Population stress: A spatiotemporal analysis of population change and land development at the county level in the contiguous United States, 2001–2011

•Population stress areas refers to those with populations growing faster than the available lands.•Population growth is associated with the decrease of land developability.•Low population stress is found to be in the Midwest and the traditional “Deep South” counties.•High population stress is found...

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Veröffentlicht in:Land use policy 2018-01, Vol.70, p.128-137
Hauptverfasser: Chi, Guangqing, Ho, Hung Chak
Format: Artikel
Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Population stress areas refers to those with populations growing faster than the available lands.•Population growth is associated with the decrease of land developability.•Low population stress is found to be in the Midwest and the traditional “Deep South” counties.•High population stress is found to be in Southeast Coast, Washington, Northern Texas, and the Southwest.•The population stress concept can act as a basis towards developing coherent sustainable land use policies. The past century has witnessed rapidly increasing population-land conflicts due to exponential population growth and its many consequences. Although the measures of population-land conflicts are many, there lacks a model that appropriately considers both the social and physical contexts of population-land conflicts. In this study we introduce the concept of population stress, which identifies areas with populations growing faster than the lands available for sustainable development. Specifically, population stress areas are identified by comparing population growth and land development as measured by land developability in the contiguous United States from 2001 to 2011. Our approach is based on a combination of spatial multicriteria analysis, zonal statistics, and spatiotemporal modelling. We found that the population growth of a county is associated with the decrease of land developability, along with the spatial influences of surrounding counties. The Midwest and the traditional “Deep South” counties would have less population stress with future land development, whereas the Southeast Coast, Washington State, Northern Texas, and the Southwest would face more stress due to population growth that is faster than the loss of suitable lands for development. The factors contributing to population stress may differ from place to place. Our "population stress" concept is useful and innovative for understanding population stress due to land development and can be applied to other regions as well as global research. It can act as a basis towards developing coherent sustainable land use policies. Coordination among local governments and across different levels of governments in the twenty-first century is a must for effective land use planning.
ISSN:0264-8377
1873-5754
DOI:10.1016/j.landusepol.2017.10.008