2020
DOI: 10.3390/su122410644
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Design and Social Factors Affecting the Formation of Social Capital in Chinese Community Garden

Abstract: In recent years, community gardens are becoming more and more popular in China. However, the role of these community gardens varies significantly: some community gardens serve as an effective means of promoting social capital, while others cause social contradictions and public doubts due to the lack of professional design and management. Therefore, this paper aims to learn and better understand what factors affect the formation of social capital in Chinese community gardens. It screened eleven design factors … Show more

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Cited by 19 publications
(21 citation statements)
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“…Looking at the portfolio of applied methods throughout this Special Issue, it becomes very clear that there is not only one fitting approach to assess sustainability impacts of UA and its implementation, but a whole set of suitable methods exists, which target the different sustainability dimensions. Among others, the methods range from assessment tools in the economic dimension (such as cost-benefit analysis [29]) over assessments of the social dimension (e.g., through interviews on social capital [31] or surveys among urban residents participating in community gardens [30]) to environmental analysis (such as life-cycle assessments) [35] or biomonitoring to measure impacts on biodiversity [40] depending on the targeted sustainability impacts.…”
Section: Methodological and Conceptual Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 4 more Smart Citations
“…Looking at the portfolio of applied methods throughout this Special Issue, it becomes very clear that there is not only one fitting approach to assess sustainability impacts of UA and its implementation, but a whole set of suitable methods exists, which target the different sustainability dimensions. Among others, the methods range from assessment tools in the economic dimension (such as cost-benefit analysis [29]) over assessments of the social dimension (e.g., through interviews on social capital [31] or surveys among urban residents participating in community gardens [30]) to environmental analysis (such as life-cycle assessments) [35] or biomonitoring to measure impacts on biodiversity [40] depending on the targeted sustainability impacts.…”
Section: Methodological and Conceptual Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Looking at this broad picture of potential measurements of UA impacts and implementation, there is further no clear preference for either quantitative or qualitative methods (see Figure 2). While two studies relied on pure qualitative analysis [25,34] and five on quantitative analysis [30,31,35,40,41], the majority of eight studies used mixed-methods approaches and combined qualitative methods (e.g., focus group discussions, stakeholder workshops, on-site visits, or expert interviews) with quantitative methods (e.g., online questionnaires or on-site surveys) [29,32,33,[36][37][38][39]42]. Given the multidimensional impacts of UA and its general multifunctionality [2,43], a mixed-methods approach often seems to be an advisable choice to tackle the different dimensions.…”
Section: Methodological and Conceptual Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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