Institutional Settings and Effects on Agricultural Land Conversion: A Global and Spatial Analysis of European Regions

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Date

2023

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

MDPI

Open Access Color

GOLD

Green Open Access

Yes

OpenAIRE Downloads

119

OpenAIRE Views

122

Publicly Funded

Yes
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Top 10%
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Average
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Top 10%

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Abstract

Spatial planning systems and institutions have a significant role in managing non-agricultural land growth in Europe and the assessment of how their implementation impacts on agricultural land consumption is of great significance for policy and institutional improvement. Reducing the area of agricultural land taken for urban development, or eliminating such conversion, is an international policy priority aiming to maintain the amount and quality of land resources currently available for food production and sustainable development. This study aimed to evaluate the impact of land use planning systems and institutional settings on urban conversion of agricultural land in the 265 NUTS2 level EU27 and UK regions. Taking these regions as the unit of our analysis, the research developed and used global and local econometrics models to estimate the effect based on socio-economic, institutional and land use data for the 2000-2018 period. There is limited research focusing on the impacts of institutional settings and planning types of the European countries on the conversion of agricultural land. Furthermore, existing research has not considered the spatial relationships with the determinants of agricultural land conversion and the response variable, therefore, our research aimed to contribute to the literature on the subject. The results showed that the types of spatial planning systems and institution variables significantly impact the conversion of agricultural land to urban uses. Socio-economic indicators and areas of agricultural and urban land have significant impact on agricultural land conversion for any type of spatial planning system. A further result was that decentralization and political fragmentation were positively associated with agricultural land conversion while quality of regional government and governance was negatively associated. A local regression model was assessed to explore the different spatial patterns of the relationships driving agricultural land conversion. The main empirical finding from this model was that there was spatial variation of driving factors of agricultural land conversion in Europe.

Description

Ustaoglu, Eda/0000-0001-6874-5162

Keywords

Agricultural Land Conversion, Spatial Planning Systems, Institutional Settings, Global and Local Models, Europe, spatial planning systems, S, Agriculture, agricultural land conversion; spatial planning systems; institutional settings; global and local models; Europe, institutional settings, global and local models, agricultural land conversion, Europe

Turkish CoHE Thesis Center URL

Fields of Science

01 natural sciences, 0105 earth and related environmental sciences

Citation

WoS Q

Q2

Scopus Q

Q2
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OpenCitations Citation Count
11

Source

Land

Volume

12

Issue

1

Start Page

47

End Page

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Citations

CrossRef : 16

Scopus : 19

Captures

Mendeley Readers : 77

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2.45974857

Sustainable Development Goals

7

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