Rural spatial commodification serves as a vital pathway toward comprehensive rural revitalization. Its development is closely intertwined with land use transition, with each process exerting reciprocal influence on the other. Research on the coupling between these two systems has emerged as a cutting-edge interdisciplinary field bridging rural geography and land system science. Based on a systematic review of research advances in rural spatial commodification and land use transition, this paper summarizes the existing gaps in the literature and attempts to construct a coupling framework integrating rural spatial commodification and land use transition. The findings indicate that, although the academic community has amassed a substantial body of research on rural spatial commodification, land use transition, and their coupled relationship with rural transformation, several gaps persist. These encompass the absence of systematic indicator frameworks and quantitative validation methods for rural spatial commodification, insufficient exploration into the coupling mechanisms between rural spatial commodification and land use transition, and a notable scarcity of empirical studies examining land use optimization driven by rural spatial commodification. Future research on the coupling between rural spatial commodification and land use transition should follow the logical framework of “elucidating theoretical connotations, characterizing coupling relationships, analyzing coupling mechanisms, simulating coupling processes, and regulating coupling states”. It is essential to strengthen the interdisciplinary integration of rural geography and land system science, thereby providing scientific guidance for the allocation of resources in rural areas and the implementation of rural revitalization practices.
Chen et al. (Tue,) studied this question.