Abstract
This article investigates how traditional methods by which citizens lodge complaints, known as petitions, against public actions are being employed and adapted to China’s rapid and sustained progress towards becoming an industrial and urban society. The article explains how China’s Ministry of Land and Resources has responded to a growing number of petitions and the apparent increased demand for public input into the development of urban and rural lands. The conclusion identifies several key areas that demonstrate how regulatory reforms enacted by the Ministry of Land and Resources regarding citizen complaints, that is, petitions, can assist in fostering greater public input in land use planning and development in China.
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