Institutional Diversity or Isomorphism? Research on the Evolution of Collective-Owned Construction Land Marketization Reform since the 1990s—The Case of Shunde and Wujiang, China
Author:
Xu Gaofeng1ORCID,
Liu Jian2
Affiliation:
1. School of Architecture and Design, Beijing Jiaotong University, Beijing 100044, China
2. School of Architecture, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084, China
Abstract
Collective-owned construction land (CCL) marketization is an important driving force for the rapid development of China’s rural economy and society. Recognizing the trends and logic of its institutional changes is important for better understanding the central-local interrelation and the new-round CCL reform. Throughout the process of rural land reform since China’s reform and opening up, together with the unified policy guidance from the central government, the diversity of local practices and the trend of convergence in the development process deserve attention. Based on the institutional isomorphism theory, this paper analyzes the evolution of the CCL system in Shunde, Guangdong Province, and Wujiang, Jiangsu Province, since the 1990s, empirically demonstrating the trend of convergence based on diversity and exploring the underlying influencing mechanisms. The study finds that the evolutionary practice is characterized by the trend of ephemeral convergence represented by the shared cooperative and the land reservation reform and that of coeval convergence represented by the construction land nationalization. Top-down coercive pressure, horizontal imitative learning pressure, and governance-embedded normative pressure jointly shape the evolutionary convergence. This paper argues that the diversity of local experiments should be allowed and encouraged based on local characteristics. Policy flexibility should be further considered by the central government when formulating uniform policies for local adaptability.
Funder
National Natural Science Program
China Postdoctoral Science Foundation
Talent Fund of Beijing Jiaotong University
Subject
Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Global and Planetary Change
Reference53 articles.
1. Rural land system reform and concentrated residential pattern evolution: A case study of southern Jiangsu;Li;City Plan. Rev.,2019
2. The dilemma and paradigm shift of land spatial governance in semi-urbanized areas of the Pearl River Delta;Wu;Urban Plan. Forum,2021
3. Land Acquisition or Market Access of Land?—A Study on the Market Entry of Collectively Operated Construction;Xia;Lan J. Beijing Univ. Technol.,2020
4. Analysis of Market Entry Model of Collective Business Construction Land and Its Market Positioning;Lv;Rural. Econ.,2018
5. Ostrom, E. (2009). Understanding Institutional Diversity, Princeton University Press.