People-Environment Relationships in Social Development and Transition
A special issue of Sustainability (ISSN 2071-1050). This special issue belongs to the section "Sustainability in Geographic Science".
Deadline for manuscript submissions: closed (31 July 2021) | Viewed by 14269
Special Issue Editors
Interests: ecological economics; community agriculture; shared and social values of ecosystem services
Special Issues, Collections and Topics in MDPI journals
Interests: Community based management and collective action, Rural environmental treatment and development transition
Special Issue Information
Dear Colleagues,
We are experiencing a rapidly changing world, with record numbers of people being displaced from their traditional environments, resulting in the disruption and fracture of localized cultural ecosystems and the services that they provide. Key to this process of development and transition is the significant loss of traditions, cultures, and close relationships between human beings and nature. Even though new technologies are making life very different, people–environment relationships form a fundamental role in society. Experience in countries which have made an effort to revitalize their countryside has shown that reshaping people–land and people–water relationships is strongly connected with the efficacy, efficiency, and sustainability of governmental investment. Such relationships are also strongly associated with urban nostalgia, and become an invisible cultural driving force for the flow of capital, technology, and human resources back to rural areas, leading to booming new service economies and the subsequent generation of new forms of cultural ecosystem service.
Therefore, in this Special Issue, authors are encouraged to look into the changing people–environment relationships in different contexts of development and transition, in different regions, and from a range of inter-disciplinary perspectives. In particular, we are trying to explore the mechanisms and processes through which people–environment relationships change, including the identification of key factors, in order to evaluate the subsequent impacts on sustainable development and transition. Efforts are also encouraged which look into potential ways of integrating the emergent reshaped people–environment relationships, and their attendant cultural ecosystem services, generated through the process of rural revitalization, the restructure of rural communities, and the rebuilding of collective actions.
The detailed schedule is as following:
2020/09–2021/01 |
Announcement and preparation |
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2021/1/31 |
Deadline for submitting long abstracts (800-1000 words) (optional. Accepted abstracts would be invited to workshops) |
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2021/01–2021/04 |
Online workshop, presenting and first round selection By 02/28 | declaration of acceptance for abstracts 1-2 workshops held to for presenting and discussion |
Invited scholars and those submitting abstracts |
2021/05–2021/07 |
Receiving submissions (first submitted, first reviewed) |
|
2021/07/31 |
Deadline for submitting manuscripts |
|
2021/08 |
First round peer reviews |
|
2021/09 |
first round Revision |
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2021/10 |
Second round peer reviews |
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2021/11 |
Final decisions |
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2021/12 |
Online publication |
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Prof. Dr. Neil Ravenscroft
Prof. Dr. Pingyang Liu
Prof. Dr. Ely Jose de Mattos
Guest Editors
Manuscript Submission Information
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Keywords
- People–land relationship
- people–water relationship
- people–nature relationship
- people–environment relationship
- Rural revitalization
- rural transition
- rural development
- Guanxi network
- community-based management
- collective action
- Cultural values
- social value
- social-cultural valuation
- Ecosystem service
- ecosystem valuation
- Resource management
- resource policy
- sustainable development
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