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Agricultural Land-Use Transition and Procedural Justice: Evidence from a Systematic Literature Review and a Case Study in Taiwan

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  • Wei-Kuang Liu

    (Department of Landscape Architecture, Chung Yuan Christian University, No. 200, Zhongbei Road, Zhongli District, Taoyuan City 320314, Taiwan)

  • Yi-Wei Shen

    (Ph.D. Program in Design, Chung Yuan Christian University, No. 200, Zhongbei Road, Zhongli District, Taoyuan City 320314, Taiwan)

Abstract

As just transition debates extend into agricultural land use, this study examines landscape transition in Huwei Township, Taiwan, through a procedural justice lens. To address severe land subsidence, the state has promoted a shift from paddy rice cultivation to dryland farming, but the transition remains politically contested. Based on a systematic review of 55 empirical studies (2020–2026) and 12 semi-structured interviews, the study identifies a key mismatch in problem attribution: official accounts emphasize irrigation, whereas farmers point to urban development pressures and infrastructure burdens. The findings also show that cultivation-decoupled subsidies enable landowners to capture compensation while shifting operational risks onto tenant farmers and other vulnerable groups. The study argues that a socially sustainable transition depends on incorporating local knowledge and redesigning subsidy eligibility and risk-sharing rules to strengthen procedural justice, representativeness, and accountability.

Suggested Citation

  • Wei-Kuang Liu & Yi-Wei Shen, 2026. "Agricultural Land-Use Transition and Procedural Justice: Evidence from a Systematic Literature Review and a Case Study in Taiwan," Sustainability, MDPI, vol. 18(9), pages 1-47, April.
  • Handle: RePEc:gam:jsusta:v:18:y:2026:i:9:p:4186-:d:1926508
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