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Urban ecology in China: Historical developments and future directions
Jianguo Wu ; Wei-Ning Xiang ; Jingzhu Zhao
Landscape and urban planning, 2014-05, Vol.125, p.222-233
[Periódico revisado por pares]
Elsevier B.V
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Título:
Urban ecology in China: Historical developments and future directions
Autor:
Jianguo Wu
;
Wei-Ning Xiang
;
Jingzhu Zhao
Assuntos:
China
;
Ecological monitoring
;
Ecology
;
Ecology
in cities
;
Ecology
of cities
;
Economics
;
Landscapes
;
Stagnation
;
Urban development
;
Urban
ecology
;
Urban planning
;
Urban sustainability
;
Urbanization
É parte de:
Landscape and urban planning, 2014-05, Vol.125, p.222-233
Notas:
ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 23
Descrição:
•China's urban population rose from 18% in 1978 to about 50% in 2010.•Urban ecology in China started in the early 1980s.•China's urban ecology has focused on environmental pollution and eco-cities.•Holistic and systems thinking has been important in China's urban ecology.•Urban ecology in China is developing rapidly, embracing diverse ideas and methods. China has the largest population and the longest urban development history in the world, with primitive cities first occurring along the Yellow River in northern China more than 4000 years ago. After a long period of stagnation during recent centuries, urbanization has revived again in China since the economic reform in 1978. Strongly influenced by national land use policy and the history of urbanization after 1949, China's urban ecology has gone through three development periods: the emergent period (1983–1989), the early growth period (1990–1999), and the rapid development period (2000–present). In this paper, we first provide a historical review of urbanization and urban ecology in China; based on this retrospective analysis, we further identify the main characteristics of, and missing links in, China's urban ecological research; and finally we suggest future research directions. The amount and scope of research in urban ecology and environment conducted in China since the 1980s are impressive. Not only did Chinese scholars import Western ideas to develop urban ecological science, but also they have promoted a holistic, use-inspired, transdisciplinary philosophy for studying and managing urban systems – which has unique Chinese characteristics. After more than 5000 years of being predominantly agrarian, China is now urban, and will become only more urban in the future. This continued fast urbanization makes China a living laboratory for studying urbanization, and China's urban ecology seems poised to make strides in the coming decades.
Editor:
Elsevier B.V
Idioma:
Inglês
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