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Hong Zhu
School of Geography and Remote Sensing, Guangzhou University, Higher Education Mega Center, Guangzhou, 510006, China

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Letters
Published: 29 July 2021 in Science
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Duo Yin; Zhenjie Yuan; Jie Li; Hong Zhu. Mitigate human-wildlife conflict in China. Science 2021, 373, 500.2 -501.

AMA Style

Duo Yin, Zhenjie Yuan, Jie Li, Hong Zhu. Mitigate human-wildlife conflict in China. Science. 2021; 373 (6554):500.2-501.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Duo Yin; Zhenjie Yuan; Jie Li; Hong Zhu. 2021. "Mitigate human-wildlife conflict in China." Science 373, no. 6554: 500.2-501.

Journal article
Published: 28 April 2021 in Applied Geography
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Real-time population data are vital for urban planning and resource management for sustainable development. To complement satellite-based population estimation methods, geospatial social media data provide additional opportunities to estimate the distribution of population with high levels of efficacy and accuracy. Thus, this study attempts to assess the performance of various sensing data to disaggregate population data in China; the tested data include Tencent location-based service (LBS) data (about 0.8 billion users), satellite-derived land use/cover data, and nightlight imagery data. With the use of census data for validation, the experimental results show that Tencent LBS data are much better than satellite-derived land use/cover data and nightlight satellite data for mapping the population distribution. The overall mapping accuracy at the city level using Tencent LBS data was 88.9%, whereas the accuracy using land use/cover data was 87.1% and that using nightlight satellite data was 85.5%. The experimental results also indicate that LBS data and remote sensing data could both be well integrated to map the population distribution in China. Thus, a population spatialization model was further developed using all of the tested indicators; this model allowed the overall population estimation accuracy at the city level to reach 90.4%. This model could help determine the population distribution on various spatial scales quickly and efficiently, and the developed tool and the provided population estimates may be vital for the sustainable development of cities and regions for which population data are lacking.

ACS Style

Yong Xu; Yimeng Song; Jixuan Cai; Hong Zhu. Population mapping in China with Tencent social user and remote sensing data. Applied Geography 2021, 130, 102450 .

AMA Style

Yong Xu, Yimeng Song, Jixuan Cai, Hong Zhu. Population mapping in China with Tencent social user and remote sensing data. Applied Geography. 2021; 130 ():102450.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Yong Xu; Yimeng Song; Jixuan Cai; Hong Zhu. 2021. "Population mapping in China with Tencent social user and remote sensing data." Applied Geography 130, no. : 102450.

Journal article
Published: 30 March 2021 in Annals of Tourism Research
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This paper starts from the observation that the literatures on indigenous tourism tend to perpetuate the assumption of indigenous people as suppliers and objects of tourism experiences and services, while there is a dearth of research as to how to theorise indigenous people as tourists, and how to study the tourist practices of indigenous people. This paper argues that to take indigenous people seriously as ordinary tourists just like others would enrich the concept of indigenous tourism on the one hand, and on the other, advance theoretical perspectives on the translocal constitution of indigeneity. Our empirical study addresses the arguments by investigating the touristic practices of the ethnic minority Mosuo, who reside in the Lugu Lake area in southwest China.

ACS Style

Lei Wei; Junxi Qian; Hong Zhu. Rethinking indigenous people as tourists: modernity, cosmopolitanism, and the re-invention of indigeneity. Annals of Tourism Research 2021, 89, 103200 .

AMA Style

Lei Wei, Junxi Qian, Hong Zhu. Rethinking indigenous people as tourists: modernity, cosmopolitanism, and the re-invention of indigeneity. Annals of Tourism Research. 2021; 89 ():103200.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Lei Wei; Junxi Qian; Hong Zhu. 2021. "Rethinking indigenous people as tourists: modernity, cosmopolitanism, and the re-invention of indigeneity." Annals of Tourism Research 89, no. : 103200.

Articles
Published: 23 August 2020 in Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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The Xinjiang Interior Class is one of the most influential but controversial ethnic minority-focused educational policies in contemporary China. The policy recruits ethnic minority youth from their northwest homeland and offers them senior secondary education in eastern and central parts of the country. The literature on the policy is flourishing, yet little attention has been paid to spatial contexts outside of school that also significantly contribute to the interethnic politics of the policy. Drawing on interviews (N=16), participant observations, and questionnaire surveys (N=97) with Uyghur students on a train which took them to their new educational world, this article examines what the students felt, thought, perceived and did during the trip, and analyses how these subjective experiences are related to the process of being mobile. This article finds that the train space is a physical space of mobility, but also an affective space, entailing students’ intensive subjectivity experiences: a conflicting sense of eliteness, reinforced sense of self-discipline, and increased place identity to Xinjiang. The article supplements the current literature by presenting the poetics and politics of subjectivity among Uyghur students in a mobile space, further reinforcing the significance of mobility theories in understanding ethnic migration and its politics in China.

ACS Style

Zhenjie Yuan; Hong Zhu. Uyghur educational elites in China: mobility and subjectivity uncertainty on a life-transforming journey. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 2020, 47, 536 -556.

AMA Style

Zhenjie Yuan, Hong Zhu. Uyghur educational elites in China: mobility and subjectivity uncertainty on a life-transforming journey. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 2020; 47 (3):536-556.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Zhenjie Yuan; Hong Zhu. 2020. "Uyghur educational elites in China: mobility and subjectivity uncertainty on a life-transforming journey." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 47, no. 3: 536-556.

Journal article
Published: 28 July 2020 in Health & Place
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This paper responds to the increasing concern regarding the role of non-human life in shaping urban space by exploring the public perception of urban companion animals during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) outbreak in China. We argue that the public's perception of urban companion animals during emerging infectious disease outbreaks is related to medical and life science issues and reflects the political, economic, and emotional struggles involved in human-animal multispecies cohabitation. We find that the public has mainly followed and reconstructed medical discourses about the risk of companion animal-to-human transmission and discussed sustainable ethical animal practices in urban public health emergency management during the COVID-19 outbreak. Concerns regarding the risk of companion animal-related infection reflect the increasing prominence of more-than-human families, the pet industry, and multispecies leisure conflicts in public space in Chinese cities. The public's attention to animal ethics has prompted Chinese policy makers to adopt a more morally acceptable model for urban public health emergency management that can be sustained and supported by responsible non-governmental organizations and ethical urban residents.

ACS Style

Duo Yin; Quan Gao; Hong Zhu; Jie Li. Public perception of urban companion animals during the COVID-19 outbreak in China. Health & Place 2020, 65, 102399 -102399.

AMA Style

Duo Yin, Quan Gao, Hong Zhu, Jie Li. Public perception of urban companion animals during the COVID-19 outbreak in China. Health & Place. 2020; 65 ():102399-102399.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Duo Yin; Quan Gao; Hong Zhu; Jie Li. 2020. "Public perception of urban companion animals during the COVID-19 outbreak in China." Health & Place 65, no. : 102399-102399.

Journal article
Published: 17 June 2020 in Tourism Management
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In the unpredictable economic environment, both academics and professionals have been keen to identify effective leadership style that can induce more employee creative performance in work. Prior research has investigated different types of leadership styles and their consequences for employee behavior in work environments. In the recent management literature, humble leadership has been found to generate a number of positive behavioral outcomes among employees. However, relatively little is known about the influences of leader humility on team processes, or about the boundary conditions of these effects. The current study examined first, the relationships among leader humility, team humility and employee creative performance; and second, the moderating role of competitive climate in the moderation effect of task dependence in the relationship between team humility and employee creative performance. Hierarchical linear modeling was applied to analyze the cross-level data with 76 work teams and 531 employees. The results showed that leader humility exerts its impact on team humility, which in turn influences employee creative performance. The effect of team humility on employee creative performance was found to be strongest under high task dependence and high competitive climate. Practical implications regarding how to optimize the positive impact of leader humility are discussed.

ACS Style

Ben Haobin Ye; Vincent Wing Sun Tung; Jun Justin Li; Hong Zhu. Leader humility, team humility and employee creative performance: The moderating roles of task dependence and competitive climate. Tourism Management 2020, 81, 104170 .

AMA Style

Ben Haobin Ye, Vincent Wing Sun Tung, Jun Justin Li, Hong Zhu. Leader humility, team humility and employee creative performance: The moderating roles of task dependence and competitive climate. Tourism Management. 2020; 81 ():104170.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Ben Haobin Ye; Vincent Wing Sun Tung; Jun Justin Li; Hong Zhu. 2020. "Leader humility, team humility and employee creative performance: The moderating roles of task dependence and competitive climate." Tourism Management 81, no. : 104170.

Journal article
Published: 08 June 2020 in International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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In this paper, we argue that research on the everyday life of older people needs to move beyond anthropocentrism because non-human support contributes to the diversity of their social networks. We elaborate this argument by examining how companion dogs are involved in the urban empty-nest family in Guangzhou (an aging and highly urbanized city in China), the building of multispecies kinships by urban empty nesters in later life and improving the health of urban empty nesters. Participatory observations and 20 in-depth interviews were combined to assess the association between dog ownership and the reconstruction of later life. Specifically, we focus on the co-disciplined pursuit of outdoor activities by urban empty nesters and their companion dogs; this pursuit represents a shared leisure practice that maintains multispecies kinship and is a creative way for older individuals to improve their happiness and physical functioning. This paper provides a relational and reflective understanding of the interaction between the urban empty nesters and companion dogs and the implications of this interaction in the urban leisure space.

ACS Style

Xianfei Chen; Hong Zhu; Duo Yin. Everyday Life Construction, Outdoor Activity and Health Practice among Urban Empty Nesters and Their Companion Dogs in Guangzhou, China. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2020, 17, 4091 .

AMA Style

Xianfei Chen, Hong Zhu, Duo Yin. Everyday Life Construction, Outdoor Activity and Health Practice among Urban Empty Nesters and Their Companion Dogs in Guangzhou, China. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17 (11):4091.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Xianfei Chen; Hong Zhu; Duo Yin. 2020. "Everyday Life Construction, Outdoor Activity and Health Practice among Urban Empty Nesters and Their Companion Dogs in Guangzhou, China." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 11: 4091.

Journal article
Published: 05 May 2020 in Cities
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As an important socio-economic development strategy around the world, urban regeneration has been gradually shifting from a focus on large-scale and modernized physical transformations to addressing diversity, sustainability, equality and liveability in the city. With large-scale urban sprawl slowing down, culture-based urban regeneration is being increasingly undertaken by the local governments of China. Drawing on detailed fieldwork in the two selected culture-based urban regeneration projects in Guangzhou, a capital city in South China, this article aims to present the subtle cultural politics embedded in the processes of urban regeneration. The findings of this article include that 1) the two culture-based urban regeneration projects in Guangzhou are intertwined with complex power relations, discourses and cultural negotiations; 2) the projects might bring the opportunity for revitalization of local culture, but simultaneously create cultural tension among different social groups; 3) the roles performed by the actors involved are flexible, fluid and highly situated. By presenting the nuanced cultural politics within culture-based urban regeneration projects, this article forms part of the literature on the interrelationship between government, developer, and resident/individual in the context of culture-led urban regeneration.

ACS Style

Xiaoliang Chen; Hong Zhu; Zhenjie Yuan. Contested memory amidst rapid urban transition: The cultural politics of urban regeneration in Guangzhou, China. Cities 2020, 102, 102755 .

AMA Style

Xiaoliang Chen, Hong Zhu, Zhenjie Yuan. Contested memory amidst rapid urban transition: The cultural politics of urban regeneration in Guangzhou, China. Cities. 2020; 102 ():102755.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Xiaoliang Chen; Hong Zhu; Zhenjie Yuan. 2020. "Contested memory amidst rapid urban transition: The cultural politics of urban regeneration in Guangzhou, China." Cities 102, no. : 102755.

Journal article
Published: 30 April 2020 in International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health
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In December 2019, a novel laboratory-confirmed coronavirus (2019-nCoV) infection, which has caused clusters of severe illnesses, was first reported in Wuhan, the capital of Hubei province, China. This foodborne illness, which reportedly most likely originated in a seafood market where wild animals are sold illegally, has transmitted among humans through close contact, across the world. The aim of this study is to explore health/risk perceptions of and attitudes toward healthy/risky food in the immediate context of food crisis. More specifically, by using the data collected from 1008 respondents in January 2020, the time when China was hit hard by the “Corona Virus Disease 2019” (COVID-19), this study investigates the overall and different generational respondents’ health/risk perceptions of and attitudes toward organic food and game meat. The results reveal that, firstly, based on their food health and risk perceptions of healthy and risky food, the respondents’ general attitudes are positive toward organic food but relatively negative toward game meat. Secondly, older generations have a more positive attitude and are more committed to organic food. Younger generations’ attitude toward game meat is more negative whereas older generations attach more importance to it because of its nutritional and medicinal values. In addition, this research also indicates that the COVID-19 crisis influences the respondents’ perceptions of and attitudes toward organic food and game meat consumption. However, the likelihood of its impact on older generations’ future change in diets is smaller, which implies that older generations’ food beliefs are more stable.

ACS Style

Xiaoru Xie; Liman Huang; Jun (Justin) Li; Hong Zhu. Generational Differences in Perceptions of Food Health/Risk and Attitudes toward Organic Food and Game Meat: The Case of the COVID-19 Crisis in China. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 2020, 17, 3148 .

AMA Style

Xiaoru Xie, Liman Huang, Jun (Justin) Li, Hong Zhu. Generational Differences in Perceptions of Food Health/Risk and Attitudes toward Organic Food and Game Meat: The Case of the COVID-19 Crisis in China. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17 (9):3148.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Xiaoru Xie; Liman Huang; Jun (Justin) Li; Hong Zhu. 2020. "Generational Differences in Perceptions of Food Health/Risk and Attitudes toward Organic Food and Game Meat: The Case of the COVID-19 Crisis in China." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 9: 3148.

Journal article
Published: 07 April 2020 in Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies
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This special issue emerges from the observation that the current literatures on migration in China are constrained by a series of shortfalls, including a relative topical homogeneity centred on domestic labour migration, relatively narrowly conceived and institutionalist conceptions of migration and migrants, and a lack of engagement with theoretical models and paradigms in the broad discipline of migration studies. Assembling eight fine-grained research papers engaging with a broad variety of migratory trajectories and experiences, this special issues addresses these shortfalls by: (1) investigating diverse forms of domestic and transnational migration in and to China; (2) problematising and innovating well-established analytical tools and categories in the studies on migration in China; and (3) underscoring the centrality of identity, subjectivity and everyday experiences to theoretical understandings of migration in China. Claims to such contributions are based on a concise but pointed review of the status quo of knowledge on migration in and to China.

ACS Style

Hong Zhu; Junxi Qian. New theoretical dialogues on migration in China: introduction to the special issue. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 2020, 47, 2685 -2705.

AMA Style

Hong Zhu, Junxi Qian. New theoretical dialogues on migration in China: introduction to the special issue. Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies. 2020; 47 (12):2685-2705.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Hong Zhu; Junxi Qian. 2020. "New theoretical dialogues on migration in China: introduction to the special issue." Journal of Ethnic and Migration Studies 47, no. 12: 2685-2705.

Comment
Published: 07 February 2020 in The Lancet Infectious Diseases
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In December, 2019, the 2019 novel coronavirus (2019-nCoV) infecting humans was first identified in Wuhan, China.1Zhu N Zhang D Wang W et al.A novel coronavirus from patients with pneumonia in China, 2019.N Engl J Med. 2020; (published online Jan 24.)DOI:10.1056/NEJMoa2001017Crossref PubMed Scopus (4265) Google Scholar, 2Huang C Wang Y Li X et al.Clinical features of patients infected with 2019 novel coronavirus in Wuhan, China.Lancet. 2020; (published online Jan 24.)https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30183-5Summary Full Text Full Text PDF Scopus (7859) Google Scholar, 3Chan JF-W Yuan S Kok K-H et al.A familial cluster of pneumonia associated with the 2019 novel coronavirus indicating person-to-person transmission: a study of a family cluster.Lancet. 2020; (published online Jan 24.)https://doi.org/10.1016/S0140-6736(20)30154-9Summary Full Text Full Text PDF Scopus (1978) Google Scholar As of Feb 3, 2020, the National Health Commission of China had reported 20 471 confirmed cases of 2019-nCoV infection in 34 provinces (autonomous regions, municipalities, and special administrative regions).4China National Health CommissionUpdate on pneumonia caused by the new coronavirus infections.http://www.nhc.gov.cn/xcs/yqtb/list_gzbd.shtmlDate accessed: February 4, 2020Google Scholar Cases have also been confirmed globally.

ACS Style

Jie Li; Jun (Justin) Li; Xiaoru Xie; Xiaomei Cai; Jian Huang; Xuemei Tian; Hong Zhu. Game consumption and the 2019 novel coronavirus. The Lancet Infectious Diseases 2020, 20, 275 -276.

AMA Style

Jie Li, Jun (Justin) Li, Xiaoru Xie, Xiaomei Cai, Jian Huang, Xuemei Tian, Hong Zhu. Game consumption and the 2019 novel coronavirus. The Lancet Infectious Diseases. 2020; 20 (3):275-276.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Jie Li; Jun (Justin) Li; Xiaoru Xie; Xiaomei Cai; Jian Huang; Xuemei Tian; Hong Zhu. 2020. "Game consumption and the 2019 novel coronavirus." The Lancet Infectious Diseases 20, no. 3: 275-276.

Journal article
Published: 19 January 2020 in Sustainability
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Mega-events, as a strategic approach taken by entrepreneurial governments, have the ability to transform the image of a city. This study explores mega-events and their relationship to urban development by developing a coupling coordination degree model and using the official statistics of Qionghai, China, from 2010 to 2015. The results of this study show that the dynamic of coordination between mega-events and urban development is a classical S-shaped growth curve. In the coupling system, this study also reveals that relevance index and the economy, as sub-indicators, make significant contributions to mega-events and urban development, respectively. Finally, the researchers concluded that the international large-scale events can significantly promote the urban development in host cities. This study reveals theoretical issues and practical implications for policy makers and event managers to achieve integrated and coordinated development between mega-events and urban development.

ACS Style

Biao He; Lianxin Zhu; Xiaomei Cai; Jun (Justin) Li; Hong Zhu. Examining the Impacts of Mega-Events on Urban Development Using Coupling Analysis: A Case Study of the Boao Forum for Asia. Sustainability 2020, 12, 730 .

AMA Style

Biao He, Lianxin Zhu, Xiaomei Cai, Jun (Justin) Li, Hong Zhu. Examining the Impacts of Mega-Events on Urban Development Using Coupling Analysis: A Case Study of the Boao Forum for Asia. Sustainability. 2020; 12 (2):730.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Biao He; Lianxin Zhu; Xiaomei Cai; Jun (Justin) Li; Hong Zhu. 2020. "Examining the Impacts of Mega-Events on Urban Development Using Coupling Analysis: A Case Study of the Boao Forum for Asia." Sustainability 12, no. 2: 730.

Journal article
Published: 01 January 2020 in 地理科学进展
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Min Wang; Mingliang Lin; Hong Zhu. Research progress and implication of the “neural turn” in human geography. 地理科学进展 2020, 39, 1182 -1195.

AMA Style

Min Wang, Mingliang Lin, Hong Zhu. Research progress and implication of the “neural turn” in human geography. 地理科学进展. 2020; 39 (7):1182-1195.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Min Wang; Mingliang Lin; Hong Zhu. 2020. "Research progress and implication of the “neural turn” in human geography." 地理科学进展 39, no. 7: 1182-1195.

Journal article
Published: 01 January 2020 in 地理科学进展
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Hui Wan; Hong Zhu. Gender, resources, and power of female cross-border marriage immigrants’ home space: A case of villages in Western Guangdong Province. 地理科学进展 2020, 39, 1909 -1922.

AMA Style

Hui Wan, Hong Zhu. Gender, resources, and power of female cross-border marriage immigrants’ home space: A case of villages in Western Guangdong Province. 地理科学进展. 2020; 39 (11):1909-1922.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Hui Wan; Hong Zhu. 2020. "Gender, resources, and power of female cross-border marriage immigrants’ home space: A case of villages in Western Guangdong Province." 地理科学进展 39, no. 11: 1909-1922.

Articles
Published: 09 October 2019 in Children's Geographies
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Children’s leisure activities in parks have attracted increasing scholarly interest in recent decades. However, relatively little attention has been given to the emotional needs and responses of children to their activities within a park’s play spaces. Moreover, what parents perceive, and how they themselves engage within children’s playing spaces, is under-studied. Drawing on fieldwork carried out in the Guangzhou Children’s Park, China, this paper aims to explore the experiences of both children and parents within this particular playing space. Supplementing participant observations with interviews and analysis of reviews on the Internet, the paper finds that children obtain a sense of family and company from their parents’ presence, and parents recall memories of their own childhood and obtain emotional recovery by visiting parks with their children. The findings suggest that play spaces are not only places where children play, but also where family life and childhood are ‘built’. The paper contributes to the existing literature by highlighting and examining the ‘child–parent’ relationship within playing spaces. By conducting a case study of a non-Western society, the paper encourages researchers to examine ‘child–parent’ relationships in a family leisure context, and to explore the everyday and emotional geographies of family life in contemporary China.

ACS Style

Chun Chen; Zhenjie Yuan; Hong Zhu. Playing, parenting and family leisure in parks: exploring emotional geographies of families in Guangzhou Children’s Park, China. Children's Geographies 2019, 18, 463 -476.

AMA Style

Chun Chen, Zhenjie Yuan, Hong Zhu. Playing, parenting and family leisure in parks: exploring emotional geographies of families in Guangzhou Children’s Park, China. Children's Geographies. 2019; 18 (4):463-476.

Chicago/Turabian Style

Chun Chen; Zhenjie Yuan; Hong Zhu. 2019. "Playing, parenting and family leisure in parks: exploring emotional geographies of families in Guangzhou Children’s Park, China." Children's Geographies 18, no. 4: 463-476.

Journal article
Published: 28 February 2019 in Progress in Geography
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敏 王; Wang Min; 荣灏 江; 竑 朱; Jiang Ronghao; Zhu Hong. 新文化地理学中的非表征与再物质化研究进展. Progress in Geography 2019, 38, 153 -163.

AMA Style

敏 王, Wang Min, 荣灏 江, 竑 朱, Jiang Ronghao, Zhu Hong. 新文化地理学中的非表征与再物质化研究进展. Progress in Geography. 2019; 38 (2):153-163.

Chicago/Turabian Style

敏 王; Wang Min; 荣灏 江; 竑 朱; Jiang Ronghao; Zhu Hong. 2019. "新文化地理学中的非表征与再物质化研究进展." Progress in Geography 38, no. 2: 153-163.