Exploring the Relationship Between Land Use and the Food‐Water‐Energy Nexus: Insights From A Systematic Literature Review

Uloženo v:
Podrobná bibliografie
Název: Exploring the Relationship Between Land Use and the Food‐Water‐Energy Nexus: Insights From A Systematic Literature Review
Autoři: Ke Yang, Qi Han, Dujuan Yang, Bauke de Vries
Zdroj: Land Degradation & Development. 36:3257-3278
Informace o vydavateli: Wiley, 2025.
Rok vydání: 2025
Témata: SDG 13 – Klimaatactie, SDG 2 – Geen honger, land use, SDG 11 – Duurzame steden en gemeenschappen, SDG 11 - Sustainable Cities and Communities, food-water- energy (F-W-E), SDG 6 – Schoon water en sanitaire voorzieningen, SDG 15 – Leven op het land, SDG 13 - Climate Action, sustainable, SDG 7 - Affordable and Clean Energy, SDG 2 - Zero Hunger, SDG 6 - Clean Water and Sanitation, food-water-energy (F-W-E), SDG 7 – Betaalbare en schone energie, SDG 15 - Life on Land
Popis: As urbanization accelerates, cities face increasingly significant ecological challenges essential for sustainability. One of the primary manifestations of these challenges is the imbalance between food, water, and energy resources, often resulting in the irrational use of land. However, few scholars have reviewed the relationship between land use and the F‐W‐E nexus. Thus, this paper examines the interplay between land use and the Food‐Water‐Energy nexus using a thematic literature review covering the past 9 years (2015–2023). Specifically, 88 relevant articles have been identified and encoded using the NVivo software based on a structured coding framework that focuses on theory (framework), method, indicators, spatial scale, aims, and results. The literature was retrieved using keyword searches from Web of Science databases. The review follows a systematic four‐step process: defining sub‐questions, conducting a structured literature review based on PRISMA guidelines, utilizing NVivo for thematic coding and organization, and finally synthesizing and discussing the findings. The findings reveal several key insights: (1) Ecological urban morphology studies are essential for understanding urban land use planning spatial patterns. The influence of agricultural land on water quality remains ambiguous, and discrepancies exist in the effects of land‐use intensity and residential density on F‐W‐E. (2) There is a clear lack of comprehensive interdisciplinary and multi‐objective research theories and methods covering F‐W‐E‐L (Food‐Water‐Energy‐Land use). At the same time, implicit consumption beyond geographical boundaries needs attention. (3) Sustainable development goals within the F‐W‐E‐L system lack clearly defined goalsover time and fail to differentiate across spatial scales. (4) There is a deficiency in shared decision‐making and post‐policy tracking of urbanization within the F‐W‐E‐L framework. To address these challenges, a comprehensive, multi‐scale, interdisciplinary approach is proposed, integrating multi‐sectoral decision‐making and public participation into urban planning.
Druh dokumentu: Article
Jazyk: English
ISSN: 1099-145X
1085-3278
DOI: 10.1002/ldr.5576
Rights: CC BY NC ND
Přístupové číslo: edsair.doi.dedup.....51cdb33fa7a687d392b843c537d154d8
Databáze: OpenAIRE
Popis
Abstrakt:As urbanization accelerates, cities face increasingly significant ecological challenges essential for sustainability. One of the primary manifestations of these challenges is the imbalance between food, water, and energy resources, often resulting in the irrational use of land. However, few scholars have reviewed the relationship between land use and the F‐W‐E nexus. Thus, this paper examines the interplay between land use and the Food‐Water‐Energy nexus using a thematic literature review covering the past 9 years (2015–2023). Specifically, 88 relevant articles have been identified and encoded using the NVivo software based on a structured coding framework that focuses on theory (framework), method, indicators, spatial scale, aims, and results. The literature was retrieved using keyword searches from Web of Science databases. The review follows a systematic four‐step process: defining sub‐questions, conducting a structured literature review based on PRISMA guidelines, utilizing NVivo for thematic coding and organization, and finally synthesizing and discussing the findings. The findings reveal several key insights: (1) Ecological urban morphology studies are essential for understanding urban land use planning spatial patterns. The influence of agricultural land on water quality remains ambiguous, and discrepancies exist in the effects of land‐use intensity and residential density on F‐W‐E. (2) There is a clear lack of comprehensive interdisciplinary and multi‐objective research theories and methods covering F‐W‐E‐L (Food‐Water‐Energy‐Land use). At the same time, implicit consumption beyond geographical boundaries needs attention. (3) Sustainable development goals within the F‐W‐E‐L system lack clearly defined goalsover time and fail to differentiate across spatial scales. (4) There is a deficiency in shared decision‐making and post‐policy tracking of urbanization within the F‐W‐E‐L framework. To address these challenges, a comprehensive, multi‐scale, interdisciplinary approach is proposed, integrating multi‐sectoral decision‐making and public participation into urban planning.
ISSN:1099145X
10853278
DOI:10.1002/ldr.5576