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Spatial–Temporal Differences in Land Use Benefits and Obstacles Under Human–Land Contradictions: A Case Study of Henan Province, China

Feng Xi (), Yiwei Xu, Shuo Liang and Yuanyuan Chen
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Feng Xi: Institute of Urban Construction and Management, Tianjin University of Commerce, Tianjin 300134, China
Yiwei Xu: Institute of Urban Construction and Management, Tianjin University of Commerce, Tianjin 300134, China
Shuo Liang: Institute of Urban Construction and Management, Tianjin University of Commerce, Tianjin 300134, China
Yuanyuan Chen: Institute of Urban Construction and Management, Tianjin University of Commerce, Tianjin 300134, China

Sustainability, 2025, vol. 17, issue 15, 1-19

Abstract: Against the background of intensifying human–land contradictions, evaluation of land use benefits and identification of obstacles are crucial for sustainable land management and socioeconomic development. Taking Henan Province as an example, this research employed the entropy weight method and TOPSIS model to assess the land use benefits across its cities from 2011 to 2020, a period of rapid land use transformation, analyzed their spatiotemporal evolution, and identified key obstacles via an obstacle degree model. The results showed the following. (1) The social land use benefits consistently exceeded the ecological and economic benefits, with steady improvements observed in both the individual and comprehensive benefits. Spatially, the benefits showed a “one city dominant” pattern, decreasing gradually from the central region to the south, north, east, and west, with this spatial gradient further intensifying over time. (2) Economic factors were the primary obstacles, with significantly higher obstruction degrees than social or ecological factors. The main obstacles were the general budget revenue of government finance per unit land area, domestic garbage removal volume, and total retail sales of social consumer goods per unit land area. (3) The policy implications focus on strengthening regional differentiated development by leveraging Zhengzhou’s core role to boost the land-based economic benefits, integrating social–ecological strengths with agricultural modernization, and promoting “core–periphery linkage” to narrow gaps through targeted industrial and infrastructure strategies. This study could provide region-specific insights for sustainable land management in agricultural provinces undergoing rapid urbanization.

Keywords: land use benefits; TOPSIS model; obstacle factors; Henan Province (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: O13 Q Q0 Q2 Q3 Q5 Q56 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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