2020
DOI: 10.1016/j.jclepro.2020.122798
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How does land urbanization promote urban eco-efficiency? The mediating effect of industrial structure advancement

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Cited by 96 publications
(38 citation statements)
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“…Many scholars have studied the influence of incremental land‐use mode on industrial structure from the perspective of urban construction land sprawl. Abdel‐Rahman and Anas (2004) and Tang et al., (2020) noted that the size of a city affects the dividend of the industrial structure, and industrial structure differences produce varying economic efficiency. The scale of urban land‐use sprawl brings about a stronger knowledge spillover effect and massive deindustrialization, spurring the knowledge‐intensive high‐skilled service industry to develop better and improving the level of industrial structure (Barrington‐Leigh & Millard‐Ball, 2015; Kovács et al., 2019).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Many scholars have studied the influence of incremental land‐use mode on industrial structure from the perspective of urban construction land sprawl. Abdel‐Rahman and Anas (2004) and Tang et al., (2020) noted that the size of a city affects the dividend of the industrial structure, and industrial structure differences produce varying economic efficiency. The scale of urban land‐use sprawl brings about a stronger knowledge spillover effect and massive deindustrialization, spurring the knowledge‐intensive high‐skilled service industry to develop better and improving the level of industrial structure (Barrington‐Leigh & Millard‐Ball, 2015; Kovács et al., 2019).…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In addition, industrial structure supererogation is increasingly dependent on technological effects (Jiang et al., 2020). Construction land reduction also improves regional industrial competitiveness, which increases the survival pressure of many enterprises, forces them to increase R&D funds and personnel investment, raises the proportion of technical personnel, and enhances the spillover effect of technological innovation or promotes technological upgrading through “learning by doing” (Namdeo et al., 2019; Tang et al., 2020), so as to improve the competitiveness and market share of products and spur the industrial structure transformation from labor‐intensive to capital‐ and technology‐intensive.…”
Section: Theoretical Hypothesismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We have taken a note of the climate-forming and climate-regulating functions of green spaces [17,18] and their ability to qualitatively affect the ecological conditions of the city [1,19,20], accompanied by changes in vegetation phenology and the increase of the growing period in urban conditions [21]. Also we have taken into account the methodological methods of research on urbanization of territories [22], recommendations and guidelines for assessing green infrastructure [23], mechanisms for increasing the ecological efficiency of cities through the development of the industrial structure [24], including electricity [25], the development of public-private partnerships to create infrastructure of urbanized areas [26].…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In the process of rapid urbanization in China, with industrial economy providing an obvious imprint, land resources in other fields are generally transferred to industrial land, causing negative social and environmental problems to a large extent [12]. Tang et al [13] pointed out that land urbanization would have a negative impact on the urban ecological effect, while the optimization and upgrading of industrial structures would have a positive effect, indicating that the latter could play a regulating role in the process of urban sustainable development. In fact, the level urbanization of land is the result of the joint influences of population and land scale, economic development, industrial structures, and government policies [14][15][16][17][18].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Among them, the evolution characteristics of industrial land are regarded as the basic attribute of urban construction land, which is also the manifestation of industrial structure evolution in space [4,21]. At present, there are few studies on the relationship between industrial structures and intensive land use [4,13], and most of them focus on the indicators of construction and evaluation, prediction, and empirical research of land use [22][23][24][25], as well as coordinated development in the process of urbanization [2,11,26]. Based on the STIRPAT model, Han et al [27] analyzed the influence of the national industrial structure on land use by using the least square method (FGLS), and pointed out that the improvement of the composition and competition effects of the industrial structure is conducive to promoting intensive land use.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%