Through a case study in a village located in suburban Haikou City, Hainan Province, this article suggests the existence of a local development regime that exercises illegal farmland conversion in China's urban periphery. This regime consists not only of state officials and business investors, but also of local farmers anxious for off-farm employment. Our study highlights the broad transitions that led to the rise of local development regimes in China's urban periphery. These transitions include (1) the development of the local state, (2) farmers' changing relations with local authorities, and (3) the asymmetrical liberalization of land transaction rights in rural and urban areas. Whereas the state government still manages to intervene in th...
The current system of converting farmland to urban land use in China can be characterized as a hybri...
The urban-rural divide in China was an entrenched feature of Chinese society in the Maoist era. This...
Chinese economic reforms have moved Mao's antiurban paradigm to an urban-driven paradigm. Since the ...
Through a case study in a village located in suburban Haikou City, Hainan Province, this article sug...
Since the implementation of economic reforms in 1978, Chinese cities have undergone unprecedented ur...
The increasing scale and pace of urban expansion over recent decades has resulted in uneven socio-sp...
Rapid industrialization and urbanization in China has produced a unique phenomenon of 'village-hollo...
Rapid industrialization and urbanization in China has produced a unique phenomenon of 'village-hollo...
The past decades have witnessed a number of informal land developments on the urban fringe in China ...
Formally, China has a highly centralized system to control the conversion of farmland to non-farming...
In the context of neoliberal globalization, the boundary between urban and rural has been increasing...
Existing scholarship suggests that local transformation in reform-era China has been a process of de...
China's rapid urbanization, characterized by large-scale rural-urban migration and radial expansion ...
Rapid industrialization and urbanization in China has produced a unique phenomenon of ‘village-hollo...
Over the past three decades, China’s urban population has increased by more than 400 million. How co...
The current system of converting farmland to urban land use in China can be characterized as a hybri...
The urban-rural divide in China was an entrenched feature of Chinese society in the Maoist era. This...
Chinese economic reforms have moved Mao's antiurban paradigm to an urban-driven paradigm. Since the ...
Through a case study in a village located in suburban Haikou City, Hainan Province, this article sug...
Since the implementation of economic reforms in 1978, Chinese cities have undergone unprecedented ur...
The increasing scale and pace of urban expansion over recent decades has resulted in uneven socio-sp...
Rapid industrialization and urbanization in China has produced a unique phenomenon of 'village-hollo...
Rapid industrialization and urbanization in China has produced a unique phenomenon of 'village-hollo...
The past decades have witnessed a number of informal land developments on the urban fringe in China ...
Formally, China has a highly centralized system to control the conversion of farmland to non-farming...
In the context of neoliberal globalization, the boundary between urban and rural has been increasing...
Existing scholarship suggests that local transformation in reform-era China has been a process of de...
China's rapid urbanization, characterized by large-scale rural-urban migration and radial expansion ...
Rapid industrialization and urbanization in China has produced a unique phenomenon of ‘village-hollo...
Over the past three decades, China’s urban population has increased by more than 400 million. How co...
The current system of converting farmland to urban land use in China can be characterized as a hybri...
The urban-rural divide in China was an entrenched feature of Chinese society in the Maoist era. This...
Chinese economic reforms have moved Mao's antiurban paradigm to an urban-driven paradigm. Since the ...