The process and driving forces of rural hollowing in China under rapid urbanization

 

The process and driving forces of rural hollowing in China under rapid urbanization

Liu Yansui, Liu Yu, Chengyaofeng, Long Hualou. Journal of Geographical Sciences, 2010, 20(6): 876-888

Abstract: Rural hollowing is a recent geographic phenomenon that has received significant attention in China, which is experiencing rapid urbanization. It has led to the wasteful use of rural land resources, and imposed obstacles on the optimization of land use and coordinated urban-rural development. Rural hollowing has various forms of manifestation, which refers to the neglect and vacancy of rural dwellings, both of which can lead to damage and ultimate abandonment of rural dwellings. Damaged dwellings have different degrees of destruction, ranging from slight, moderate to severe. The evolutive process of rural hollowing in general has five stages, i.e., emergence, growth, flourishing, stability, and decline. Based on the combination of both regional economic development level and its physiographic features, the types of rural hollowing can be categorised as urban fringe, plain agricultural region, hilly agricultural region, and agro-pastoral region. Especially, the plain agricultural region is the most typical one in rural hollowing, which shows the spatial evolution of rural hollowing as a ※poached egg§ pattern with a layered hollow core and solid shape. Furthermore, the driving forces behind rural hollowing are identified as the pull of cities and push of rural areas. In particular, this paper identifies contributors to rural hollowing that include rural depopulation in relation to rapid urbanization and economic change, land ownership and land use policy, and institutional barriers.

Keywords: rural hollowing; hollowing villages; settlement evolution; rural depopulation; rural residential land use; China.