问题 问答题 论述题

试述城乡一体化的发展要点。

答案

参考答案:

1、城乡一体化不是城乡“一样化”和“平均化”,有人认为城乡一体化就是要完全消灭城乡差别,最终达到城乡的绝对融合。这种观点实质上就是将城乡一体化引向了“城乡一样化”,这在理论和实践上都是行不通的。因为城市和乡村这两种社区形态的形成和发展有着其特定的自然、社会、经济、历史等条件,只要这些方面存在着差别,城乡差别就不可能消失。同时,城乡一体化并不会导致城乡的“低层次平衡发展”和“平均主义”,它不是降低城市的地位,而是将乡村的地位加以适当提高,使其在市场体制下处于与城市同等的竞争地位。城乡一体化强调城乡间各要素的融合、贯通,但并不排斥差别,相反,通过科学、合理的规划,可以将差别转化为各自的特色,这将有利于形成城乡系统的高层次协调发展。

2、城乡一体化的动力机制:城市化和农业产业化,城乡一体化是城乡两大系统发展的一种社会、经济、生态过程,同时又是这一过程的战略目标。农村的发展,不能单靠城市化的辐射,也不能盲目推行农村工业化,造成生态环境的破坏。实现城乡协调发展必须两头启动,依靠城市化和农业产业化加以推进,这就是城乡一体化的动力所在。

3、城乡统一市场的建立是城乡一体化的核心,市场是城乡经济联系的纽带,也是缩小城乡差距、优化城乡资源配置的有利渠道。城乡经济要素的流动,是二元结构转换、城乡协调发展的关键。这就需要打破原有的各种体制束缚,以市场体制为契机,在原有城市市场和农村市场的基础上,构建城乡统一市场。这将是一个市场类型齐全、功能完备的市场体系,它既包括产品市场,又包括要素市场。通过统一的市场体系使农村的资源优势转化为商品优势,剩余劳动力转化为生产要素,并得到优化组合,从而为实现城乡全面贯通、走向一体奠定坚实的基础。

4、城乡一体化要从人的需要出发,即“以人为本”,从人本主义角度讲,人们从事的一切活动都是为其自身各方面需要服务的,城乡发展从本质上来说是人与自然在协调基础上的自我发展。因此,城乡一体化建设要求为人类创造一个良好的生产、生活和发展的环境,同时要有利于提高人的综合素质,特别是广大农村人口的素质,使其享受现代城市文明,从而利于整个社会的进步。

单项选择题

Despite decades of scientific research, no one yet knows how much damage human activity is doing to the environment. Humans are thought to be responsible for a whole host of environmental problems, ranging from global warning to ozone depletion. What is not in doubt, however, is the devastating effect humans are having on the animal and plant life of the planet.

Currently, an estimated 50,000 species become extinct every year. If this carries on, the impact on all living creatures is likely to be profound, says Dr. Nick Middleton, a geographer at Oxford University. " All species depend in some way on each other to survive. And the danger is that, if you remove one species from this very complex web of interrelationships, you have very little idea about the knock-on effects of other extinctions. "

Complicating matters is the fact that there are no obvious solutions to the problem. Unlike global warning and ozone depletion—which, if the political will was there, could be reduced by cutting gas emissions—preserving biodiversity remains an intractable problem.

The latest idea is " sustainable management " , which is seen as a practical and economical way of protecting species from extinction. This means humans should be able to use any species of animal or plant for their benefit, provided enough individuals of that species are left alive to ensure its continued existence.

For instance, instead of depending on largely ineffective laws against poaching, it gives local people a good economic reason to preserve plants and animals. In Zimbabwe, there is a sustainable management project elephants. Foreign tourists pay large sums of money to kill these animals for sport. This money is then given to the inhabitants of the area where the hunting takes place. In theory, locals will be encouraged to protect elephants, instead of poaching them—or allowing others to poach them—because of the economic benefit involved.

This sounds like a sensible strategy, but it remains to be seen whether it will work. With corruption endemic in many developing countries, some observers are skeptical that the money will actually reach the people it is intended for.Others wonder how effective the locals will be at stopping poachers.

There are also questions about whether sustainable management is practical when it comes to protecting areas of great-bio-diversity such as the world’s tropical forests. In theory, the principle should be the same as with elephants—allow logging companies to cut down a certain number of trees, but not so many as to completely destroy the forest.

Sustainable management of forests requires controls on the number of trees which are cut down, as well as investment in replacing them. But because almost all tropical forests are located in countries which desperately need revenue from logging, there are few regulations to do this. Moreover, unrestricted logging is so much more profitable that wood prices from managed forests would cost up to five times more—an increase that consumers, no matter how " green " , are unlikely to pay.

For these reasons, sustainable management of tropical forests is unlikely to become widespread in the near future. This is disheartening news. It’s estimated these forests contain anything from 50 to 90 percent of all animal and plant species on Earth. In one study of a five-square-kilometer area of rain forest in Peru, for instance, scientists counted 1,300 species of butterfly and 600 species of bird. In the entire continental United States, only 400 species of butterfly and 700 species of bird have been recorded.

Scientist Professor Norman Myers sees this situation as a gigantic " experiment we’re conducting with our planet " . " We don’t know what the outcome will be. If we make a mess of it, we can’t move to another planet…It’s a case of one planet, one experiment.

What is an effective way to preserve biodiversity()

A. Reduction of the impact of species extinction on others

B. Sustainable management of the world’s tropical forests

C. Encouragement of political will to reduce gas emission

D. No effective way has been found yet

单项选择题