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Search Results (1,021)

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77 pages, 1669 KB  
Article
Predictive Model of Community Disaster Resilience Across Serbia: A BRIC–DROP Composite Index and Spatial Patterns
by Vladimir M. Cvetković, Dalibor Milenković, Jasmina Bašić, Tin Lukić and Renate Renner
Safety 2026, 12(3), 59; https://doi.org/10.3390/safety12030059 - 1 May 2026
Abstract
Community disaster resilience is increasingly guiding risk-reduction investments, but in many Southeast European settings, comparable subnational data remain scarce. This study assesses perceived community disaster resilience across Serbia by combining BRIC–DROP dimensions into a single index and analyzing differences across hazard types and [...] Read more.
Community disaster resilience is increasingly guiding risk-reduction investments, but in many Southeast European settings, comparable subnational data remain scarce. This study assesses perceived community disaster resilience across Serbia by combining BRIC–DROP dimensions into a single index and analyzing differences across hazard types and sociodemographic factors. A cross-sectional household survey was conducted using multistage random sampling and the “next birthday” method for respondent selection. The final sample included 1200 adults from 22 local government units across four regions: Belgrade, Vojvodina, Šumadija & Western Serbia, and Southern & Eastern Serbia. Participants evaluated preventive measures and societal resilience for ten hazard types and considered five social dimensions: social structure, social capital, social mechanisms, social equity/diversity, and social beliefs. Descriptive statistics, bivariate analyses (including Pearson correlations, t-tests, and ANOVA), and multiple linear regression identified key predictors of preventive behavior and perceived resilience. Composite scores highlighted spatial resilience differences. Overall perceptions were generally low, mostly falling below the midpoint of the scale. Furthermore, the highest ratings for implemented preventive measures were recorded for pandemics/epidemics, storms/hail, and floods, whereas the lowest were observed for environmental pollution and droughts. Perceived resilience was highest for snowstorms, storms/hail, and pandemics/epidemics, and lowest for environmental pollution and droughts. Also, respondents reported relatively strong family ties and favorable perceptions of communication and access to basic supplies, but weak institutional capacity, particularly in budget allocation, early warning and public notification, rapid decision-making, and evacuation and shelter readiness. Regression results were statistically significant but explained only a small portion of the variance. Age and public-sector employment positively predicted perceived resilience; fear, income, and, to a lesser extent, education were negatively associated. These findings highlight the structural and psychosocial factors that shape perceptions of resilience. The BRIC–DROP composite indicates generally low perceived preparedness and resilience, especially in risk communication, evacuation and shelter readiness, and financing—the key bottlenecks in strengthening local resilience. The results recommend combining institutional reform with targeted risk communication to reduce fear and build trust, especially focusing on hazard areas with the lowest confidence, such as environmental pollution and drought. Full article
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17 pages, 428 KB  
Article
Rethinking Health Financing: An Analysis of Innovative Tax Models in Sub-Saharan African Contexts
by Favourate Yelesedzani Mpofu and Sharon R. T. Chilunjika
Economies 2026, 14(5), 153; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies14050153 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 5
Abstract
Sub-Saharan African health systems face critical funding challenges due to declining foreign aid, mounting debt and increasing disease burdens. Traditional financing mechanisms have proven inadequate, necessitating the exploration of innovative domestic revenue mobilization (DRM) strategies. This paper contributes to the health economics literature [...] Read more.
Sub-Saharan African health systems face critical funding challenges due to declining foreign aid, mounting debt and increasing disease burdens. Traditional financing mechanisms have proven inadequate, necessitating the exploration of innovative domestic revenue mobilization (DRM) strategies. This paper contributes to the health economics literature by examining the use of innovative tax models as DRM strategies for sustainable health financing in Sub-Saharan Africa, using the fiscal space for health framework. This narrative review synthesizes peer-reviewed articles, policy documents, and grey literature published between 2010 and 2025. The review identifies four promising innovative models: health taxes (tobacco, alcohol, sugar-sweetened beverages), environmental levies (pollution, carbon, plastic), digital taxation (digital services taxes, mobile money taxes, Value Added Tax (VAT) on digital services) and resource extraction taxes. The evidence demonstrates significant revenue generation potential while achieving public health and environmental co-benefits. However, critical implementation challenges persist: weak administrative capacity, poor governance quality, equity concerns and extensive informality and economic diversity. The paper recommends strengthening tax administration through digital infrastructure investment and capacity building, implementing progressive tax design with targeted exemptions, enhancing transparency and linking tax revenue to health service delivery, and tailoring reforms to country-specific contexts while learning from regional experience. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Health Economics)
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29 pages, 1174 KB  
Systematic Review
Sustainability of Drone-Based Urban Air Mobility: A Systematic Review of Consensus and Controversies
by Yuchen Guo, Junming Zhao, Mingbo Wu, Xiangguo Peng, Yu Xia and Yankai Yu
Drones 2026, 10(5), 334; https://doi.org/10.3390/drones10050334 - 29 Apr 2026
Viewed by 97
Abstract
Drone-based Urban Air Mobility (UAM) shows immense potential in urban logistics and emergency response; however, evidence regarding its systemic sustainability remains fragmented. In a systematic review using the PRISMA methodology, this study analyzes 301 core articles to construct an evaluation framework spanning environmental, [...] Read more.
Drone-based Urban Air Mobility (UAM) shows immense potential in urban logistics and emergency response; however, evidence regarding its systemic sustainability remains fragmented. In a systematic review using the PRISMA methodology, this study analyzes 301 core articles to construct an evaluation framework spanning environmental, economic, social, and systemic effectiveness dimensions. Given technical similarities, electric Vertical Take-off and Landing (eVTOL) findings are integrated to anticipate operational challenges. Results highlight a clear consensus: drone delivery is time-efficient in high-sensitivity scenarios, though noise, equity, and safety remain critical bottlenecks. Meanwhile, deep controversies persist across some dimensions. Environmental benefits are highly context-dependent, contingent on operating models, battery life cycles, and clean energy proportions from a Life Cycle Assessment (LCA) perspective. Economically, a mismatch between high costs and low willingness to pay (WTP) necessitates optimized pricing strategies. Socially, public acceptance is sensitive to the balance between perceived benefits and risks. Furthermore, systemic effectiveness depends on the coupling between vertiports and ground infrastructure. Concluding that sustainable drone-based UAM is a multistakeholder systemic endeavor, we urge future research to prioritize LCA, pricing strategies, public acceptance surveys, and integrated air-ground coordination to resolve controversies and foster sustainable systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Air Mobility Solutions: UAVs for Smarter Cities)
20 pages, 719 KB  
Article
Risk Perception Among Decision-Makers in the Dominican Republic’s National System for Prevention, Mitigation, and Response to Climate Change-Related Events
by Juan Cesario Salas-Rosario, Yanelba Elisa Abreu-Rojas, Antonio Torres-Valle and Ulises Javier Jauregui-Haza
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(5), 565; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23050565 - 27 Apr 2026
Viewed by 171
Abstract
Sustainable development results from the harmonious integration of economic growth, social equity, and environmental sustainability. Building on available risk analysis capacities, this study employs risk perception as a diagnostic tool to evaluate the adequacy of decision-making regarding environmental sustainability in vulnerable human settlements [...] Read more.
Sustainable development results from the harmonious integration of economic growth, social equity, and environmental sustainability. Building on available risk analysis capacities, this study employs risk perception as a diagnostic tool to evaluate the adequacy of decision-making regarding environmental sustainability in vulnerable human settlements under a changing climate in the Dominican Republic. Using the perceived risk profile approach and a specially designed questionnaire, the research explores issues related to climate change and sustainability, targeting a population composed of decision-makers and professionals engaged in risk assessment. The findings reveal a systematic underestimation of risk across most perception variables, as well as a generally low collective risk perception. The study’s methodological framework enables the identification of proactive measures to strengthen knowledge and performance among decision-makers and stakeholders involved in advancing sustainable development in Dominican human settlements. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Environmental Sciences)
25 pages, 1709 KB  
Article
A Scalable Methodology Towards a European Noise-Barrier Database: The Case of Andalusian Highways (Spain)
by Rosa María Muñoz-Millán, Carlos Castillo, Laura Muñoz-Millán, Rafael Pérez and Antonio J. Cubero-Atienza
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4312; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094312 - 27 Apr 2026
Viewed by 180
Abstract
Environmental noise is increasingly recognized as a major environmental and public health challenge, with road traffic identified as the dominant source of acoustic pollution across Europe. In this context, noise mitigation is directly linked to sustainable development goals related to human health and [...] Read more.
Environmental noise is increasingly recognized as a major environmental and public health challenge, with road traffic identified as the dominant source of acoustic pollution across Europe. In this context, noise mitigation is directly linked to sustainable development goals related to human health and urban sustainability. Noise barriers are among the most widely implemented mitigation strategies; however, their spatial distribution and adequacy remain poorly documented, limiting their effectiveness for sustainable territorial planning. This study develops the first georeferenced database of highway noise barriers in Andalusia (Spain) and applies a reproducible, transdisciplinary geospatial workflow integrating field surveys, remote-sensing tools, and Geographic Information Systems (GIS). A total of 110 barriers were mapped, classified by material, geometry, and surrounding land use, and analyzed in relation to sensitive receptors, including dwellings, schools, and hospitals. Results show that only 1.6% of the Andalusian highway network is currently protected by noise barriers, with strong territorial disparities: over 50% of all structures are concentrated along coastal metropolitan corridors, while extensive inland areas remain unprotected. Misalignments were also detected between barrier placement and officially reported high-exposure segments, indicating limited correspondence between infrastructural deployment and planning-designated priority areas. Beyond generating a comprehensive regional dataset, the proposed methodology provides a scalable basis for national and European initiatives seeking to harmonize the mapping and assessment of noise-mitigation infrastructures. By offering an open-access, transferable framework, this work contributes to a more equitable distribution of environmental protection measures and supports policy professionals, environmental managers, and planners in advancing healthier and more sustainable urban and transport systems. Full article
21 pages, 528 KB  
Perspective
When Urban Tourism Growth Becomes a Moral Problem: An Ethical Framework for Sustainable Urban Tourism
by Angeliki N. Menegaki
Tour. Hosp. 2026, 7(5), 120; https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp7050120 - 25 Apr 2026
Viewed by 258
Abstract
Urban tourism is frequently promoted as a driver of regeneration, competitiveness, and local economic growth. However, its expansion increasingly generates overtourism, environmental degradation, social inequality, gentrification pressures, and cultural commodification in densely populated cities. Although existing tourism research has examined these challenges from [...] Read more.
Urban tourism is frequently promoted as a driver of regeneration, competitiveness, and local economic growth. However, its expansion increasingly generates overtourism, environmental degradation, social inequality, gentrification pressures, and cultural commodification in densely populated cities. Although existing tourism research has examined these challenges from managerial, planning, and sustainability perspectives, less attention has been paid to their ethical foundations. This conceptual paper addresses that gap by developing an integrated ethical framework for sustainable urban tourism through a structured, theory-driven synthesis of literature in environmental ethics, social justice theory, virtue ethics, and urban tourism studies. The paper makes three main contributions: it reframes urban tourism growth as a moral and normative issue rather than merely an economic one; it organizes the key ethical dilemmas of urban tourism as interconnected outcomes of growth-oriented development; and it links ethical principles to stakeholder responsibilities and desired governance outcomes. The proposed framework positions tourists, businesses, and policymakers as moral agents and identifies ecological integrity, social equity, and cultural protection as core criteria for evaluating tourism development. As a conceptual study, however, the framework remains theoretical and requires future empirical application and testing across different urban contexts. Full article
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25 pages, 885 KB  
Article
Financial Performance, Risk, and Market Integration of Sustainability-Oriented Equity Indices: Implications for the Sustainability Transition (2010–2025)
by Jeanne Kaspard, Cesar Kamel, Fleur Khalil and Richard Beainy
Risks 2026, 14(5), 99; https://doi.org/10.3390/risks14050099 - 24 Apr 2026
Viewed by 140
Abstract
The present study provides a high-frequency empirical assessment of the financial performance, volatility, and market integration of thematic sustainability-oriented equity funds, focusing on clean energy and environmental innovation indices. Specifically, the study compares the financial performance of representative thematic green equity funds, such [...] Read more.
The present study provides a high-frequency empirical assessment of the financial performance, volatility, and market integration of thematic sustainability-oriented equity funds, focusing on clean energy and environmental innovation indices. Specifically, the study compares the financial performance of representative thematic green equity funds, such as ICLN and QCLN, and an emerging-market benchmark (ECON) with conventional developed-market indices (SPY, QQQ, GSPC, and XLE) using daily stock prices from 2010 to 2025. The analysis employs a transparent and replicable framework based on daily logarithmic and cumulative returns and incorporates the compound annual growth rate (CAGR), Sharpe and Sortino ratios, beta estimation, correlation analysis, and maximum drawdown. The research frequency is appropriate for a thorough analysis of short-term market structures and performance. The results indicate that sustainability-oriented equity indices exhibit higher volatility, deeper drawdowns, and greater sensitivity to broad market movements than conventional benchmarks. Sustainability-focused equity indices that emphasize clean energy exhibit higher market sensitivity (betas above 1) and strong correlations with traditional equity indices. Correlation and beta estimates suggest a high degree of integration with traditional equity markets, implying limited diversification benefits within an equity-only framework. Periods of relative outperformance appear to be associated with favorable policy conditions and energy market dynamics, but are not consistently sustained over the sample period. In addition, the overall results suggest that sustainability investments generate substantial environmental and social externalities. Risk-adjusted performance measures suggest weaker historical performance over the sample period relative to conventional benchmarks. These findings should be interpreted as a comparative historical assessment rather than a structural risk model. From a policy perspective, the findings suggest that stable and credible regulatory frameworks, including long-term climate policy support and investment-enabling institutions, may be important for improving the financial resilience and long-term viability of green equity instruments. From a sustainability transition perspective, the observed volatility and market dependence of sustainability-oriented equity indices may constrain their effectiveness as standalone market-based financing mechanisms without complementary institutional and policy support. Full article
33 pages, 2364 KB  
Article
Spatial Differentiation of Climate Risks Across U.S. Metropolitan Statistical Areas: An Empirical Analysis Based on PCA and K-Means Clustering
by Boyuan Zhang and Daining Liu
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4236; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094236 - 24 Apr 2026
Viewed by 208
Abstract
In the context of intensifying climate change, understanding the spatial heterogeneity of urban climate risk is critical to effective climate governance in the United States. This study takes 251 major Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) in the United States as the analytical unit and [...] Read more.
In the context of intensifying climate change, understanding the spatial heterogeneity of urban climate risk is critical to effective climate governance in the United States. This study takes 251 major Metropolitan Statistical Areas (MSAs) in the United States as the analytical unit and establishes a multidimensional urban climate risk assessment framework covering hazard risk, exposure vulnerability, and adaptive capacity. Principal Component Analysis (PCA) is adopted for dimensionality reduction to extract key factors, and K-means clustering is used to identify the spatial differentiation characteristics of climate risk across these MSAs. The results show that climate risk in U.S. MSAs presents significant spatial disparities and can be categorized into four types: high resource and adaptive capacity, high exposure with insufficient adaptive support, complex socio-environmental vulnerability, and low current vulnerability with latent cumulative risk. Based on these findings, this study proposes targeted policy recommendations, including promoting inter-MSA coordination and adaptive capacity spillover, implementing gray–green integrated infrastructure development and enhancing social resilience in the southeastern coastal regions, strengthening equity orientation in climate governance, and advancing proactive governance of cumulative and chronic risks. These conclusions provide a reference for relevant authorities to formulate climate policies. Full article
20 pages, 837 KB  
Article
Perceived Conservation Effectiveness as a Driver of Cultural Ecosystem Service Value in a Transboundary River Corridor: Evidence from the Lower Jordan River Basin
by Ansam Bzour and István Valánszki
Land 2026, 15(5), 697; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15050697 - 22 Apr 2026
Viewed by 189
Abstract
River corridor rehabilitation is increasingly expected to deliver coupled outcomes by combining ecological recovery with measurable improvements in human well-being. Cultural ecosystem services (CESs), the non-material benefits people derive from landscapes, are central to this objective but remain difficult to operationalize in securitized [...] Read more.
River corridor rehabilitation is increasingly expected to deliver coupled outcomes by combining ecological recovery with measurable improvements in human well-being. Cultural ecosystem services (CESs), the non-material benefits people derive from landscapes, are central to this objective but remain difficult to operationalize in securitized transboundary settings, where border governance, uneven mobility, and community histories shape access to rivers and the formation of cultural meanings. This study examines whether perceived conservation effectiveness is associated with higher CES value in the Lower Jordan River Basin (LJRB) and whether this association persists after accounting for the community-group structure. Using survey data from 445 respondents across seven community groups, the perceived CES valuation was assessed through a five-point Cultural Significance rating, analyzed alongside conservation-related and contextual variables. Conservation was measured through perceived conservation impact and self-reported conservation involvement (yes/no). A staged inference design combined group comparisons and multivariable regression with adjustments for the community-group structure and contextual controls. Conservation involvement was not associated with meaningful differences in Cultural Significance. The perceived conservation impact showed a positive association in pooled and simple models but lost independent significance after adjusting for community-group structure, which accounted for much of the explanatory power. These findings indicate that CES valuation in the LJRB is structured more by community-group differences and borderland conditions than by individual conservation participation, underscoring the importance of locally encounterable outcomes and group-tailored engagement strategies in transboundary river planning. Full article
30 pages, 4257 KB  
Article
A Sustainable and Resilient Distribution System Restoration Framework Based on Intentional Islanding and Blockchain-Based P2P Insurance
by Amany El-Zonkoly
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4163; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094163 - 22 Apr 2026
Viewed by 248
Abstract
Extreme weather events have raised the frequency of power outages, posing critical challenges to the sustainability and resilience of modern power systems. In such cases, distributed energy resources (DERs) can effectively support the re-establishment of sustainable power supply for critical loads within the [...] Read more.
Extreme weather events have raised the frequency of power outages, posing critical challenges to the sustainability and resilience of modern power systems. In such cases, distributed energy resources (DERs) can effectively support the re-establishment of sustainable power supply for critical loads within the distribution network and reduce power outage losses. In this paper, a sustainable fault recovery framework based on an intentional islanding scheme is proposed to partition the distribution system in order to optimize the priority restoration of critical loads, while taking the operational constraints of the system into consideration. In addition, a blockchain-based P2P insurance mechanism is applied to mitigate the outage losses of the network’s users with a higher degree of security and transparency. By linking technical restoration decisions with financial risk-sharing mechanisms, the proposed framework improves economic sustainability and social equity among network users. For this purpose, a multi-layer, multi-objective optimization algorithm is proposed for optimal partitioning of the distribution network, management of DERs, and demand side management of flexible loads in order to minimize the outage losses and the insurance premium, while maintaining satisfactory performance of the network. To validate the feasibility of the proposed algorithm, the 45-node distribution network of Alexandria, Egypt is used. The results show that a reduction in peak load, outage losses, and operational costs are achieved, with an overall saving of 17.34%, in addition to a premium reduction of 41.3%. These results highlight the effectiveness of the proposed framework in enhancing the environmental, economic, and operational sustainability of distribution systems under outage conditions. Full article
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18 pages, 569 KB  
Systematic Review
Reconceptualizing STEAM Education as a Transformative Framework for Sustainability and Global Competence: A Systematic and Critical Review (2014–2024)
by Aitziber Sagastizabal-Sáez, Naiara Bilbao-Quintana and Javier Portillo-Berasaluce
Sustainability 2026, 18(9), 4153; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18094153 - 22 Apr 2026
Viewed by 215
Abstract
(1) Background: The global educational landscape increasingly necessitates pedagogical approaches capable of addressing complex socio-environmental challenges. While STEAM education is widely adopted, its contribution to the 2030 Agenda and Global Competence requires further theoretical consolidation. This study proposes a reconceptualization of STEAM as [...] Read more.
(1) Background: The global educational landscape increasingly necessitates pedagogical approaches capable of addressing complex socio-environmental challenges. While STEAM education is widely adopted, its contribution to the 2030 Agenda and Global Competence requires further theoretical consolidation. This study proposes a reconceptualization of STEAM as a Transformative STEAM Framework, explicitly aligned with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) 4, 5, and 10, as well as the development of Global Competence. (2) Methods: Guided by PRISMA 2020 principles for study retrieval, a search for peer-reviewed research, literature reviews, and relevant institutional documents conducted in Scopus, Web of Science, and ERIC yielded a final corpus of 32 studies (2014–2024). A multi-layered methodological design was applied, integrating a Critical Interpretive Synthesis (CIS) framework for conceptual evaluation alongside a hybrid thematic synthesis to ensure rigorous data coding. (3) Results: The findings indicate that STEAM bolsters Global Competence by fostering intercultural interaction and critical thinking, demonstrating robust alignment with quality education (SDG 4) and gender equality (SDG 5). However, significant gaps remain concerning broader structural inequalities (SDG 10) and the paucity of validated, multidimensional assessment tools for evaluating Global Competence. (4) Conclusions: This review establishes a conceptual framework that positions STEAM as a catalyst for equity and the 2030 Agenda. To realize its transformative potential, future research must explicitly address the reduction in inequalities and develop robust assessment mechanisms. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Towards Sustainable Futures: Innovations in the Education)
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24 pages, 2039 KB  
Article
Water-Related Climate Stress and Food System Risk: A Cross-Quantilogram and Quantile Spillover Approach
by Nader Naifar
Resources 2026, 15(4), 59; https://doi.org/10.3390/resources15040059 - 21 Apr 2026
Viewed by 261
Abstract
This paper investigates whether water-related climate stress predicts tail movements in food system assets and whether these spillovers vary across market regimes and investment horizons. Using daily data from January 2012 to January 2026, we examine the relationships among a water-risk proxy, agricultural [...] Read more.
This paper investigates whether water-related climate stress predicts tail movements in food system assets and whether these spillovers vary across market regimes and investment horizons. Using daily data from January 2012 to January 2026, we examine the relationships among a water-risk proxy, agricultural commodities, agribusiness, and food supply-chain equities, and a fertilizer-related proxy. The analysis combines the cross-quantilogram with quantile spillover analysis in the frequency domain, allowing us to capture directional dependence in the tails of the distribution and short- and long-run connectedness. To account for structural change, we employ data-driven break detection and identify three major regimes: a pre-disruption period, a COVID-related adjustment phase, and a broader food system stress regime from early 2022 onward. The findings indicate that water-related climate stress has its strongest predictive power in the tails, especially for agribusiness and fertilizer-related assets, while the broad agricultural commodity basket is comparatively less sensitive. Lower-tail dependence is predominantly negative and often significant, whereas upper-tail dependence is generally positive, indicating asymmetric transmission under extreme market conditions. The spillover results further show that connectedness in the water–food system is mainly short-run, with agribusiness and fertilizer channels acting as the primary conduits of transmission. From a practical perspective, these findings suggest that investors and risk managers can use water-related market signals as early warning indicators of stress in food system assets, while policymakers can strengthen food system resilience through integrated water management, input market monitoring, and supply chain adaptation measures. The findings suggest that water-related climate stress is not merely an environmental constraint but a systemic source of food system risk with implications for resilience, risk monitoring, and integrated water-agriculture governance. Full article
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11 pages, 214 KB  
Entry
Social Washing and Authentic Accountability
by Charles Tong-Lit Leung
Encyclopedia 2026, 6(4), 92; https://doi.org/10.3390/encyclopedia6040092 - 20 Apr 2026
Viewed by 496
Definition
Social washing refers to the strategic exaggeration or misrepresentation of an organisation’s commitment to social responsibility, ethical governance, or social impact without corresponding substantive action. It typically operates through selective disclosure, symbolic initiatives, or performative communication that aligns the organisation with socially desirable [...] Read more.
Social washing refers to the strategic exaggeration or misrepresentation of an organisation’s commitment to social responsibility, ethical governance, or social impact without corresponding substantive action. It typically operates through selective disclosure, symbolic initiatives, or performative communication that aligns the organisation with socially desirable values—such as equity, human rights, community development, or inclusion—while underlying practices remain unchanged, weakly evidenced, or contradictory. The concept belongs to the wider family of “washing” phenomena associated with corporate social responsibility (CSR) and environmental, social, and governance (ESG) frameworks, especially the difficult-to-measure social (“S”) pillar. By contrast, authentic accountability refers to governance and reporting practices that connect institutional commitments to verifiable social outcomes and discernible improvements in human well-being. The institutionalisation of ESG frameworks has raised expectations of corporate responsibility while also enlarging the scope for reputational manipulation. Within this setting, social washing has become relevant not only to social policy and sustainable development debates, but also to corporate governance, ESG evaluation, and cross-sector partnership practice. This entry examines how organisations construct narratives of social responsibility that do not necessarily correspond to substantive social outcomes. It also argues that such distortions matter both for welfare systems and civil-society actors and for ESG assessment, reputational signalling, and the interpretation of social performance in market settings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Collection Encyclopedia of Social Sciences)
25 pages, 871 KB  
Systematic Review
Quantifying Sustainability in Transportation Asset Management: A Review of Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) Metrics
by Loqman Ahmadi, Vassiliki Demetracopoulou and Ali Maher
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4051; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084051 - 19 Apr 2026
Viewed by 318
Abstract
Transportation asset management (TAM) has traditionally centered on technical performance and economic efficiency. In recent years, however, there has been increasing recognition of the environmental and social impacts of maintenance and rehabilitation (M&R) activities. This paper presents a systematic review of how Environmental, [...] Read more.
Transportation asset management (TAM) has traditionally centered on technical performance and economic efficiency. In recent years, however, there has been increasing recognition of the environmental and social impacts of maintenance and rehabilitation (M&R) activities. This paper presents a systematic review of how Environmental, Social, and Governance (ESG) metrics are being incorporated into TAM. Using PRISMA 2020, four major databases were searched, identifying 75 studies since 2010. Environmental metrics were the most developed, especially those measuring emissions, energy use, and material consumption. Social metrics appeared less frequently and are typically used descriptively, including indicators of income inequality, user costs, and equity-focused metrics such as the Benefit Distribution Ratio and Social Return on Investment. Governance was the least explored pillar and is generally addressed through fiscal transparency, risk management, or institutional practices rather than explicit measurable indicators. Overall, the review shows growing interest in integrating ESG into TAM, but the adoption of social and governance metrics remains limited. In particular, governance indicators are rarely operationalized as measurable variables within TAM decision-making, highlighting a critical gap in the literature. This study synthesizes ESG-related indicators used in TAM and provides a structured foundation for future research and more comprehensive sustainability-oriented decision frameworks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Transportation)
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22 pages, 298 KB  
Article
How Does Supply Chain Shareholding Affect Corporate Carbon Emission? Evidence from China
by Rongrong Chen, Jianbu Fang, Zixuan Li and Qian Wu
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 4044; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18084044 - 18 Apr 2026
Viewed by 281
Abstract
Corporate carbon reduction is essential for sustainable development, yet little is known about whether equity linkages within supply chains facilitate firms’ low-carbon transition. Using data on Chinese A-share listed firms from 2008 to 2022, this study examines the effect of supply chain shareholding, [...] Read more.
Corporate carbon reduction is essential for sustainable development, yet little is known about whether equity linkages within supply chains facilitate firms’ low-carbon transition. Using data on Chinese A-share listed firms from 2008 to 2022, this study examines the effect of supply chain shareholding, defined as equity ownership by suppliers and customers in a focal firm, on corporate carbon emission intensity. We find that supply chain shareholding significantly reduces corporate carbon emission intensity, and this result remains robust after a series of robustness and endogeneity tests. Mechanism analyses show that supply chain shareholding lowers carbon emission intensity by strengthening corporate green governance, promoting green innovation, and facilitating cleaner production. Further analyses indicate that this effect is more pronounced under stricter air quality requirements, in regions with stronger environmental regulation, and among heavily polluting industries. These findings highlight the role of supply chain governance in corporate carbon reduction and suggest that equity linkages within supply chains can support firms’ low-carbon transition. Full article
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