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Search Results (125)

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21 pages, 10177 KB  
Article
Postcolonial Resilience in Casablanca: Colonial Legacies and Climate Vulnerability
by Pelin Bolca
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8656; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198656 - 26 Sep 2025
Abstract
Casablanca, Morocco’s largest Atlantic port city, faces increasing exposure to floods, drought, and other risks that align with legacies of urban transformations carried out during the colonial period. This study examines how early-20th-century interventions—including the canalization and burial of the Oued Bouskoura, extensive [...] Read more.
Casablanca, Morocco’s largest Atlantic port city, faces increasing exposure to floods, drought, and other risks that align with legacies of urban transformations carried out during the colonial period. This study examines how early-20th-century interventions—including the canalization and burial of the Oued Bouskoura, extensive coastal reclamation, and the implementation of rigid zoning—were associated with a reconfiguration of the city’s hydrology and coincide with persistent socio-spatial inequalities. Using historical cartography, archival sources, and GIS-based overlays of colonial-era plans with contemporary hazard maps, the analysis reveals an indicative spatial correlation between today’s high-risk zones and areas transformed under the Protectorate, with the medina emerging as one of the most vulnerable districts. While previous studies have examined either colonial planning in architectural or contemporary climate risks through technical and governance lenses, this article illuminates historically conditioned relationships and long-term associations for urban resilience. In doing so, it empirically maps spatial associations and conceptually argues for reframing heritage not only as cultural memory but as a climate resource, illustrating how suppressed vernacular systems may inform adaptation strategies. This interdisciplinary approach provides a novel contribution to postcolonial city research, climate adaptation and heritage studies by proposing a historically conscious framework for resilience planning. Full article
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33 pages, 3814 KB  
Article
From AI Adoption to ESG in Industrial B2B Marketing: An Integrated Multi-Theory Model
by Raul Ionuț Riti, Laura Bacali and Claudiu Ioan Abrudan
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8595; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198595 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 27
Abstract
Artificial intelligence is transforming industrial marketing by reshaping processes, decision-making, and inter-firm relationships. However, research remains fragmented, with limited evidence on how adoption drivers create new capabilities and sustainability outcomes. This study develops and empirically validates an integrated framework that combines technology, organization, [...] Read more.
Artificial intelligence is transforming industrial marketing by reshaping processes, decision-making, and inter-firm relationships. However, research remains fragmented, with limited evidence on how adoption drivers create new capabilities and sustainability outcomes. This study develops and empirically validates an integrated framework that combines technology, organization, environment, user acceptance, resource-based perspectives, dynamic capabilities, and explainability. A convergent mixed-methods design was applied, combining survey data from industrial firms with thematic analysis of practitioner insights. The findings show that technological readiness, organizational commitment, environmental pressures, and user perceptions jointly determine adoption breadth and depth, which in turn foster marketing capabilities linked to measurable improvements. These include shorter quotation cycles, reduced energy consumption, improved forecasting accuracy, and the introduction of carbon-based pricing mechanisms. Qualitative evidence further indicates that explainability and human–machine collaboration are decisive for trust and practical use, while sustainability-oriented investments act as catalysts for long-term transformation. The study provides the first empirical integration of adoption drivers, capability building, and sustainability outcomes in industrial marketing. By demonstrating that artificial intelligence advances competitiveness and sustainability simultaneously, it positions marketing as a strategic lever in the transition toward digitally enabled and environmentally responsible industrial economies. We also provide a simplified mapping of theoretical lenses, detail B2B-specific scale adaptations, and discuss environmental trade-offs of AI use. Given the convenience/snowball design, estimates should be read as upper-bound effects for mixed-maturity populations; robustness checks (stratification and simple reweighting) confirm sign and significance. Full article
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4 pages, 6120 KB  
Proceeding Paper
When Planes Fly Better than Birds: Should AIs Think like Humans?
by Soumya Banerjee
Proceedings 2025, 126(1), 9; https://doi.org/10.3390/proceedings2025126009 - 16 Sep 2025
Viewed by 258
Abstract
As artificial intelligence (AI) systems continue to outperform humans in an increasing range of specialised tasks, a fundamental question emerges at the intersection of philosophy, cognitive science, and engineering: should we aim to build AIs that think like humans, or should we embrace [...] Read more.
As artificial intelligence (AI) systems continue to outperform humans in an increasing range of specialised tasks, a fundamental question emerges at the intersection of philosophy, cognitive science, and engineering: should we aim to build AIs that think like humans, or should we embrace non-human-like architectures that may be more efficient or powerful, even if they diverge radically from biological intelligence? This paper draws on a compelling analogy from the history of aviation: the fact that aeroplanes, while inspired by birds, do not fly like birds. Instead of flapping wings or mimicking avian anatomy, engineers developed fixed-wing aircraft governed by aerodynamic principles that enabled superior performance. This decoupling of function from the biological form invites us to ask whether intelligence, like flight, can be achieved without replicating the mechanisms of the human brain. We explore this analogy through three main lenses. First, we consider the philosophical implications: What does it mean for an entity to be intelligent if it does not share our cognitive processes? Can we meaningfully compare different forms of intelligence across radically different substrates? Second, we examine engineering trade-offs in building AIs modelled on human cognition (e.g., through neural–symbolic systems or cognitive architectures) versus those designed for performance alone (e.g., deep learning models). Finally, we explore the ethical consequences of diverging from human-like thinking in AI systems. If AIs do not think like us, how can we ensure alignment, predictability, and shared moral frameworks? By critically evaluating these questions, this paper advocates for a pragmatic and pluralistic approach to AI design: one that values human-like understanding where it is useful (e.g., for interpretability or human–AI interaction) but also recognises the potential of novel architectures unconstrained by biological precedent. Intelligence may ultimately be a broader concept than the human example suggests, and embracing this plurality may be key to building robust and beneficial AI systems. Full article
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20 pages, 306 KB  
Article
Towards Coexistence? Navigating Interpretivism and Positivism in an Early Childhood Professional Development Program
by Gabriela Arias de Sanchez and Ling Li
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(9), 1193; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15091193 - 11 Sep 2025
Viewed by 462
Abstract
Over the past 30 years, early childhood education has emerged as a critical program and policy initiative of Canadian provincial governments and jurisdictions. With the recent announcement by the Government of Canada regarding plans to create and implement a national childcare system, tensions [...] Read more.
Over the past 30 years, early childhood education has emerged as a critical program and policy initiative of Canadian provincial governments and jurisdictions. With the recent announcement by the Government of Canada regarding plans to create and implement a national childcare system, tensions have been on the rise regarding early childhood educators’ (ECEs’) professional development. Informed by socio-constructivist and socio-cultural theories, this study examines the experiences of 18 ECEs and 10 coaches while being trained to use the Pyramid Model (PM) for promoting social-emotional competence in early childhood education. The study investigates the tensions and coexistence of two distinct educational philosophical paradigms—interpretivism and positivism—within the project implementation process, particularly how these paradigms influenced ECEs’ professional development. An action research methodology was utilized, and six focus group interviews were conducted with ECEs and coaches between 2023 and 2025. Findings reveal a perceived conflict between the PM’s positivist approach and the interpretative lenses that ground the early learning framework used in the province. However, as implementation progressed, participants began merging practices from both paradigms while engaging in meaningful professional reflexive processes. This study contributes to a broader understanding of how professional learning unfolds in complex, multi-paradigmatic contexts. The study highlights the need to create professional learning spaces where ECEs can collectively become participants and agents of change. By exploring the interplay between philosophical paradigms and professional development practices, this research aims to inform future efforts in ECEs’ professional development initiatives and to shed light on the complex dynamics at play when contrasting paradigms become explicit within professional learning opportunities. Full article
15 pages, 568 KB  
Article
From Knowledge Keeper to Intelligent Collaborator: The Role Reinvention and Value Reconstruction of Librarians in the AI-Enabled Era
by Jiwei Zhang and Jiafu Liu
Publications 2025, 13(3), 43; https://doi.org/10.3390/publications13030043 - 6 Sep 2025
Viewed by 520
Abstract
AI technology is reshaping the knowledge ecosystem, bringing both challenges and opportunities to libraries. This article examines the transformation of librarians from “knowledge guardians” to “intelligent collaborators.” It discusses the professional challenges and practical dilemmas introduced by AI through the lenses of value [...] Read more.
AI technology is reshaping the knowledge ecosystem, bringing both challenges and opportunities to libraries. This article examines the transformation of librarians from “knowledge guardians” to “intelligent collaborators.” It discusses the professional challenges and practical dilemmas introduced by AI through the lenses of value reorientation and paradigm shift. The paper argues that librarians should actively adopt new technologies, engage in ongoing learning, and develop more resilient knowledge service systems, while also identifying their key roles and potential pathways for transformation within smart library frameworks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Academic Libraries in Supporting Research)
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19 pages, 1725 KB  
Article
To Care and to Produce: Community Participation and Care Economy Among Women in Mexico’s Sembrando Vida Program
by Cynthia Cruz-Carrasco, Armando Luna-Fuentes, Baldomero Hortencio Zárate-Nicolás, María Eufemia Pérez-Flores and Arcelia Toledo-López
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(9), 518; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14090518 - 27 Aug 2025
Viewed by 891
Abstract
This study, conducted in Cajón de Piedra, Santo Domingo Tehuantepec, analyzes women’s participation in Sembrando Vida (PSV), Mexico’s flagship reforestation and rural development program, through the lenses of community engagement and feminist care economy frameworks. The research employed convenience sampling and participatory workshops [...] Read more.
This study, conducted in Cajón de Piedra, Santo Domingo Tehuantepec, analyzes women’s participation in Sembrando Vida (PSV), Mexico’s flagship reforestation and rural development program, through the lenses of community engagement and feminist care economy frameworks. The research employed convenience sampling and participatory workshops with 27 participants (20 men and seven women). Using innovative mixed methods, the study maps gendered labor divisions and PSV’s impact on women’s daily lives. The results reveal that while PSV enhances women’s productive labor visibility, it simultaneously exacerbates time poverty due to unpaid care work burdens and infrastructural deficits. The program’s contribution to community resilience is tempered by its reinforcement of traditional gender roles. These findings underscore the urgent need for intersectional policy design in rural development initiatives, highlighting the importance of this research in shaping future policies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Gender Studies)
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19 pages, 772 KB  
Article
Earth-Lens Telescope for Distant Axion-like Particle Sources with Stimulated Backward Reflection
by Taiyo Nakamura and Kensuke Homma
Universe 2025, 11(9), 287; https://doi.org/10.3390/universe11090287 - 25 Aug 2025
Viewed by 343
Abstract
We propose a novel telescope concept based on Earth’s gravitational lensing effect, optimized for the detection of distant dark matter sources, particularly axion-like particles (ALPs). When a unidirectional flux of dark matter passes through Earth at sufficiently high velocity, gravitational lensing can concentrate [...] Read more.
We propose a novel telescope concept based on Earth’s gravitational lensing effect, optimized for the detection of distant dark matter sources, particularly axion-like particles (ALPs). When a unidirectional flux of dark matter passes through Earth at sufficiently high velocity, gravitational lensing can concentrate the flux at a distant focal region in space. Our method combines this lensing effect with stimulated backward reflection (SBR), arising from ALP decays that are induced by directing a coherent electromagnetic beam toward the focal point. The aim of this work is to numerically analyze the structure of the focal region and to develop a framework for estimating the sensitivity to ALP–photon coupling via this mechanism. Numerical calculations show that, assuming an average ALP velocity of 520 km/s—as suggested by the observed stellar stream S1—the focal region extends from 9×109 m to 1.4×1010 m, with peak density near 9.6×109 m. For a conservative point-like ALP source located approximately 8 kpc from the solar system, based on the S1 stream, the estimated sensitivity in the eV mass range reaches g/M=O(1022)GeV1. This concept thus opens a path toward a general-purpose, space-based ALP observatory that could, in principle, detect more distant sources—well beyond O(10)kpc—provided that ALP–photon coupling is sufficiently strong, that is, MMPlanck. Full article
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14 pages, 221 KB  
Article
Linguistic Analysis of Redemption in Khaled Hosseini’s The Kite Runner Through a Critical Discourse Approach
by Sidra Mahmood, Sareen Kaur Bhar and Shamim Ali
Humanities 2025, 14(8), 172; https://doi.org/10.3390/h14080172 - 16 Aug 2025
Viewed by 641
Abstract
Redemption, as a response to guilt and a path toward self-realization, is a fundamental theme in human narratives. The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini poignantly explores this theme through the protagonist’s moral conflict, internal struggle, and eventual journey toward atonement. While prior studies [...] Read more.
Redemption, as a response to guilt and a path toward self-realization, is a fundamental theme in human narratives. The Kite Runner by Khaled Hosseini poignantly explores this theme through the protagonist’s moral conflict, internal struggle, and eventual journey toward atonement. While prior studies have predominantly examined the novel through psychological and literary lenses, this paper adopts a linguistic perspective by applying van Leeuwen’s Social Actor Network Model within the framework of Critical Discourse Studies (CDS). It investigates how discourse constructs and negotiates guilt, moral responsibility, and redemption through social actor representation, role allocation, and inclusion/exclusion strategies across Amir’s narration, inner monologue, and dialogue. The analysis reveals that linguistic techniques such as association, passivation, and categorization play a pivotal role in shaping the protagonist’s moral transformation. By foregrounding the role of discourse in constructing ethical identity, this study offers a novel contribution to both literary linguistics and trauma narratives. It also adds to global scholarly conversations on how language mediates reconciliation and recovery in postcolonial and transnational fiction. Full article
21 pages, 1311 KB  
Article
How Exploitative Leadership Emerges: The Activating Effect of Organizational Context on Individual Traits
by Junhui Zhang, Yilin Zhang and Wei Pan
Behav. Sci. 2025, 15(8), 1093; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs15081093 - 12 Aug 2025
Viewed by 547
Abstract
Although the detrimental effects of exploitative leadership have been widely revealed, scholarly understanding of its formation mechanisms remains insufficient. Addressing this gap, the present study draws upon trait activation theory to investigate the antecedents and formation mechanisms of exploitative leadership through the dual [...] Read more.
Although the detrimental effects of exploitative leadership have been widely revealed, scholarly understanding of its formation mechanisms remains insufficient. Addressing this gap, the present study draws upon trait activation theory to investigate the antecedents and formation mechanisms of exploitative leadership through the dual lenses of personality traits and organizational contexts. Through an empirical examination of questionnaire data from 422 leader–subordinate dyads in Chinese organizations, the results of this study reveal that: three leader personality traits—self-interest, other-oriented perfectionism, and high power distance orientation—significantly and positively predict exploitative leadership behaviors; three organizational contexts—task challenge, flexible status conferral, and leader–subordinate goal misalignment—likewise serve as positive predictors of exploitative leadership behaviors; through trait activation effects, flexible status conferral significantly strengthens the positive relationships between all three personality traits and exploitative leadership, while task challenge and goal misalignment specifically amplify the positive relationships of exploitative leadership with high power distance orientation and self-interested personality, respectively. The research findings are of great value for improving the theoretical framework of exploitative leadership and guiding management practice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Organizational Behaviors)
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42 pages, 2870 KB  
Review
Tremor: Clinical Frameworks, Network Dysfunction and Therapeutics
by Emmanuel Ortega-Robles and Oscar Arias-Carrión
Brain Sci. 2025, 15(8), 799; https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci15080799 - 27 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1908
Abstract
Background: Tremor is a common but diagnostically challenging movement disorder due to its clinical heterogeneity and overlapping aetiologies. The 2018 consensus introduced a two-axis classification system that redefined tremor syndromes by distinguishing between clinical phenomenology and underlying causes, and introduced new diagnostic categories, [...] Read more.
Background: Tremor is a common but diagnostically challenging movement disorder due to its clinical heterogeneity and overlapping aetiologies. The 2018 consensus introduced a two-axis classification system that redefined tremor syndromes by distinguishing between clinical phenomenology and underlying causes, and introduced new diagnostic categories, such as essential tremor plus. Methods: This review synthesises recent advances in the epidemiology, classification, pathophysiology, and treatment of tremor syndromes, aiming to provide an integrated and clinically relevant framework that aligns with emerging diagnostic and therapeutic paradigms. Results: We discuss how electrophysiology, neuroimaging, wearable sensors, and artificial intelligence are reshaping diagnostic precision. Syndromes such as essential tremor, parkinsonian tremor, dystonic tremor, task-specific tremor, orthostatic tremor, and functional tremor are examined through syndromic, aetiological, and mechanistic lenses. The limitations of current rating scales and the promise of emerging biomarkers are critically assessed. Conclusions: As therapeutic approaches evolve toward neuromodulation and precision medicine, the need for pathophysiologically grounded diagnostic criteria becomes more urgent. Integrating network-based frameworks, digital diagnostics, and individualised treatment holds promise for advancing tremor care. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sensory and Motor Neuroscience)
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14 pages, 662 KB  
Article
Changes in Body Mass Index Among Korean Adolescents Before and After COVID-19: A Comparative Study of Annual and Regional Trends
by Seong Jun Ha
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22(7), 1136; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22071136 - 18 Jul 2025
Viewed by 499
Abstract
This study aimed to longitudinally analyze changes in body mass index (BMI) among Korean middle and high school students before and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Data were obtained from the national-level Physical Activity Promotion System (PAPS), collected between 2018 and 2024. A total [...] Read more.
This study aimed to longitudinally analyze changes in body mass index (BMI) among Korean middle and high school students before and after the COVID-19 pandemic. Data were obtained from the national-level Physical Activity Promotion System (PAPS), collected between 2018 and 2024. A total of 171,705 adolescents aged 13 to 18 were included in the analysis (86,542 males and 85,163 females), with a mean age of 15.2 years (SD = 1.68). Time-series analysis and two-way analysis of variance (ANOVA) were conducted to examine differences in BMI by year, sex, region (capital vs. non-capital), and urban–rural classification. The results indicated a significant increase in BMI during the pandemic period (2020–2022), peaking in 2022, followed by a gradual decline thereafter. Notably, male students and those living in rural or non-capital areas consistently exhibited higher BMI levels, suggesting structural disparities in access to physical activity opportunities and health resources. This study employed the Socio-Ecological Model and the Health Equity Framework as theoretical lenses to interpret BMI changes not merely as individual behavioral outcomes but as consequences shaped by environmental and policy-level determinants. The findings underscore the need for equity-based interventions in physical education and health policy to mitigate adolescent health inequalities during future public health crises. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Primary Health Care and Community Health)
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22 pages, 1210 KB  
Systematic Review
Peri-Urban Land Transformation in the Global South: Revisiting Conceptual Vectors and Theoretical Perspectives
by Shiwaye M. Tesfay, Genet Alem Gebregiorgis and Daniel G. Ayele
Land 2025, 14(7), 1483; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14071483 - 17 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1960
Abstract
Peri-urban areas in the Global South are rapidly transforming due to urban expansion, land commodification, and institutional change. Although diverse theoretical perspectives address these dynamics, existing scholarship remains fragmented. This study systematically reviews how various theoretical frameworks deepen our understanding of peri-urban land [...] Read more.
Peri-urban areas in the Global South are rapidly transforming due to urban expansion, land commodification, and institutional change. Although diverse theoretical perspectives address these dynamics, existing scholarship remains fragmented. This study systematically reviews how various theoretical frameworks deepen our understanding of peri-urban land transformation, focusing on conceptual and institutional dimensions. Following PRISMA 2020 guidelines, a systematic review was conducted on 120 studies published between 1996 and 2024, sourced from Scopus, Web of Science, ProQuest, and additional unindexed repositories. Eligible studies explicitly addressed peri-urban land issues in the Global South and applied theoretical approaches. Data extraction involved detailed coding of study characteristics, theoretical orientations, and thematic insights. Using open and selective coding, 19 thematic codes were identified. Three overarching themes emerged: (1) conceptualizing peri-urban spaces through territorial, functional, and transitional lenses; (2) institutionalization of place; and (3) theoretical interpretations of land transformation grounded in neoclassical, modernization, neo-Marxist, dependency, structuration, institutionalist, and urban political ecology frameworks. Studies were appraised for theoretical rigor, relevance, and potential conceptual bias. Limitations include the exclusion of non-English studies. Findings highlight the need for pluralistic, context-sensitive frameworks, with political ecology offering a particularly integrative analytical lens to examine global–local power dynamics and socio-natural transformations. This review was funded by the Alexander von Humboldt Foundation (Georg Forster Fellowship, grant no. 1233452). Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Contexts and Urban-Rural Interactions)
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25 pages, 4876 KB  
Article
“Metropolitan Parks” in Southern Barcelona: Key Nodes at the Intersection of Green Infrastructure and the Polycentric Urban Structure
by Joan Florit-Femenias, Carles Crosas and Aleix Saura-Vallverdú
Land 2025, 14(7), 1432; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14071432 - 8 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1172
Abstract
Contemporary urban planning faces the ongoing challenge of developing Green Infrastructure capable of providing vital ecosystem services. Within this framework, the Barcelona metropolitan area has advanced a network of parks that, while serving local neighborhoods, also aim for metropolitan relevance. This study offers [...] Read more.
Contemporary urban planning faces the ongoing challenge of developing Green Infrastructure capable of providing vital ecosystem services. Within this framework, the Barcelona metropolitan area has advanced a network of parks that, while serving local neighborhoods, also aim for metropolitan relevance. This study offers a forward-looking analysis of selected parks in the southern Llobregat River basin—an area shaped by historic villages and working-class settlements—to evaluate their contribution to both Green Infrastructure and the region’s polycentric structure. Building on previous landmark studies and multidisciplinary perspectives, the research examines eight parks through four spatial and scalar lenses, assessing their territorial role and accessibility, ecological connectivity, urban integration and permeability, and landscape design with both qualitative and quantitative data. Using a comparative framework alongside research-by-design methods tested in urban design studios, the research links analytical insights to design-based strategies. The outcome is a set of actionable guidelines aimed at enhancing local park performance, with broader implications for over 50 ‘Metropolitan Parks’ spread in more than 30 municipalities. These insights contribute to shaping a more integrated, livable, and resilient metropolitan region. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Planning and Landscape Architecture)
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21 pages, 964 KB  
Article
Innovation in Timber Processing—A Case Study on Low-Grade Resource Utilisation for High-Grade Timber Products
by Sebastian Klein, Benoit Belleville, Giorgio Marfella, Rodney Keenan and Robert L. McGavin
Forests 2025, 16(7), 1127; https://doi.org/10.3390/f16071127 - 8 Jul 2025
Viewed by 731
Abstract
Native forest timber supplies are declining, and industry needs to do more with less to meet growing demand for wood products. An Australian-based, vertically integrated timber manufacturing business is commissioning a spindleless lathe to produce engineered wood products from small logs. The literature [...] Read more.
Native forest timber supplies are declining, and industry needs to do more with less to meet growing demand for wood products. An Australian-based, vertically integrated timber manufacturing business is commissioning a spindleless lathe to produce engineered wood products from small logs. The literature on innovation in timber manufacturing was found to generally focus on technical innovation, with relatively little use of market-oriented concepts and theory. This was particularly true in the Australian context. Using a market-oriented case study approach, this research assessed innovation in the business. It aimed to inform industry-wide innovation approaches to meet market demand in the face of timber supply challenges. Interviews were conducted with key personnel at the firm. Data and outputs were produced to facilitate comparison to existing research and conceptual frameworks. The business was found to empower key staff and willingly access knowledge, information and data from outside its corporate domain. It was also found to prioritise corporate goals outside of traditional goals of profit and competitive advantage. This was shown to increase willingness to try new things at the mill and increase the chances that new approaches would succeed. Thinking outside of the corporate domain was shown to allow access to resources that the firm could not otherwise count on. It is recommended that wood processing businesses seek to emulate this element of the case study, and that academia and the broader sector examine further the potential benefits of using enterprise and market-oriented lenses to better utilise available resources and maintain progress towards corporate goals. Full article
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30 pages, 6368 KB  
Article
Operationalization of the Creative City Concept in Japan: A Comparative Review with a Special Focus on Kanazawa and Environmental Sustainability
by Baptiste Gueniffey and Kei Sakamura
Sustainability 2025, 17(13), 6127; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17136127 - 3 Jul 2025
Viewed by 1645
Abstract
The creative city concept has gained global recognition, notably through the UNESCO Creative Cities Network (UCCN). In Japan, facing declining birth rates and economic stagnation, this framework was seen as a revitalization tool to increase the urban quality. Yet, while the creative city [...] Read more.
The creative city concept has gained global recognition, notably through the UNESCO Creative Cities Network (UCCN). In Japan, facing declining birth rates and economic stagnation, this framework was seen as a revitalization tool to increase the urban quality. Yet, while the creative city concept clearly appears on the theoretical level, its operationalization usually remains unclear. Additionally, previous research considers sustainability questions through economic, social, and cultural lenses but more rarely through environmental aspects. Thus, this paper aims to explore the implementation of the creative city in Japan, unveil the specific elements composing the policies of UNESCO Creative Cities, and question how environmental sustainability is addressed in these policies. The research method includes a qualitative analysis of the membership monitoring reports (MMRs) submitted by cities to UNESCO. Conducting a field survey in a creative facility and a hearing survey with the city government, the research also focuses on Kanazawa as a case study to explore in greater depth the interaction between creative city strategies and environmental sustainability. Among the research findings, economic perspectives—through support for creative industries and the promotion of tourism—and systematic actions targeting children dominate the MMRs, while socio-environmental aspects receive less attention. Most ambitious initiatives toward environmental sustainability were implemented in rural cities. In Kanazawa, it appears the creative city policy is independent of the local environmental policies, although some opportunities exist to connect them. The field survey indeed reveals that some spontaneous initiatives toward environmental sustainability might emanate from a creative facility. Therefore, the paper provides significance in unveiling the specific content of creative city policies in Japan and in re-examining the notion of creativity to integrate environmental sustainability into the creative city agenda. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Urban and Rural Development)
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