Rural Land Management and Revitalization through a Locally Coordinated Integrated Master Plan—A Model from Germany to China
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Rural Revitalization in China for Narrowing the Rural–Urban Gap
1.2. The Objective and Approach of This Study
2. Rural Development through Revitalization as a Land Issue: Conceptual and Practical Understanding
2.1. Reiterating Rural Development
2.2. Rural Revitalization from General and Geographical Perspectives
- Investing in rural economies: While agricultural productivity sparks non-agricultural rural activities, additional investments in innovation, incubation centers, industrial parks, and special economic zones can help boost rural enterprise development.
- Investing in ICTs: Complementary investments in input markets and financial services are required to ensure that markets function efficiently and equitably. In addition, promoting small and medium rural enterprises that use new technologies could have a differential impact on youth, given their capacity to use Information Communication Technology.
- Investing in education: Enhancing rural education systems and matching training to local needs and opportunities can ensure that educated youth do not leave for the city and propel growth poles and corridors across rural areas. Education is critical to providing rural people with knowledge and skills to improve their livelihoods. Investments include, first and foremost, improving primary and secondary education.
- Supporting rural health: Investments in health services can serve as a linchpin to improving labor productivity, nutrition, and quality of life for generations to come. For example, creating rural health education systems, training nurses to carry out procedures traditionally reserved for physicians, and safe motherhood programs have great potential in rural revitalization.
- Fostering sustainability and a healthy environment: Rural areas can contribute to rural and urban environmental quality through sustainable practices to manage ecosystem resources and protect biodiversity. Improvements in resource tenure systems and removal of distortionary subsidies can create better incentives for sustainable resource use. Adopting community-based management systems for water and forests can also offer opportunities for shared prosperity, environmental sustainability, and social cohesion.
- Encouraging devolution and people-oriented governance: A decentralized system of participatory, transparent, and accountable and balanced fiscal powers with assigned functions is better positioned to promote sustainable rural revitalization. Moreover, good governance is a prerequisite to rural revitalization in the sense that functioning and responsive local governments act in the people’s interest and provide high-quality services.
2.3. Rural Revitalization from General and Geographical Perspectives: Chinese Context
“To speed up the modernization in rural areas in China, a rural revitalization strategy was adopted during the 19th National Congress of the Communist Party of China on October 18, 2017. It is a response to the rural challenges, which pursues balanced economic and agricultural development. The report of the 19th National Congress pointed out that, “We must prioritize the development of agriculture and rural areas. To build rural areas with a thriving business, pleasant living environment, social etiquette and civility, effective governance and prosperity, we need to put in place sound systems, mechanisms and policies for promoting integrated urban-rural development and speed up the modernization of agriculture and rural areas. The Document Number One’ of 2018, which reflects the top priority of the central Government, also draws a roadmap for China reaching three goals: significant progress in rural rejuvenation by 2020, agricultural modernization by 2025, and a strong agriculture sector and full realization of farmers wealth by 2050. In response, the Ministry of Agriculture is looking at a more scientific approach supported with local data collected from villages across China.”
2.4. Rural Revitalization from General and Geographical Perspectives: European Context
- Fostering knowledge transfer and innovation in agriculture, forestry, and rural areas;
- Enhancing the competitiveness of all types of agriculture and farm viability activities;
- Promoting food chain organization and risk management in agriculture;
- Restoring and preserving an ecosystem dependent on agriculture and forestry;
- Promoting resource efficiency and supporting the shift towards a low-carbon and climate-resilient economy in agriculture, food, and forestry sectors;
- Promoting social inclusion, poverty reduction, and economic development in rural areas.
3. Methodology
3.1. Pilot Study Areas and Methods
3.2. Challenges Encountered and Limitations That Influenced This Study
3.3. Grasping the Scenario of Rural Land Challenges in Nanchong by Listening to the Voices of the People
4. Adapting Bavarian Rural Revitalization Knowledge to Sichuan: Key Issues
4.1. Dorferneuerung (Village Renewal): The Bavarian Context of Rural Revitalization
4.2. Flurbereinigung (Land Consolidation) for Strengthening Rural Agriculture and Landscapes
5. Locally Coordinated, Integrated Master Plan Model in Sichuan
5.1. Coordinated, Integrated Master Plan for Rural Revitalization in Sichuan. What and Why?
5.2. How the Generic Locally Coordinated, Integrated Master Plan Approach Was Adapted in Sichuan
5.3. Specific Components of the Locally Coordinated, Integrated Master Plan Adopted in Sichuan
6. Conclusions and Recommendations
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Description of Key Informants | Quotations from Key Informants | Context of Remark |
---|---|---|
High-level staff (HLS) participating at a lecture event to prepare the ground for the pilot project | “We must continue from now, we must think more deeply.” | An HLS is someone holding a management position in a government ministry. This informant views the land challenges in rural areas with urgency, and thoughtfulness. |
Party secretary (AS) | “We must shift our thinking. The more fundamental, the better.” | AS is the leader of the Chinese Communist Party organization in a province, city, village, or other administrative region. AS is the de facto highest political office of its area of jurisdiction. This AS considers the rural issue both a philosophical and ideological concern. |
Party secretary at an event involved high-level staff and politically responsible individuals in the area | “We do not have to work based on the Chinese Speed in implementation. It is like a building. It works better with good foundations. We must use the pilot project as a field for experiments.” | This AS calls for the need to avoid a rushed approach to their rural land problems. In doing so, he is critical of the typical Chinese approaches which sometimes prioritize speed over quality. |
8-year-old whose parents are migrant workers | “I want to stay in countryside.” | This child indicated he would like to remain in the village rather than join his migrant parents in the city. This reflects the fundamental longing for young people to live in their rural towns and villages. |
Migrant worker | “Where my home is, there is no work, where the work is, there is no home.” | This migrant worker emphasizes the rural problem of unemployment and the urban problem of livability. |
HLS participating in a lecture event to prepare the ground for the pilot project | “The biggest problem is the lack of human resources since most local villagers have already moved away.” | This HLS is concerned about the high rural–urban migration which has left her village deserted without a skilled work force for rural land management. |
HLS invited from an actual responsible decision board as an advisor to the project | “In the process of urbanization for 40 years, Chinese cities have been depriving rural areas of their most valuable resource-human resources.” | This HLS reflects on the negative urban development impacts which result in urban–rural migration. Thereby, drawing professionals away from rural areas. |
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Chigbu, U.E.; Klaus, M.; Zhang, W.; Alexander, L. Rural Land Management and Revitalization through a Locally Coordinated Integrated Master Plan—A Model from Germany to China. Land 2023, 12, 1840. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12101840
Chigbu UE, Klaus M, Zhang W, Alexander L. Rural Land Management and Revitalization through a Locally Coordinated Integrated Master Plan—A Model from Germany to China. Land. 2023; 12(10):1840. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12101840
Chicago/Turabian StyleChigbu, Uchendu Eugene, Michael Klaus, Wenjun Zhang, and Laina Alexander. 2023. "Rural Land Management and Revitalization through a Locally Coordinated Integrated Master Plan—A Model from Germany to China" Land 12, no. 10: 1840. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12101840
APA StyleChigbu, U. E., Klaus, M., Zhang, W., & Alexander, L. (2023). Rural Land Management and Revitalization through a Locally Coordinated Integrated Master Plan—A Model from Germany to China. Land, 12(10), 1840. https://doi.org/10.3390/land12101840