Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China

Based on China’s “dual-carbon” goals, rural areas are rapidly advancing toward low-carbon transition. However, uniform policy instruments may unintentionally intensify the structural inequities in how carbon burdens and resource benefits are distributed across different social groups at the micro le...

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Main Authors: Wang, Xinxin, Hong, Jingjing, Chen, Kevin Z.
Format: Artículo preliminar
Language:Inglés
Published: CGIAR System Organization 2025
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180249
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author Wang, Xinxin
Hong, Jingjing
Chen, Kevin Z.
author_browse Chen, Kevin Z.
Hong, Jingjing
Wang, Xinxin
author_facet Wang, Xinxin
Hong, Jingjing
Chen, Kevin Z.
author_sort Wang, Xinxin
collection Repository of Agricultural Research Outputs (CGSpace)
description Based on China’s “dual-carbon” goals, rural areas are rapidly advancing toward low-carbon transition. However, uniform policy instruments may unintentionally intensify the structural inequities in how carbon burdens and resource benefits are distributed across different social groups at the micro level. Using Qingshan Village in Zhejiang Province as a case study, this study draws on a complete household survey of 738 rural families to examine the core question of carbon fairness—who bears the burden and who receives the benefits in the rural low-carbon transition. Theoretically, the study integrates the three-dimensional framework of environmental justice with the survival–luxury emissions theory to analyze the mechanisms of carbon inequality within rural communities from both distributive and recognition perspectives. Methodologically, it pioneers a micro-level carbon fairness assessment system constructed across economic, ecological, and social dimensions, and employs the entropyweight method, inter-group comparative analysis, and OLS regression to systematically identify fairness disparities among different population groups. Results show that: Clear differences in carbon fairness scores exist across income levels, gender of household head, age groups, spatial locations, and digital skills, revealing an inverse pattern of “high emissions–high gains” versus “low emissions–low gains.” Significant within-group mobility challenges the assumption of group homogeneity, highlighting the role of individual behavior and lifestyle in shaping fairness outcomes. The EBR indicator effectively differentiates survival emissions—typical among low-income and elderly households—from luxury emissions, avoided by some high-income households through intentional lowcarbon choices. The study recommends establishing differentiated carbon compensation mechanisms based on group-specific characteristics to promote a more equitable and inclusive rural low-carbon transition.
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spelling CGSpace1802492026-01-21T16:55:31Z Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China Wang, Xinxin Hong, Jingjing Chen, Kevin Z. climate change adaptation carbon rural areas rural environment Based on China’s “dual-carbon” goals, rural areas are rapidly advancing toward low-carbon transition. However, uniform policy instruments may unintentionally intensify the structural inequities in how carbon burdens and resource benefits are distributed across different social groups at the micro level. Using Qingshan Village in Zhejiang Province as a case study, this study draws on a complete household survey of 738 rural families to examine the core question of carbon fairness—who bears the burden and who receives the benefits in the rural low-carbon transition. Theoretically, the study integrates the three-dimensional framework of environmental justice with the survival–luxury emissions theory to analyze the mechanisms of carbon inequality within rural communities from both distributive and recognition perspectives. Methodologically, it pioneers a micro-level carbon fairness assessment system constructed across economic, ecological, and social dimensions, and employs the entropyweight method, inter-group comparative analysis, and OLS regression to systematically identify fairness disparities among different population groups. Results show that: Clear differences in carbon fairness scores exist across income levels, gender of household head, age groups, spatial locations, and digital skills, revealing an inverse pattern of “high emissions–high gains” versus “low emissions–low gains.” Significant within-group mobility challenges the assumption of group homogeneity, highlighting the role of individual behavior and lifestyle in shaping fairness outcomes. The EBR indicator effectively differentiates survival emissions—typical among low-income and elderly households—from luxury emissions, avoided by some high-income households through intentional lowcarbon choices. The study recommends establishing differentiated carbon compensation mechanisms based on group-specific characteristics to promote a more equitable and inclusive rural low-carbon transition. 2025-12-31 2026-01-20T21:47:05Z 2026-01-20T21:47:05Z Working Paper https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180249 en Open Access application/pdf CGIAR System Organization Wang, Xinxin; Hong, Jingjing; and Chen, Kevin Z. 2025. Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China. CGIAR System Organization. https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180249
spellingShingle climate change adaptation
carbon
rural areas
rural environment
Wang, Xinxin
Hong, Jingjing
Chen, Kevin Z.
Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China
title Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China
title_full Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China
title_fullStr Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China
title_full_unstemmed Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China
title_short Justice in rural carbon transition: A micro-level diagnosis from a low-carbon demonstration village in east China
title_sort justice in rural carbon transition a micro level diagnosis from a low carbon demonstration village in east china
topic climate change adaptation
carbon
rural areas
rural environment
url https://hdl.handle.net/10568/180249
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AT chenkevinz justiceinruralcarbontransitionamicroleveldiagnosisfromalowcarbondemonstrationvillageineastchina