19 pages, 6462 KB  
Article
Reconstructing Rural Settlements from a Living Space Perspective: Evidence from the Karst Mountainous Areas of Southwest China
by Qiuyu Zou, Xuesong Zhang, Jianwei Sun, Xiaowen Zhou and Hongjie Peng
Land 2026, 15(4), 685; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040685 - 21 Apr 2026
Viewed by 192
Abstract
Rural settlements serve as the core spatial carriers of rural living space, and their spatial evolution and functional transformation reflect the dynamic restructuring of human–land relationships. In karst mountainous areas, complex topography, fragmented land resources, and uneven distribution of public facilities significantly influence [...] Read more.
Rural settlements serve as the core spatial carriers of rural living space, and their spatial evolution and functional transformation reflect the dynamic restructuring of human–land relationships. In karst mountainous areas, complex topography, fragmented land resources, and uneven distribution of public facilities significantly influence settlement patterns and residents’ living spaces. This study aims to quantify the relationship between settlement clustering characteristics and living-space demand and to construct a spatially explicit framework for rural settlement restructuring from a living-space perspective. Taking the Qixingguan District of Bijie City, Guizhou Province—a representative karst mountainous area in Southwest China—as a case study, we develop an integrated analytical framework encompassing spatial identification, demand measurement, and zoning optimization. Settlement clusters were identified using the Nearest Neighbor Index and Kernel Density Analysis, while accessibility to essential services—including education, healthcare, and shopping—was quantified via a Gaussian-based two-step floating catchment area method. Living-space demand was further assessed by integrating accessibility gradients with residential conditions, and restructuring types were classified based on the Living Space Index and the distance from settlements to town centers. The results indicate that (1) rural settlements in Qixingguan District exhibit significant clustering, with high-density zones concentrated around urban peripheries and along transportation corridors; (2) accessibility to living services follows a distance-decay pattern modulated by transportation networks, forming hotspots in suburban and town-center areas and cold spots in peripheral karst mountainous areas; and (3) based on the comprehensive assessment, settlements are categorized into four types—urbanizing villages, central villages, preserved villages, and relocation villages—with corresponding targeted spatial restructuring strategies proposed. This study advances the geographical understanding of rural settlement restructuring in karst mountainous areas and provides empirical evidence for optimizing human–land relationships and promoting more equitable and sustainable spatial development in mountainous regions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainability in Land Use Planning: Tools and Case Studies)
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30 pages, 558 KB  
Article
The Impact of Digitalization on Farmers’ Recycling Behavior of Pesticide Packaging Waste: Evidence from Rural China
by Congying Zhang and Xinrui Feng
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4054; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084054 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 243
Abstract
The recycling of pesticide packaging waste is crucial for the sustainable development of agriculture and the advancement of ecological civilization. However, the current recycling management still faces challenges. This study adopts a dynamic analytical framework of “ex-ante behavioral cognition and post-event outcome perception” [...] Read more.
The recycling of pesticide packaging waste is crucial for the sustainable development of agriculture and the advancement of ecological civilization. However, the current recycling management still faces challenges. This study adopts a dynamic analytical framework of “ex-ante behavioral cognition and post-event outcome perception” to investigate the impact of digitalization on farmers’ recycling behavior of pesticide packaging waste. The analysis draws on data from the 2020 China Rural Revitalization Survey and examines two dimensions of digitalization: digital technology access and digital technology usage. The findings indicate that integrating digital technologies into farming practices significantly increases the likelihood of farmers participating in pesticide packaging waste recycling programs. These results remain robust after conducting robustness checks and addressing potential endogeneity issues. A heterogeneity analysis reveals that the promotional effect of digitalization varies significantly across different categories of rural elite status, cooperative membership, education level, pesticide spraying methods, and income structure. Mechanism testing further indicates that hazard cognition regarding pesticide packaging serves as a mediating factor in the impact of both digital technology access and usage on farmers’ recycling behavior. In contrast, farmers’ satisfaction with their living environment mediates only the effect of digital technology usage on recycling behavior. Overall, these findings provide both theoretical and empirical support for the hypothesis that digitalization can facilitate the recycling of pesticide packaging waste and enhance the ecological effectiveness of agricultural policy governance. Full article
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26 pages, 2160 KB  
Article
Land-Finance Intensity, the Urban–Rural Income Gap, and Female Educational Attainment: A Mediation Analysis Based on Provincial Panel Data from China
by Hao Pang, Zhe Huang, SangBum Son and Xiaowen Sha
Land 2026, 15(4), 673; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040673 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 153
Abstract
In this study, the relationship between land-finance intensity and female educational attainment is examined. A provincial panel dataset for China from 2002 to 2023 is constructed. Two-way fixed effects and mediation models are estimated to identify the underlying mechanisms, and panel threshold models [...] Read more.
In this study, the relationship between land-finance intensity and female educational attainment is examined. A provincial panel dataset for China from 2002 to 2023 is constructed. Two-way fixed effects and mediation models are estimated to identify the underlying mechanisms, and panel threshold models are adopted to test the conditional constraints imposed by government intervention and urbanization. A clear tradeoff is revealed by the findings. On average, land-finance intensity is positively associated with female educational attainment. A dual transmission pathway is identified by mediation analysis: local public education expenditure is significantly increased by land finance, which directly promotes female education, while the urban–rural income gap is simultaneously widened, thus restricting further educational progress. Nonlinear effects are also detected. The positive link between land finance and education is weakened in regions with strong government intervention or high urbanization. Regional heterogeneity is demonstrated by estimation results: the positive effect is strongest in western China, moderate but significant in eastern China, and insignificant in central China. Accordingly, a differentiated spatial governance strategy should be implemented by policymakers. Land revenues should be allocated to basic educational infrastructure in less urbanized regions, and the reduction in urban–rural opportunity gaps should be prioritized in developed regions. Full article
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