| Literature DB >> 35886478 |
Xiaojun Zhang1,2, Weiqiao Wang1, Yunan Bai1, Yong Ye1.
Abstract
Ecological civilization (EC) has been seen as the final goal of social and environmental reform within a given society. Much attention has been paid to the national governmental level in previous studies, and district- and local-level government actions have been a lower priority, which may have led to overlooking key details of management institutions and policy systems in relation to EC. In this research, we aimed to make a significant contribution to the literature by tracing the EC trajectory and policy transitions. Through bibliometric analysis of policy documents, we reviewed the EC construction system for Fujian Province from 2004 to 2020. The policy priorities, organization-functional network, and contributing factors to policy changes in each of the three phases are discussed in depth. Target setting, actors' functions, and institutional guarantees are the core elements of EC construction. This research provides a quantitative foundation for understanding policy reform and transition with regards to Chinese local governments' EC actions. The experience of Fujian Province shows trends toward legalization, multi-actor linkage, and issue refinement that may serve as a basis for other countries and regions in order to explore the promotion of sustainable development and environmental governance as pathways to EC.Entities:
Keywords: bibliometric analysis; ecological civilization; environmental governance
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35886478 PMCID: PMC9319507 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph19148627
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 4.614
Policy document classification.
| Category | Policy Goals |
|---|---|
| Ecological Economy (EE) | Energy Saving and Emission Reduction (ESER) |
| Green Industry (GI) | |
| Infrastructure (IF) | |
| Green Finance (GF) | |
| Ecological Life (EL) | City Virescence (CV) |
| Garbage Disposal (GD) | |
| Green Lifestyle (GL) | |
| Water Usage (WU) | |
| Ecological Culture (EC) | Party and Government Culture (PGC) |
| Citizen Culture (CC) | |
| Ecological Institution (EI) | River Chief System (RCS) |
| Responsibility and Supervision (RS) | |
| Planning and Deployment (PD) | |
| Ecological Safety (ES) | Environmental Quality Improvement (EQI) |
| Ecosystem Protection (EP) | |
| Environmental Risk Prevention (ERP) | |
| Ecological Space (ESP) | Urban Layout (UL) |
| Cultivated Land Planning (CLP) | |
| Ecological Redline (ER) | |
| Resources Utilization (RU) | |
| Ecological Synthesis (ESY) | Including more than 2 different categories’ policy goals |
Figure 1Annual number of documents.
Figure 2Overall organization-functional network (Phases I to III).
Normal degree centrality of policy goals.
| Rank | Overall | Phase I | Phase II | Phase III |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | EP (0.364) | EP (0.454) | EP (0.343) | EP (0.325) |
| 2 | RS (0.284) | RS (0.392) | RS (0.295) | RS (0.221) |
| 3 | PD (0.243) | EQI (0.372) | GI (0.264) | PD (0.181) |
| 4 | EQI (0.232) | GI (0.366) | PD (0.244) | GI (0.157) |
| 5 | GI (0.230) | CC (0.350) | EQI (0.239) | EQI (0.151) |
| 6 | RU (0.163) | PD (0.298) | RU (0.151) | RU (0.124) |
| 7 | ESER (0.120) | CV (0.262) | GF (0.108) | ESER (0.099) |
| 8 | GF (0.107) | GL (0.250) | ESER (0.102) | GF (0.075) |
| 9 | CV (0.098) | RU (0.205) | IF (0.101) | GD (0.075) |
| 10 | CC (0.089) | ERP (0.189) | CV (0.098) | GL (0.064) |
Betweenness centrality of policy goals in the 2-mode network.
| Rank | Overall | Phase I | Phase II | Phase III |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | CC (0.248) | CC (0.457) | CC (0.243) | EP (0.254) |
| 2 | EP (0.173) | PGC (0.150) | GI (0.177) | EQI (0.160) |
| 3 | RS (0.172) | EP (0.106) | EP (0.136) | RS (0.146) |
| 4 | EQI (0.118) | GI (0.081) | EQI (0.130) | CC (0.111) |
| 5 | GI (0.110) | GL (0.068) | RS (0.122) | GL (0.095) |
Figure 3Co-word analysis and cluster analysis of keywords (2004–2012).
Figure 4Co-word analysis and cluster analysis of keywords (2013–2017).
Figure 5Co-word analysis and cluster analysis of keywords (2018–2020).
Figure 6Core elements of EC and their pathways.