4.7 Article

Reclaiming small to fill large: A novel approach to rural residential land consolidation in China

Journal

LAND USE POLICY
Volume 109, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.landusepol.2021.105706

Keywords

Land consolidation; Rural residential land; Village hollowing; Rural homestead vacancy; China

Funding

  1. Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China [41771179, 42071162, 41871103]
  2. Strategic Planning Project from Institute of Northeast Geography and Agroecology (IGA) , Chinese Academy of Sciences [Y6H2091001]
  3. Key Research Program of the Chinese Academy of Sciences [KSZD-EW-Z-021-03, KFZD-SW-314]

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The study proposes a new land consolidation approach involving a homestead exchange mechanism to help rural residents relocate from small settlements to vacant properties in large settlements, aiming to achieve land-use optimization. The simulation in Jilin Province estimated that this approach could increase the effective amount of arable land and the average size of rural settlements while decreasing the number of rural settlements. This targeted approach can achieve the objective of land-use optimization despite varying degrees of rural fragmentation and hollowing.
The optimization of rural land-use through land consolidation has become an indispensable part of reform in China, significantly impacting rural settlements and their residents. Given the growing social problems due to land consolidation, this study proposes a new land consolidation approach that involves helping rural residents relocate from small settlements to vacant properties in large settlements through a homestead exchange mechanism. We argue that this targeted approach can achieve land-use optimization, without the negative impacts of the conventional approach to land consolidation. To evaluate our idea empirically, we conducted a case study in Jilin Province. The simulation estimated that our approach could increase the effective amount of arable land by 1046.66 km(2) and the average size of rural settlements by 51.9%, while decreasing the number of rural settlements by 44.6%. Therefore, our approach can achieve the objective of land-use optimization, despite the highly complex context and varying degrees of rural fragmentation and hollowing.

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