In order to explore the train of thought for China’s urbanizing development and coordinated rural economic development, and to find good ways of solving rural problems through urbanization, this paper absorbs the pus...In order to explore the train of thought for China’s urbanizing development and coordinated rural economic development, and to find good ways of solving rural problems through urbanization, this paper absorbs the push-and-pull forces theory and the systematic dynamic theory in the traditional population migration theories, views urbanization as a dynamic system, makes research on the push-and-pull mechanism of urbanization. The pulling power of urbanization is analyzed according to two aspects, the agglomeration effect and the radiation effect of cities. The agglomeration effect provides continuous propelling force for urbanization, and the radiation effect further accelerates the urbanization process by pushing forward the development of rural economy. Of course, the slow development of urbanization can result in the hindrance to rural economic development.展开更多
This article is a research into the history of our town, several times changing its status on its nearly 80-year record. We trace its gradual evolvement from a backwater town into a 21th century capital to piece the p...This article is a research into the history of our town, several times changing its status on its nearly 80-year record. We trace its gradual evolvement from a backwater town into a 21th century capital to piece the picture of our town together from separate puzzles in names and events. The history of our town with its colonial, soviet and post-soviet periods is impetuously losing its two original contexts. The new city was not built anew, from scratch, but was further constructed, extended and novelized. However the first two periods are effaced and pushed to the background, becoming an apophasis. The questions to puzzle out are: Why the town was renamed so many times into Akmolinsk, Tselinograd, Akmola, and Astana; why it had a few emblems on its record; and from which year starts settlement of the territory this modern city currently takes up. Then comes another moot point: How many times was our town's status put to question? Of special interest is street renaming and monuments' relocation and the town's demographic constituent is no less a serious subject of research. Our town formed through permanent movement of the rural population to it, which concurred with the governmental campaigns in the epoch in question. Urban environment certainly told on inter-relations, and brought about problems. One of them is the problem of tolerance, inevitably arising in any big city. The problem of misunderstanding between the residents of former Tselinograd and present Astana is generation gap. For permanent population's rotation practically no urban life traditions have taken on a definite shape among majority of the residents, paradoxical as it is. The population's intent to cast off all the colonial and soviet past ended in the loss of representative opportunities of the "old" town.展开更多
文摘In order to explore the train of thought for China’s urbanizing development and coordinated rural economic development, and to find good ways of solving rural problems through urbanization, this paper absorbs the push-and-pull forces theory and the systematic dynamic theory in the traditional population migration theories, views urbanization as a dynamic system, makes research on the push-and-pull mechanism of urbanization. The pulling power of urbanization is analyzed according to two aspects, the agglomeration effect and the radiation effect of cities. The agglomeration effect provides continuous propelling force for urbanization, and the radiation effect further accelerates the urbanization process by pushing forward the development of rural economy. Of course, the slow development of urbanization can result in the hindrance to rural economic development.
文摘This article is a research into the history of our town, several times changing its status on its nearly 80-year record. We trace its gradual evolvement from a backwater town into a 21th century capital to piece the picture of our town together from separate puzzles in names and events. The history of our town with its colonial, soviet and post-soviet periods is impetuously losing its two original contexts. The new city was not built anew, from scratch, but was further constructed, extended and novelized. However the first two periods are effaced and pushed to the background, becoming an apophasis. The questions to puzzle out are: Why the town was renamed so many times into Akmolinsk, Tselinograd, Akmola, and Astana; why it had a few emblems on its record; and from which year starts settlement of the territory this modern city currently takes up. Then comes another moot point: How many times was our town's status put to question? Of special interest is street renaming and monuments' relocation and the town's demographic constituent is no less a serious subject of research. Our town formed through permanent movement of the rural population to it, which concurred with the governmental campaigns in the epoch in question. Urban environment certainly told on inter-relations, and brought about problems. One of them is the problem of tolerance, inevitably arising in any big city. The problem of misunderstanding between the residents of former Tselinograd and present Astana is generation gap. For permanent population's rotation practically no urban life traditions have taken on a definite shape among majority of the residents, paradoxical as it is. The population's intent to cast off all the colonial and soviet past ended in the loss of representative opportunities of the "old" town.