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Showing items 2116 through 2124 of 73375.Protecting cultivated land is an urgent mitigation measure for China to reconcile the contradiction between food safety and carbon neutrality.
Pricing of direct industrial real estate (DIRE) has long been under-researched due to the paucity of analysable data.
Rapid urbanization results in farmland loss, habitat fragmentation, biodiversity decrease, and greenhouse gas emissions.
The project-based construction land-use policy of ‘increasing versus decreasing balance’ (IVDB) is pivotal to easing the contradiction between urban and rural land in China.
Controlling land use change in coastal areas is one of the world’s sustainable development goals and a great challenge. Existing research includes in-depth studies of land use change in relatively developed regions, but research on economically less developed but fast-growing regions is lacking.
As an important resource for human survival and development, the utilization efficiency of cultivated land is directly related to national food security and social harmony and stability.
The rural land right has paved the way for the deepening of China’s agricultural land system, which is critical to the successful implementation of the rural revitalization plan in the new era.
The excessive use of cultivated land for non-grain production activities is considered a threat to grain security. This study presents an analysis framework on unraveling the causal mechanisms for non-grain production of cultivated land.
Analyzing the relationship between rural settlements and rural population change under different policy scenarios is key in the sustainable development of China’s urban and rural areas.
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