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From Competition to Collaboration: The Evolutionary Dynamics Between Economic and Ecological Departments in Sustainable Land-Use Planning

Author

Listed:
  • Guojia Li

    (College of Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh EH8 9YL, UK)

  • Cheng Zhou

    (School of Government, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210023, China)

Abstract

The collaboration between economic and ecological departments in land-use planning is crucial for advancing sustainable development. However, existing research has largely focused on macro-level policies and technical instruments, paying insufficient attention to the micro-level logics of behavior and strategic interactions between these two departments. This research employs a rigorous mixed-methods approach to bridge empirical depth with analytical rigor. The qualitative phase, encompassing 41 semi-structured interviews and analysis of 327 internal documents, examines the departments’ real-world motivations, strategic behaviors, and the cost–benefit structures underlying their decision-making. Based on these empirical findings, a tailored evolutionary game theory model is constructed to formally simulate the dynamic pathways and stable equilibria of collaboration between the Economic and Ecological Departments. Our analysis reveals that the evolutionary game system converges toward a dichotomy of stable states: a non-cooperative equilibrium characterized by development-oriented land-use planning with adaptive regulation, and a cooperative equilibrium underpinned by green-coordinated planning supported by stringent regulatory enforcement. A cooperative equilibrium is more readily achieved when both departments demonstrate a willingness to simultaneously increase their cost investment parameters in sustainable land-use planning. Conditions contrary to this mutual commitment lead to a non-cooperative equilibrium. Building on these findings, the study synthesizes this interplay into a novel “Institutional-Situational-Behavioral” (ISB) framework. This framework provides a cohesive theoretical lens for diagnosing and fostering interdepartmental collaboration in sustainable land governance. The research thus offers a theoretical foundation for analyzing the evolutionary dynamics of interdepartmental collaboration and delivers mechanism-informed policy guidance for enhancing sustainable land-use planning.

Suggested Citation

  • Guojia Li & Cheng Zhou, 2026. "From Competition to Collaboration: The Evolutionary Dynamics Between Economic and Ecological Departments in Sustainable Land-Use Planning," Land, MDPI, vol. 15(2), pages 1-26, January.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jlands:v:15:y:2026:i:2:p:249-:d:1853563
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