“…Cropland abandonment is a complex and multi‐dimensional phenomenon that is influenced by the interaction of environmental, economic, political, and social determinants (Lambin & Meyfroidt, 2010). Harsh natural conditions (e.g., steep topographies and poor soil conditions), parlous economic state (e.g., massive rural‐urban labor migration and low agricultural income), imperfect land rental market (e.g., market failure and policy distortion), and unsatisfactory land reform (e.g., transfer rights limitation and inheritance rights subdivision), among others, affect cropland abandonment to varying degrees (Deininger et al., 2012; Lieskovsky & Lieskovska, 2021; MacDonald et al., 2000; Prishchepov et al., 2012; D. Xu et al., 2019; Zhou et al., 2020; Y. Zhang et al., 2014). Specifically, land fragmentation is a critical driving force affecting cropland abandonment (Q. Zhang et al., 2018).…”