Research on the Urbanization Path in China

2013 ◽  
Vol 357-360 ◽  
pp. 1988-1991
Author(s):  
Yu Nan Yang ◽  
Fei Fei Yu

Speeding up the urbanization process has important realistic and far-reaching historical significance for building a well-off society and realizing socialist modernization in China. This paper discusses which urbanization path China should take, and advances the pluralistic urbanization path with Chinese characteristics: the big cities should be the regional center and develop preferentially; at the same time, we should actively develop the small and medium-sized cities; moreover the small towns should be developed reasonably and selectively. The large, medium, small cities and small towns will develop harmoniously with China's national conditions.

2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 11
Author(s):  
Meng Xu

<p>New-type urbanization is a coordinated development of large, medium and small cities, small towns, and new rural communities. Strengthening rural social management is an important link in promoting the new urbanization process. This article makes an objective analysis of the relationship between rural rejuvenation and new urbanization, national policies conducive to rural development, and challenges and countermeasures in rural social management.</p>


2012 ◽  
Vol 452-453 ◽  
pp. 586-590
Author(s):  
Xiao Wen Bian ◽  
Bao Cheng Lu ◽  
Xia Zhao

At present, the phenomenon of rural collective construction land transference widely exists in many cities, including big cities and small and medium-sized cities. Due to the small city's characteristics, the collective land transference management is easier to be ignored. But small and medium-sized cities play an important role in promoting urbanization process with Chinese characteristics. Therefore we must be cautious in dealing with collective construction land transference management of small and medium-sized cities. Most scholars in research give more attentions to big cities. They think transference should be promoted and imposing restrictions on transference is below allowing it. They also think allowing transference can effectively relieve the shortage of land supply, revitalize the land resources, and increase farmers' income, but also can solve the problems such as "small property right". But this conclusion overlooked the differences of large and medium-sized cities and small urban in land use and land resources demand characteristics. Based on small city land development characteristics, its collective construction land transference should adjust measures to local conditions


2017 ◽  
Vol 9 (3) ◽  
pp. 238-262 ◽  
Author(s):  
Philip T. Roundy

Purpose Entrepreneurial ecosystems are receiving growing attention from scholars, practitioners and policy-makers in both developed and developing countries. Studies of this phenomenon have focused almost exclusively on ecosystems in large, urbanized regions and metropolitan areas, located primarily in developed economies. However, the prevalence of small cities across the globe and the increasing acknowledgment that entrepreneurship in small towns is a key determinant of their economic development and rejuvenation suggests that entrepreneurial ecosystems research would benefit from a broader lens of inquiry. Thus, the purpose of this paper is to introduce a framework for studying entrepreneurial ecosystems in small towns. Design/methodology/approach This conceptual paper introduces the concept of small town entrepreneurial ecosystems (STEEs), draws from a wide-ranging set of disciplines to delineate the ways in which small town ecosystems are similar to and different than their larger counterparts and theorizes about several strategies STEEs use to overcome their limitations. Findings It is theorized that entrepreneurship in small cities is best conceptualized as the outcome of an ecosystem, which means that although small towns may not have some of the same key components as entrepreneurial ecosystems in large urban centers, other elements of the ecosystem may be able to bolster these deficiencies. It also suggests that those attempting to create or develop small town ecosystems may need to be entrepreneurial in the way they attract, view and utilize resources. Finally, it is theorized that small cities may be able to engage in several strategies to overcome their limitations and create vibrant entrepreneurial communities. Originality/value The theory developed produces implications for scholars focused on entrepreneurial ecosystems, economic development and emerging economies and suggests practical implications for policy-makers and development organizations seeking to improve the economic landscape of small cities.


2016 ◽  
Vol 52 (8) ◽  
pp. 1258-1276 ◽  
Author(s):  
Debarshi Guin

Contemporary urbanization in India is in transition and this, along with the continuation of a ‘top heavy’ urban structure and gradual deindustrialization, is characterized by faster growth of informal employment, a declining trend of urban-ward migration of males, the slow down in the growth of cities and towns and the emergence of new urban centres. Given this immediate backdrop, this paper examines the contemporary processes and emerging forms of urban transition in West Bengal, with its longstanding history of ‘mono-centric’ urbanization. It reveals that urbanization in the state is no longer confined to a few pockets, as many new urban centres have emerged away from them and small towns are growing at relatively faster rates compared to the cities. But the underlying factors of this transition are not associated with the dispersal of economic activities and employment opportunities away from the metropolises. Furthermore, the study is sceptical about the significance of this emerging form of urbanization fuelled by the growth of small cities and towns which have a weak economic base, a crisis of urban governance and inadequate access to basic amenities.


2020 ◽  
pp. 68-78
Author(s):  
D. Yu. Zemlianskii ◽  
V.A. Chuzhenkova

This article is devoted to analysis of the territorial investment distribution in Russian Federation cities in depending on population and economics-geographical factors. The main aim is gives raised researchers influence to the regional heterogeneity of investments distribution in cities and investment aspects of big cities development. Herewith, the shortage of works, devoted to investment situation in cities with population less 100 thousand, is remained. The work conclusions are based on the analysis of the investment distributions to the main capital for 1066 Russian Federation cities over the period from 2015 to 2018 years. Based on this analysis, conclusions are made about hard investment territorial distribution dependence from the regional situation. The cities influence to the investment situation firstly manifests in the Moscow and the St. Petersburg agglomerations. But even other cities over a million people mostly depends on its regional economic. It was found, that investment distribution dependence from the city’s population has a nonlinear character. The distortions appear because of small oil-gas cities and the large and largest cities underinvestments. The polarization is especially strong among the small towns: 2% of all the settlement with population less than 50% concentrates almost quarter of investments for this cities group. It was found, that the investment activity for most of the cities doesn’t bring comparable results for cities economics and budget.


Author(s):  
Yunus Emre Genç

Entrepreneurship is a key element for developing of economies in recent years. Turkey is a country that is experiencing entrepreneurship both in national and international area. The Turkish economy, especially after 1980, opened its doors to the world global economy, and entrepreneurship became more important in this new order. Before 1980, the big companies were established only in the big cities of Turkey. But after that time, they started to be founded in small cities, too. There are governmental support organizations in Turkey, which fund the entrepreneurship intentions. And there are also new regulations in recent years in Turkey, which enable entrepreneurship activities to establish online on internet processes. By comparison with other countries, it could easily be said that Turkey is also in the arena with facilitation and developing of entrepreneurship in the world scene. Turkish people know more about the increasing importance of entrepreneurship now.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 ◽  
pp. 1-3
Author(s):  
Hangyu Wang ◽  
Haowen Yan

<p><strong>Abstract.</strong> For the early curve generalization algorithms, most of them only consider the reduction of the number of vertices, and do not take into consideration the important role of bends, especially the characteristic bends, on the shape of the curve. And the existing generalization methods based on the bends of the curve have complex algorithms and a large amount of calculation, focus on relationship between adjacent bends excessively and ignore the relationship among the overall bends. In addition, the threshold setting for filtering the bends is based on the unreasonable experience. Aiming at the problems above, a generalization algorithm based on the area of bends is proposed to achieve the purpose of simplifying the curve with the head/tail breaks classification method in this paper. Experiment shows that the algorithm is simple and efficient, and can iteratively take account of the overall bends with reasonable threshold, discarding the small bends and retaining the characteristic bends of the original curve to obtain generalization results which conform the natural law and is highly similar to the original graphics at different levels of detail.</p><p>Head/tail breaks is a classification method that is always applied to the classification of heavy-tailed data. Heavy-tailed data is universal in nature and human society. For example, there are more small towns than big cities in the world. However, small towns are less important than big cities in the field of economy and politics. Thus, cartographers will mark the big cities on the map and eliminate the small town. Map generalization is a progress of retaining important elements and delete unimportant elements. Head/tail breaks is able to extract significant data which can be retained as a generalization result by arithmetic mean.</p><p>Figure 1 shows the algorithm flow chart. First of all, we divide the curve into several bends with oblique-dividing-curve method. Secondly, we calculate the area of each bend, and then use head/tail breaks to complete the classification of the area of bends. If the percentage of bends in the head is less than 40%, it means the data conform to heavy-tailed distribution and can be classified with head/tail breaks. If the percentage of bends in the head is greater than 40%, the head/tail breaks is not applicable to this data. After classification, for the bends which is more important in the head, we reserve them directly. For the bends in the tail, we extract the feature points of each bend by retaining the point farthest from the axis so as to maintain the local shape of the original curve. Finally, we merge the bends in the head and the feature points as a generalization result.</p><p>The experimental result is shown in the Fig 2. The data of this experiment is administrative division map of Gansu Province extracted from a China map with a scale of 1&amp;thinsp;:&amp;thinsp;10,000,000. Because algorithm can be executed iteratively, it can generate results at different levels of detail. We can see that from the result in detail to concise result, the graphic changes progressively and there is no oversimplified result. With comparison of three algorithms in the Fig 3, the generalization results of both this paper and bend group division algorithm have better retention of characteristic bends than Douglas-Peuker algorithm. However, the algorithm of this paper has higher compression ratio and less execution time than bend group division algorithm, as shown in Table 1.</p><p>The algorithm of this paper is based on nature law rather than empirical threshold, and can generate progressive results at different levels of details by iteration. In addition, it takes overall relationship of bends into consideration, so the generalization result is unique. The experimental result shows this algorithm has not only better retention of characteristic bends than Douglas-Peuker algorithm but also higher compression ratio and less execution time than bend group division algorithm. To further optimize the algorithm, we will study how to evaluate the apparent extent of the curved feature better and how to extract and eliminate the small bend inside of the bend in the head in order to improve compression ratio in the future.</p>


2021 ◽  
Vol 2021 (1329) ◽  
pp. 1-25
Author(s):  
Mariya Pominova ◽  
◽  
Todd Gabe ◽  
Andrew Crawley ◽  
◽  
...  

This paper examines the use of location quotients, a measure of regional business activity relative to the national benchmark, as an indicator of sectoral agglomeration in small cities and towns, and as a measure of industry specialization that might impact the number of new business startups in these places. Using establishment-level data on businesses located in Maine, our findings suggest that the addition of one "hypothetical" establishment in very small towns leads to a dramatic change in the magnitude of the region-industry location quotient. At population sizes of about 4,100 or more people, however, location quotients are reasonably stable. Regression results from an analysis of the relationship between new business activity and regional industry specialization show that the effect of location quotients on business startups switches from "inelastic" to "elastic" at a population size cutoff of about 2,600 residents. Overall, our findings suggest that researchers and practitioners should exercise caution when using location quotients to study small regions.


2012 ◽  
Vol 174-177 ◽  
pp. 2361-2365
Author(s):  
Xiao Jian Chen ◽  
Chuan Qin

The differences of spatial accessibility and spatial density of morphology structure for the medium and small cities in Northwest China are addressed based on site visiting, analyzing of satellite remote sensing images as well as the space syntax. The results reveal that different morphology structure appears different spatial charters. For the cities with a single centre, the morphology structure characters between small and medium cities have big differences. For the cities with several groups distribution separately, the spatial activities decline gradually from centre to outer areas. For the cities with multi-centres structure, the spatial structure is not even, because it is still in the first stage and the aggregation ability is still weak. The morphology change from simplicity to complication and its types change from single to diversity under the rapid urbanization process.


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