Publication | Open Access
Spatiotemporal Change and Coordinated Development Analysis of “Population-Society-Economy-Resource-Ecology-Environment” in the Jing-Jin-Ji Urban Agglomeration from 2000 to 2015
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Citations
44
References
2021
Year
EngineeringLand UseSustainable DevelopmentUrban DevelopmentRegional DevelopmentEnvironmental PlanningUrban ScienceChange AnalysisEarth ScienceSocial SciencesIndicator DevelopmentUrban Land UseCultural PlanningGlobal Urban PlanningUrban EnvironmentSustainable CitiesGeographyUrban EcologyUrban PlanningUrban Agglomeration ScaleJing-jin-ji Urban AgglomerationCoordinated Development AnalysisAgglomeration EconomicsUrban GeographySpatiotemporal ChangeRemote SensingRegional Sustainable DevelopmentRegional PlanningUrban Climate
Measuring the regionally coordinated development degree quantitively at an urban agglomeration scale is vital for regional sustainable development. To date, existing studies mainly utilized statistical data to analyze coordinated development degrees between different subsystems, which failed to measure the development gap of subsystems between cities. This study integrated remote sensing and statistical data to evaluate the development degree from six subsystems. The coordinated index (CI) and coordinated development index (CDI) were then promoted to assess the coordinated degree and coordinated development degree. The main findings were: (1) The coordinated development degree of Jing-Jin-Ji (JJJ) had increased from 0.4616 in 2000 to 0.6099 in 2015, with the corresponding grade improvement from “moderate” to “good”; (2) JJJ and six subsystems’ development degree showed an increasing trend. JJJ’s whole development degree had improved from 0.34 to 0.52, and the grade had changed from “fair” to “moderate”; (3) The coordinated degree of JJJ displayed a “V” shape. However, the coordinated degree was lower in 2015 than in 2000.
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