Ancient and current resilience in the Chengdu Plain: Agropolitan development re-‘revisited/’ (Record no. 13288)

MARC details
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fixed length control field 02510nab a22001817a 4500
005 - DATE & TIME
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100 ## - MAIN ENTRY--PERSONAL NAME
Personal name Abramson, Daniel B
245 ## - TITLE STATEMENT
Title Ancient and current resilience in the Chengdu Plain: Agropolitan development re-‘revisited/’
Statement of responsibility Daniel B Abramson
260 ## - PUBLICATION, DISTRIBUTION, ETC. (IMPRINT)
Place of publication, distribution, etc Londonl:
Name of publisher, distributor, etc Sage,
Date of publication, distribution, etc 2020.
300 ## - PHYSICAL DESCRIPTION
Pages Vol 57, issue 7, 2020: (1372–1397 p.)
520 ## - SUMMARY, ETC.
Summary, etc The Dujiangyan irrigation system, China’s largest, is one of the world’s most important examples of sustainable agropolitan development, maintained by a relatively decentralised system of governance that minimises bureaucratic oversight and depends on significant local autonomy at many scales down to the household. At its historic core in the Chengdu Plain, the system has supported over 2000 years of near-continuously stable urban culture, as well as some of the world’s highest sustained long-term per-hectare productivity and diversity of grain and other crops, especially considering its high population density, forest cover, general biodiversity and flood management success. During the past decade, rapid urban expansion has turned the Chengdu Plain from a net grain exporter into a grain importer, and has radically transformed its productive functioning and distinctive scattered settlement pattern, reorganising much of the landscape into larger, corporately-managed farms, and more concentrated and infrastructure-intensive settlements of non-farming as well as farming households. Community-scale case studies of spatial-morphological and household socio-economic variants on the regional trend help to articulate what is at stake. Neither market-driven ‘laissez-faire’ rural development nor local state-driven spatial settlement consolidation and corporatisation of production seem to correlate well with important factors of resilience: landscape heterogeneity; crop diversity and food production; permaculture; and flexibility in household independence and choice of livelihood. Management of the irrigation system should be linked to community-based agricultural landscape preservation and productive dwelling, as sources of adaptive capacity crucial to the social-ecological resilience of the city-region, the nation and perhaps all humanity.
773 0# - HOST ITEM ENTRY
Host Biblionumber 8843
Host Itemnumber 16581
Place, publisher, and date of publication London Sage Publications Ltd. 1964
Title Urban studies
International Standard Serial Number 0042-0980
856 ## - ELECTRONIC LOCATION AND ACCESS
Uniform Resource Identifier https://doi.org/10.1177/0042098019843020
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Koha item type Articles
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