Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk Road

The Belt and Road Initiative is the leading project in the regions along the ancient Silk Road. This aims to revive the New Silk Road (NSR) as a transnational space towards an era of new regional integration and globalization. Despite the potential economic effects on a global scale, local sustainab...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hannes Thees
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2020-12-01
Series:Sustainability
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/24/10612
id doaj-8a0e9a6c47cd4cadb8c2df7cedf53fac
record_format Article
spelling doaj-8a0e9a6c47cd4cadb8c2df7cedf53fac2020-12-19T00:06:10ZengMDPI AGSustainability2071-10502020-12-0112106121061210.3390/su122410612Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk RoadHannes Thees0Chair of Tourism/Center for Entrepreneurship, Catholic University Eichstaett-Ingolstadt, 85072 Eichstaett, GermanyThe Belt and Road Initiative is the leading project in the regions along the ancient Silk Road. This aims to revive the New Silk Road (NSR) as a transnational space towards an era of new regional integration and globalization. Despite the potential economic effects on a global scale, local sustainability remains questionable. Building upon the central engagement in infrastructure improvements, this article aims to investigate the role of local sustainability in research along the New Silk Road. Starting with 597 scientific articles, this article conducts a systematic literature review on four levels of concretization to characterize the research field of the New Silk Road, and to develop in-depth insights systematically. The results reveal a research focus on economic growth, which is lacking in environmental considerations and especially the socio-cultural dimension of sustainability on a local scale. Future directions in local sustainability should therefore include local stakeholders to build a joint understanding of sustainability by recognizing the characteristics of regionalism upon which manifold local support of mega infrastructure can evolve. Given these findings, the New Silk Road emerges as a field of study that calls for interdisciplinary research on different spatial levels.https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/24/10612New Silk Roadlocal sustainabilitymega infrastructuresystematic literature reviewBelt and Roadsustainable development
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hannes Thees
spellingShingle Hannes Thees
Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk Road
Sustainability
New Silk Road
local sustainability
mega infrastructure
systematic literature review
Belt and Road
sustainable development
author_facet Hannes Thees
author_sort Hannes Thees
title Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk Road
title_short Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk Road
title_full Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk Road
title_fullStr Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk Road
title_full_unstemmed Towards Local Sustainability of Mega Infrastructure: Reviewing Research on the New Silk Road
title_sort towards local sustainability of mega infrastructure: reviewing research on the new silk road
publisher MDPI AG
series Sustainability
issn 2071-1050
publishDate 2020-12-01
description The Belt and Road Initiative is the leading project in the regions along the ancient Silk Road. This aims to revive the New Silk Road (NSR) as a transnational space towards an era of new regional integration and globalization. Despite the potential economic effects on a global scale, local sustainability remains questionable. Building upon the central engagement in infrastructure improvements, this article aims to investigate the role of local sustainability in research along the New Silk Road. Starting with 597 scientific articles, this article conducts a systematic literature review on four levels of concretization to characterize the research field of the New Silk Road, and to develop in-depth insights systematically. The results reveal a research focus on economic growth, which is lacking in environmental considerations and especially the socio-cultural dimension of sustainability on a local scale. Future directions in local sustainability should therefore include local stakeholders to build a joint understanding of sustainability by recognizing the characteristics of regionalism upon which manifold local support of mega infrastructure can evolve. Given these findings, the New Silk Road emerges as a field of study that calls for interdisciplinary research on different spatial levels.
topic New Silk Road
local sustainability
mega infrastructure
systematic literature review
Belt and Road
sustainable development
url https://www.mdpi.com/2071-1050/12/24/10612
work_keys_str_mv AT hannesthees towardslocalsustainabilityofmegainfrastructurereviewingresearchonthenewsilkroad
_version_ 1724378111590531072