Land-Use Conflict Dynamics, Patterns, and Drivers under Rapid Urbanization
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Study Area, Materials and Methods
2.1. Overview of the Study Area
2.2. Data Sources
2.3. Research Methodology
2.3.1. Evaluation of the Technical Process
2.3.2. Landscape Conflict Measurement Model
- Spatial complexity index SPI
- 2.
- Spatial Fragility Index SFI
- 3.
- Spatial Stability Index SRI
2.3.3. Local Spatial Autocorrelation
2.3.4. Functional Conflict Modeling
- Land function evaluation model construction
- 2.
- Land function conflict identification model
3. Results and Analysis
3.1. Characteristics of Temporal and Spatial Differentiation of Landscape Conflicts
3.1.1. Spatial and Temporal Differentiation of Landscape Conflicts
3.1.2. Landscape Conflict Development Characteristics
3.2. Functional Conflict Measurement and Spatial and Temporal Differentiation
3.3. Spatial Coupling Characteristics of Landscape Conflict and Functional Conflict
4. Discussion
4.1. Internal Driving Forces of Land-Use Conflicts:
4.1.1. Spontaneous Diffusion of Economically Active Areas
4.1.2. The Traditional Industrial Pattern and the Guiding Role of Industrial Policy
4.1.3. Spatial Differentiation of Conflicts Due to Geospatial Constraints
4.2. LUC’s Drive from Regional Synergistic Development
4.2.1. Differentiated Zoning Strategy Drive under Regional Synergistic Development
4.2.2. Driven by the Flow of Industrial and Economic Factors
4.2.3. The Role of Integration of Internal and External Development Goals in the Context of Regional Synergy
4.3. Policy Implications and Future Directions for Governance
4.3.1. Stabilizing Urban–Rural Construction Land Conflicts through Use Control: Preventing the Spread of New Conflicts Due to Construction and Development
4.3.2. Ensure the Sanity of Arable Land Replenishment and Ecological Governance and Avoid Intensifying Lagging Governance Conflicts
4.3.3. Ensure Land-Use Coordination in the Process of Regional Synergistic Development and Reduce the Externality Drivers of Conflict
4.4. Implications and Limitations for Future Research
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Utilization Data | Period of Data | Source of Data |
---|---|---|
Land-use data | 2005, 2010, 2015, 2018, 2020 | Center for Resource and Environmental Sciences and Data, Chinese Academy of Sciences https://www.resdc.cn, accessed on 15 February 2021 |
Population geo-grid data | 2005, 2010, 2015, 2018, 2020 | |
GDP geo-grid data | 2005, 2010, 2015, 2018, 2020 | |
Meteorological data | Day-by-day data for 2005, 2010, 2015, 2018, 2020 | |
Data on geohazard sites | Until 2019 | |
DEM | 2000 | |
Road network data | 2005, 2010, 2015, 2018, 2020 | Extracted from Openstreetmap |
Educational resources POI data | Until 2020 | Guihuayun guihuayun.com, accessed on 9 April 2021 |
Medical resource POI data | Until 2020 |
Land Function Type | Description | Land-Use Type |
---|---|---|
Production-living space | Land used primarily to meet the needs of human life and production | Town land, rural settlement land, other construction land |
Production–ecological space | Land with predominantly productive functions and ecological functions, with the provision of crop products as the main function | Paddy field and dryland |
Ecological–production space | Sites with predominantly ecological functions and production functions, which may combine the provision of agricultural and forestry products | Forested land, shrubland, open forest land, other forest land |
Ecological space | Land with ecological value such as climate regulation and water conservation | Low-cover grassland, medium-cover grassland, high-cover grassland, rivers, canals, lakes, mudflats, beaches, marshes, reservoir pits, and ponds |
Type of Conflict | Conflict Value Classification | Description of the Type of Conflict |
---|---|---|
Stabilizing controlled conflicts | (0,0.34) | Stage of basic control of the conflict, where the external effects of the conflict are stable and manageable |
Mild conflict | [0.34,0.45) | Conflict manifestation phase, where the external effects of the conflict are largely manageable, is a critical period for prevention |
Moderate conflict | [0.45,0.58) | Heating up phase of the conflict, when the external effects of the conflict begin to spiral out of control and the results of the conflict begin to be seen |
Serious conflict | [0.58,1) | Stalemate phase of the conflict, where the external effects of the conflict are seriously out of control and the outcome of the conflict affects the sustainable development of the region |
Target Layer | Criteria Layer (Weights) | Factor Layer (Weights) | Factor Grading and Score | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 | 80 | 60 | 40 | 20 | |||
Ecological Functions | Natural factor (0.618) | Land-use type (0.75) | Woodlands, rivers, lakes, marshes | High and medium cover grassland, mudflats | Paddy land, dry land, other forest land | Bare land, low-cover grassland | Town land, rural settlement land, other construction land |
Forest cover (0.15) | Five levels of natural breakpoints are used, with scores assigned from high to low | ||||||
Climatic suitability (0.1) | |||||||
Location factor (0.284) | Distance to town/m (0.262) | >4000 | 2000–4000 | 1000–2000 | 500–1000 | <500 | |
Distance to villages/m (0.161) | >2000 | 1000–2000 | 500–1000 | 250–1000 | <250 | ||
Distance from road/m (0.099) | >1000 | 500–1000 | 250–500 | 100–250 | <100 | ||
Distance from water body/m (0.062) | <100 | 100–250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | >1000 | ||
Distance from ecological sources (0.416) | <500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | 2000–4000 | >4000 | ||
Socio-economic factors (0.097) | Index of comparative advantage in land use (1) | Five levels of natural breakpoints are used, with scores assigned from high to low |
Target Layer | Criteria Layer (Weights) | Factor Layer (Weights) | Factor Grading and Score | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 | 80 | 60 | 40 | 20 | |||
Production function | Natural factor (0.154) | Land-use type(0.164) | Town land, rural settlement land, other construction land | Paddy land, dry land, other forest land | Forested land, high and medium cover grasslands, rivers, lakes, reservoirs | Low-cover grasslands, mudflats, beaches, shrublands, open woodlands | Bare land, marshland |
Topographic index (0.539) | Five levels of natural breakpoints are used, with points assigned in descending order | ||||||
Distance to geologic hazard sites/m (0.297) | >2000 | 1500–2000 | 1000–1500 | 500–1000 | <500 | ||
Location factor (0.64) | Distance to town/m (0.309) | <500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | 2000–4000 | >4000 | |
Distance to villages/m (0.121) | <250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | >2000 | ||
Distance from roads above county level/m (0.096) | <250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | >2000 | ||
Distance from sub-county roads/m (0.044) | <100 | 100–250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | >1000 | ||
Distance from the river/m (0.121) | <500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | 2000–4000 | >4000 | ||
Distance from production sources/m (0.309) | <500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | 2000–4000 | >4000 | ||
Socio-economic factors (0.206) | Index of comparative advantage in land use (0.167) | Five levels of natural breakpoints are used, with points assigned in ascending order | |||||
GDP distribution (0.416) | |||||||
Population distribution (0.417) |
Target Layer | Criteria Layer (Weights) | Factor Layer (Weights) | Factor Grading and Score | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
100 | 80 | 60 | 40 | 20 | |||
Living function | Natural factor (0.164) | Land-use type (0.30) | Town | Land for rural settlements | Other building land | Paddy land, dry land, other forest land | other |
Topographic index (0.30) | Five levels of natural breakpoints are used, with points assigned in descending order | ||||||
Distance to geologic hazard sites/m (0.40) | >4000 | 3000–4000 | 2000–3000 | 1000–2000 | <1000 | ||
Location factor (0.297) | Distance to town/m (0.327) | <250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | >2000 | |
Distance to villages/m (0.149) | <200 | 200–500 | 500–1000 | 1000–1500 | >1500 | ||
Distance from roads above county level/m (0.098) | <200 | 200–500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | >2000 | ||
Distance from sub-county roads/m (0.066) | <100 | 100–250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | >1000 | ||
Distance from the river/m (0.033) | <250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | >2000 | ||
Distance from living sources/m (0.327) | <250 | 250–500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | >2000 | ||
Socio-economic factors (0.539) | Distance to educational facilities/m (0.268) | <500 | 500–1000 | 1000–2000 | 2000–4000 | >4000 | |
Distance to medical facilities/m (0.268) | <400 | 400–800 | 800–1500 | 1500–3000 | >3000 | ||
Population distribution (0.464) | Five levels of natural breakpoints are used, with points assigned in ascending order |
Description of the Conflict | Function Combination Type | Conflict Intensity Index/Level | Stages of Conflict Development | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Production | Life | Ecological | |||
Largely conflict-free | W | W | W | 1 | Conflict-free zone |
Single-function dominance | S | W | W | 2 | Basically manageable phase of the conflict |
W | S | W | |||
W | W | S | |||
M | W | W | |||
W | M | W | |||
W | W | M | |||
Weak conflict between two types of functions | M | M | W | 3 | |
M | W | M | |||
W | M | M | |||
Moderate conflict between two types of functions | S | M | W | 4 | |
S | W | M | |||
M | S | W | |||
W | S | M | |||
M | W | S | |||
W | M | S | |||
Strong conflict between two types of functions | S | S | W | 5 | Stage at which the conflict starts to spiral out of control |
S | W | S | |||
W | S | S | |||
Three types of functions in weak conflict | M | M | M | 6 | |
S | M | M | |||
M | S | M | |||
M | M | S | |||
Three types of functions are in moderate conflict | S | S | M | 7 | |
S | M | S | |||
S | S | M | |||
Three types of functions in strong conflict | S | S | S | 8 | The conflict is completely out of control |
Type of Conflict | Conflict Value Classification | Number of Grid Cells/pc | Percentage of Grid Cells/% | ||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 2010 | 2015 | 2020 | 2005 | 2010 | 2015 | 2020 | ||
Stabilizing controlled | (0,0.34) | 2981 | 2950 | 2867 | 2789 | 13.77 | 13.63 | 13.24 | 12.88 |
Mild conflict | [0.34,0.45) | 5478 | 4341 | 4055 | 3994 | 25.3 | 20.05 | 18.73 | 18.45 |
Moderate conflict | [0.45,0.58) | 10,669 | 9883 | 9627 | 9270 | 49.28 | 45.65 | 44.47 | 42.82 |
Serious conflict | [0.58,1) | 2520 | 4474 | 5099 | 5595 | 11.64 | 20.67 | 23.55 | 25.85 |
Heavy conflict rings up | —— | 1954 | 625 | 496 | —— | 77.54 | 13.97 | 9.77 |
Level of Conflict | Year | |||
---|---|---|---|---|
2005 | 2010 | 2015 | 2020 | |
1 | 0.446% | 0.564% | 0.395% | 0.305% |
2 | 36.462% | 37.312% | 35.797% | 36.998% |
3 | 18.351% | 28.298% | 22.672% | 21.007% |
4 | 35.657% | 21.022% | 26.780% | 27.120% |
5 | 4.553% | 7.924% | 9.542% | 6.498% |
6 | 4.225% | 4.474% | 4.371% | 7.285% |
7 | 0.293% | 0.375% | 0.417% | 0.746% |
8 | 0.004% | 0.020% | 0.015% | 0.031% |
Landscape Conflict—Functional Conflict Spatial Aggregation Types | Coupling Type Description | Characteristics of Change |
---|---|---|
High–High | Land function conflicts are higher and conflicts are spatially manifested in higher landscape conflicts | Exacerbation followed by deceleration |
Low–High | Functional conflicts are high, but spatially expressed landscape conflicts are low | Mitigation followed by stabilization |
High–Low | Functional conflicts are low, but spatially expressed landscape conflicts are high | Decline but unstable |
Low–Low | Land function conflicts are low and conflicts are spatially manifested in low landscape conflicts | Stabilization followed by gradual increase |
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Share and Cite
Wang, G.; Wang, J.; Wang, L.; Zhang, Y.; Zhang, W. Land-Use Conflict Dynamics, Patterns, and Drivers under Rapid Urbanization. Land 2024, 13, 1317. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13081317
Wang G, Wang J, Wang L, Zhang Y, Zhang W. Land-Use Conflict Dynamics, Patterns, and Drivers under Rapid Urbanization. Land. 2024; 13(8):1317. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13081317
Chicago/Turabian StyleWang, Guojian, Jianguo Wang, Lingzhi Wang, Yi Zhang, and Wenxuan Zhang. 2024. "Land-Use Conflict Dynamics, Patterns, and Drivers under Rapid Urbanization" Land 13, no. 8: 1317. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13081317
APA StyleWang, G., Wang, J., Wang, L., Zhang, Y., & Zhang, W. (2024). Land-Use Conflict Dynamics, Patterns, and Drivers under Rapid Urbanization. Land, 13(8), 1317. https://doi.org/10.3390/land13081317