Abstract

Rapid and far-reaching development transition has triggered corresponding restructuring in rural China especially since the turn of the new millennium. Recently, there has been an increasing trend emphasizing regional resources in formulating rural development policy and restructuring rural areas. This paper analyzes the rural restructuring in China affected by the allocation and management of critical resources including human resource, land resource and capital, by establishing a theoretical framework of “elements-structure-function” of rural territorial system. It is argued that rural restructuring is a process of optimizing the allocation and management of the material and non-material elements affecting the development of rural areas and accomplishing the structure optimization and the function maximum of rural development system. Due to the constraints from the maintained urban–rural dualism of land ownership and household registration, the rapid rural restructuring under both globalization and the implementation of the national strategies on industrialization, urbanization, informatization and agricultural modernization, the changes of the allocation of critical resources have brought about many problems and challenges for the future development of rural China, such as the nonagriculturalization, non-grain preference and abandonment of farmland use together with the derelict and idle rural housing land, the weakening mainbody of rural development, the unfair urban–rural allocation of capital and its structural imbalance, and so on. Aiming at how to resolve the problems and adapt to the challenges, it is pivotal to restructure the rural development space, rural industry, and rural social organization and management mainbody. Furthermore, it is necessary to restructure the contours of state intervention in rural societies and economies and allocate and manage the critical resources affecting rural development, from the perspectives of integrating urban and rural resources, improving the efficiency of resources utilization, and fully understanding the influences of globalization on rural restructuring in China.

Highlights

  • Since the 1990s, rural restructuring has been a hot topic of rural studies (Wilson, 1995; Kiss, 2000; Hoggart and Paniagua, 2001; Xu and Tan, 2002; Tonts and Atherley, 2005; Woods, 2005; Long and Woods, 2011; Fang and Liu, 2015)

  • It is necessary to restructure the contours of state intervention in rural societies and economies (Woods, 2012), by coordinating urban and rural development, pushing forward the reform of rural land property rights system, deepening the reform of rural financial system, and improving related policy and technical systems of rural planning

  • The essence of rural restructuring is a process of optimizing the allocation and management of the material and non-material elements affecting the development of rural areas, including human resource, land resource, capital, etc., and accomplishing the structure optimization and the function maximum of rural development system

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 1990s, rural restructuring has been a hot topic of rural studies (Wilson, 1995; Kiss, 2000; Hoggart and Paniagua, 2001; Xu and Tan, 2002; Tonts and Atherley, 2005; Woods, 2005; Long and Woods, 2011; Fang and Liu, 2015). With the influences of globalization and the implementation of the national strategies on industrialization, urbanization, informatization and agricultural modernization (Li et al, 2014b), vast rural China has been profoundly changed due to the recombination of regional development factors and the reshaping of regional industries (Long et al, 2009) It has taken on the status quo of nonagriculturalization and concurrent occupation of rural population, nonagriculturalization and non-grain preference of rural land use, and nonagriculturalization and diversification of rural industry (Long, 2014). This study is intended to analyze the rural restructuring in China affected by the allocation and management of critical resources, based on a theoretical framework of “elements-structure-function”. With the growing regional cultural exchanges and increasing cultural homogeneity, the characteristic style of rural settlements, simple folk customs and the unique cultural characteristics have aroused more and more people's attention, and the rural territory begins to bear the function of inheriting culture

Elements and structure of rural territorial system
Function of rural territorial system
Human resource
Land resource
14 Shanghai
Capital
Allocation of capital for developing rural public infrastructure and affairs
Prospects on rural restructuring based on resources optimal allocation
Spatial restructuring
Industrial reshaping
Social restructuring
Discussion
Promoting the bidirectional flowing of urban-rural development elements
Findings
Pushing forward the reform of rural land property rights system
Conclusions
Full Text
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