Lihua Yang
Peking University
31 Papers
138 Citations
Lihua Yang is an academic researcher from Peking University. The author has contributed to research in topics: China & Collective action. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 24 publications. Previous affiliations of Lihua Yang include Arizona State University & Beihang University.
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Papers
Ecological civilization: perspectives from landscape ecology and landscape sustainability science
Amy E. Frazier,Brett A. Bryan,Alexander Buyantuev,Liding Chen,Cristian Echeverría,Peng Jia,Lumeng Liu,Qin Li,Qin Li,Zhiyun Ouyang,Jianguo Wu,Jianguo Wu,Wei-Ning Xiang,Jun Yang,Lihua Yang,Lihua Yang,Shuqing Zhao +16 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors provide perspectives from landscape ecology and landscape sustainability science for achieving an ecological civilization, and provide a key place to start is with landscapes, linking landscape patterns with biodiversity and ecosystem processes/function across scales.
Types and Institutional Design Principles of Collaborative Governance in a Strong-government Society: The Case Study of Desertification Control in Northern China
TL;DR: Based on a case study of 12 field sites and a systematic review of an additional 16 sites reported in the literature on desertification control in northern China, Li et al. as mentioned in this paper identified four types of collaboration and determined Type I (Strong Government with Strong Nongovernmental Participants) to be the best for desertification controlling performance, Type IV (Weak Government with Weak NongoGovernmental Participants), and Type II (strong Government with weak Nongo Governmental Participants).
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Seven design principles for promoting scholars' participation in combating desertification
Lihua Yang,Jianguo Wu +1 more
TL;DR: It is suggested that successful scholar-participated governance needs to satisfy seven design principles to be successful, and the better satisfied these principles are, the more successful the effort to combat desertification.
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Internet's impact on expert–citizen interactions in public policymaking—A meta analysis
TL;DR: In this article, a meta-analysis of the past studies on internet's impact on citizen participation in public policy making was conducted, and the authors found that the internet has successfully reduced resource difference between policy experts and the citizens as promised.
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Roles of science in institutional changes: The case of desertification control in China
TL;DR: Wang et al. as mentioned in this paper explored the role of science in institutional changes associated with desertification control in northern China and found that the application of science significantly improved the outcome of desertification by influencing several aspects of institutional changes.
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