Author
Listed:
- Zixi Guo
(College of Art & Design, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China)
- Ruomei Tang
(College of Art & Design, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China
Jinpu Research Institute, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China
Digital Innovation Design Center, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China)
- Xiangbin Peng
(College of Fashion and Design, Donghua University, Shanghai 201620, China)
- Yanping Xiao
(College of Art & Design, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing 210037, China)
- Qiantong Liang
(Faculty of Humanities and Social Sciences, Macao Polytechnic University, Macao 999078, China)
Abstract
Rural gentrification is transforming China’s countryside, yet the ways gentrified landscapes shape community co-build willingness across social groups remain unclear. Guided by the Hierarchy Effects Model (HEM) and Martin Phillips’ four-dimensional view of rural landscapes (material, symbolic, social, and living), this study develops a “landscape–emotion–intention” framework linking spatial–environmental continuity, cultural landscape transition, social interaction embeddedness, and new rural livability to community identity, sense of belonging, and co-build willingness. Based on 50 in-depth interviews in She Village, Nanjing, latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) is used to extract key themes, which are combined with the four-dimensional framework to construct a 25-item questionnaire; 376 valid responses from immigrants and local villagers are then examined through multi-group structural equation modeling and artificial neural networks for robustness and importance analysis. Results indicate that cultural landscape transition and new rural livability are the main drivers of identity and belonging among immigrants, whereas cultural landscape transition, spatial–environmental continuity, and social interaction embeddedness are more critical for local villagers; in both groups, sense of belonging is the strongest predictor of co-build willingness. The study embeds HEM within gentrified rural settings, operationalizes stakeholder perceptions via an LDA–SEM–ANN pipeline, and proposes differentiated strategies for inclusive rural community building and sustainable governance.
Suggested Citation
Zixi Guo & Ruomei Tang & Xiangbin Peng & Yanping Xiao & Qiantong Liang, 2025.
"Impact of Gentrified Rural Landscapes on Community Co-Build Willingness: The Differentiated Mechanisms of Immigrants and Local Villagers,"
Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 17(23), pages 1-29, November.
Handle:
RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:17:y:2025:i:23:p:10613-:d:1803783
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