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Search Results (660)

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18 pages, 2150 KB  
Article
Residents’ Perceptions and Willingness to Pay for Multifunctional Ecological Compensation in Watershed Forests: Evidence from the Jinghe River Basin, the Loess Plateau
by Xiao Wang, Lixin Shu and Yanhui Wang
Forests 2026, 17(2), 189; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17020189 (registering DOI) - 31 Jan 2026
Abstract
As a critical institutional arrangement for regulating the distribution of ecosystem service benefits, the scientific setting of ecological compensation standards is particularly vital in cross-regional watershed governance. However, there is currently a lack of methods grounded in the multifunctionality of forests and residents’ [...] Read more.
As a critical institutional arrangement for regulating the distribution of ecosystem service benefits, the scientific setting of ecological compensation standards is particularly vital in cross-regional watershed governance. However, there is currently a lack of methods grounded in the multifunctionality of forests and residents’ preferences for determining compensation. Taking the Jinghe watershed as a case study, this research employed a contingent valuation questionnaire survey (n = 747 valid responses) to analyze residents’ perceptions and willingness for forest ecological compensation. The results show that (1) watershed residents generally understand the multifunctional services of forests (cognitive rate: 71.6%–96.4%), and most agree that upstream forest construction benefits downstream ecology, but 30%–40% remain unclear about specific compensation policies. (2) The average willingness to accept (WTA) compensation for upstream residents is 314.10 CNY/mu/year, while the average willingness to pay (WTP) for downstream residents is 289.59 CNY/mu/year. This translates to a compensation standard range of 4343.85 to 4711.5 CNY/ha/year, approximately twice the local afforestation cost but one-sixth of the estimated total ecosystem service value. (3) While over 60% of respondents prefer compensation via governmental funds, there is notable and growing acceptance for development-oriented mechanisms like industrial collaboration and joint park construction under fiscal constraints. (4) Regression analysis indicates that occupation, annual income, and ecological cognition positively influence willingness, whereas age and household size show negative correlations; formal education level showed no significant impact. This study provides empirical evidence and a preference-based framework for setting scientifically grounded and socially accepted multifunctional ecological compensation standards in cross-regional watersheds. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Economics, Policy, and Social Science)
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25 pages, 662 KB  
Article
Systematic Review on Academic Spin-Offs: Challenges, Impacts, and Success Factors
by Vilma dos Santos Ramos, Rafael Verão Françozo, Eliane da Silva Leandro and Valdecir Alves da Silva
Adm. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 66; https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci16020066 - 28 Jan 2026
Viewed by 107
Abstract
Academic spin-offs (ASOs) are one of the main means of relationship between universities and the market. ASOs transform scientific research results into products, services, or processes that can be commercialized, promoting the transfer of technology between the academic and industrial sectors. This study [...] Read more.
Academic spin-offs (ASOs) are one of the main means of relationship between universities and the market. ASOs transform scientific research results into products, services, or processes that can be commercialized, promoting the transfer of technology between the academic and industrial sectors. This study aims to identify institutional, organizational, and policy-related aspects and drivers influencing the use of ASOs as technology transfer mechanisms. The article systematically reviews the literature on ASOs, aiming to explore concepts, types, creation processes, barriers, and success factors for these initiatives from 2010 to 2023. The search was conducted in the Scopus database, selected according to the following criteria: article format, publication in a scientific journal, and written in English, Portuguese, or Spanish. The analysis resulted in 82 articles published in 47 journals, which revealed different types of ASOs and creation models, as well as determining factors, such as institutional support and external context, that impacted their formation and success. The study suggests that ASOs can contribute significantly to technological innovation and economic development, but they face challenges such as cultural barriers, lack of funding, and university–market integration. Full article
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21 pages, 268 KB  
Article
Comparative Benchmarking Study of Leading International and Brazilian Metro Systems
by Leonardo da Silva Ribeiro, Joyce Azevedo Caetano, Larissa Rodrigues Turini, Daduí Cordeiro Guerrieri, Marina Leite de Barros Baltar, Cintia Machado de Oliveira and Rômulo Dante Orrico Filho
Future Transp. 2026, 6(1), 28; https://doi.org/10.3390/futuretransp6010028 - 28 Jan 2026
Viewed by 103
Abstract
Metro systems are high-capacity urban rail networks designed to provide fast, reliable, and efficient transportation. This article presents a comparative benchmarking study of six leading metro systems in Brazil and six prominent international cases, aiming to identify best practices and recurring challenges based [...] Read more.
Metro systems are high-capacity urban rail networks designed to provide fast, reliable, and efficient transportation. This article presents a comparative benchmarking study of six leading metro systems in Brazil and six prominent international cases, aiming to identify best practices and recurring challenges based on key operational, planning, design, governance, and performance indicators. The Brazilian systems analyzed are located in Rio de Janeiro, São Paulo, Belo Horizonte, Fortaleza, Recife, and Salvador, while the international cases include London, Paris, Tokyo, Berlin, New York, and Madrid. The methodology combined documentary research with technical analysis of public data sources, institutional reports, and performance indicators. The results reveal significant contrasts in network scale, operational efficiency, governance models, funding mechanisms, and integration with urban planning. São Paulo’s system stands out for its network robustness, automation, and consolidated monitoring framework, while other Brazilian cities face limitations in service coverage and financial sustainability. The international cases offer valuable insights into fare integration, the use of emerging technologies, and the application of performance metrics to foster more sustainable and efficient high-capacity urban transit systems. The findings provide relevant evidence to support policymakers, transport authorities, and urban planners in improving the planning, management, and sustainability of high-capacity urban transit systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Transportation Infrastructure: Planning and Resilience)
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16 pages, 388 KB  
Article
AI for Social Responsibility: Critical Reflections on the Marketization of Education
by Praphat Sinlapakitjanon, Sumate Noklang and Peeradet Prakongpan
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(2), 68; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15020068 - 27 Jan 2026
Viewed by 102
Abstract
This study critically examines how Artificial Intelligence for Social Responsibility (AI for SR) is enacted within Thai education, using this Global South context to expose the universal dynamics of educational marketization. Drawing on Freire’s critical pedagogy and Habermas’s theory of lifeworld, the research [...] Read more.
This study critically examines how Artificial Intelligence for Social Responsibility (AI for SR) is enacted within Thai education, using this Global South context to expose the universal dynamics of educational marketization. Drawing on Freire’s critical pedagogy and Habermas’s theory of lifeworld, the research employs a qualitative design grounded in critical phenomenology. Analysis of interviews, observations, and policy documents reveals that AI for SR is driven less by ethical participation than by policy compliance, funding agendas, and portfolio-driven competition. This dynamic transform responsibility from a moral practice into symbolic capital. Students become producers of symbolic output, and educators act as image managers for institutional displays. The study concludes by proposing a critical pedagogical framework that reclaims AI for SR as a public good, emphasizing dialog and social justice to resist this commodification. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Social Stratification and Inequality)
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11 pages, 224 KB  
Article
“Somebody Is Watching, Somebody Still Loves You:” Spirituality and Religion in Mental Health and Substance Use Care for Youth of African Descent
by Ifeyinwa Mbakogu and Brad Richards
Adolescents 2026, 6(1), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents6010013 - 26 Jan 2026
Viewed by 93
Abstract
Spirituality and religion are underrecognized components of mental health and substance use (MHSU) care for youth of African descent. This study explores the dual role of spirituality and religion in influencing the help-seeking behaviors, recovery journeys, and care outcomes of youth of African [...] Read more.
Spirituality and religion are underrecognized components of mental health and substance use (MHSU) care for youth of African descent. This study explores the dual role of spirituality and religion in influencing the help-seeking behaviors, recovery journeys, and care outcomes of youth of African descent aged 18 to 25 residing in Nova Scotia, Canada. Drawing on findings from a Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) funded community-based study using mixed methods, including interviews, focus groups, and arts-based approaches, the research highlights both the supportive and ambivalent roles spirituality plays in MHSU care. Participants shared themes such as spiritual reflection as a turning point, the assurance of a higher power, the culturally responsive support of faith-informed providers, and the significance of meditation and unseen connection as healing tools. While the narratives of research participants attested to the role of spiritual and religious practices in offering a sense of belonging, hope, and culturally aligned care, they may also reinforce stigma or act as a barrier to accessing formal MHSU services. These themes were derived from qualitative analysis of in-depth interviews with 60 youth participants. Through the lens of Ubuntu and Afrocentric paradigms, this paper calls for a more holistic and culturally inclusive approach to care, one that respects or honors the spiritual and communal lives of youth of African descent. It also reinforces the importance of training MHSU care providers to recognize, respect, and integrate spirituality as a legitimate component of wellness and recovery for help-seeking youth of African descent. Full article
14 pages, 423 KB  
Article
An Environmental Scan of Services for Adolescents and Young Adults Diagnosed with Cancer Across Canadian Pediatric and Adult Tertiary Care Centres
by Nicole Rutkowski, Sara Beattie, Fiona Schulte, Chantale Thurston, April Boychuk, Marie de Guzman Wilding, Chana Korenblum and Perri R. Tutelman
Curr. Oncol. 2026, 33(2), 68; https://doi.org/10.3390/curroncol33020068 - 24 Jan 2026
Viewed by 203
Abstract
Adolescents and Young adults (AYAs: 15–39 years) diagnosed with cancer face unique medical and psychosocial challenges requiring specialized care. This study conducted an environmental scan of AYA-specific programming and services currently offered across Canadian tertiary care centres. Key informants from pediatric and adult [...] Read more.
Adolescents and Young adults (AYAs: 15–39 years) diagnosed with cancer face unique medical and psychosocial challenges requiring specialized care. This study conducted an environmental scan of AYA-specific programming and services currently offered across Canadian tertiary care centres. Key informants from pediatric and adult cancer centres in Canada reported on program logistics, AYA specialized staff and training opportunities, and collaboration between centres, funding, and specific areas of interest for AYA care such as palliative care, fertility, fatigue, and sexual health. Surveys were completed by 13/16 (81%) pediatric sites and 19/23 (83%) adult sites. Only about half of pediatric sites (n = 8/13) and adult sites (n = 9/19) who responded reported offering any AYA-specific cancer services or programming. One third of centres without programming reported to be working on developing programming. Only 6 sites reported to offer specialized AYA training. Several barriers were reported, such as the need for collaboration among institutions and improvement of oncofertility services. Significant disparities exist regarding geographic availability of services, the range of services available, and the populations served. Findings will guide researchers, health professionals, and provincial health authorities in the development of highquality and equitable services and programs for AYAs diagnosed with cancer across Canada. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Psychosocial Oncology)
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34 pages, 18502 KB  
Article
Influencing Factors of Diverse Development in Campus Community Gardens at Chinese Universities: An Empirical Analysis of Universities in Beijing
by Ye Liu, Xiayi Zhong, Yue Gao and Yang Liu
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1156; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031156 - 23 Jan 2026
Viewed by 134
Abstract
Campus community gardens are expected to leverage disciplinary resources and spatial conditions to deliver ecological, educational, and social benefits beyond those of general community gardens. In China, these gardens are primarily established under the guidance of educational authorities, leading to issues such as [...] Read more.
Campus community gardens are expected to leverage disciplinary resources and spatial conditions to deliver ecological, educational, and social benefits beyond those of general community gardens. In China, these gardens are primarily established under the guidance of educational authorities, leading to issues such as significant homogenization and a lack of diversity, which hinders the full realization of their potential. This study investigates the potential factors influencing the development of campus gardens. Focusing on university campuses in Beijing, it employs stratified sampling and a questionnaire survey (n = 1008), utilizing methods including exploratory factor analysis (EFA), multiple linear regression, and analysis of variance (ANOVA) to systematically identify the factors affecting their differentiated development. The results indicate that: (1) the willingness to participate is collectively driven by four dimensions: “planting expectation,” “funding and site selection,” “personal motivation,” and “organizational support,” with “planting expectation” being the most significant factor. (2) Students’ academic disciplines influence their perceptions of the need for organizational support and spatial resources for gardens. (3) Campus location and size moderate the demand for gardens, with students in the urban expansion belt (between the 4th and 5th Ring Roads) and those from smaller campuses showing a stronger “pro-nature compensation” tendency. Based on campus spatial scale, urban location, and the academic backgrounds of participants, the study proposes integrated “space-organization” development strategies. This research provides targeted planning strategies for campus community gardens in China, aiming to leverage institutional disciplinary strengths, respond to participant needs, and maximize the gardens’ benefits. Full article
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30 pages, 3480 KB  
Article
Portfolio Asset Allocation Strategy for US Unlisted Sector-Specific Real Estate Across Interest Rate Cycles
by Yu-Cheng Lin, Jufri Marzuki and Chyi Lin Lee
Buildings 2026, 16(2), 308; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16020308 - 11 Jan 2026
Viewed by 244
Abstract
Real estate constitutes a core segment of the global building and built environment industry, absorbing substantial volumes of international institutional investment capital. Unlisted real estate has featured prominently in the portfolios of global institutional investors. In recent years, global real estate markets have [...] Read more.
Real estate constitutes a core segment of the global building and built environment industry, absorbing substantial volumes of international institutional investment capital. Unlisted real estate has featured prominently in the portfolios of global institutional investors. In recent years, global real estate markets have been significantly impacted by rising interest rates, posing a real and significant risk to investors. In response, more tactical asset allocation strategies have been adopted. Investment fund managers and institutional investors seek to rebalance through sector selections and sectoral portfolio diversification when tactical asset allocation strategy may be insufficient in phases of heightened rate volatility. By deploying MSCI US unlisted sector-specific real estate quarterly total returns between March 1999 and June 2024, this research assesses portfolio asset allocation strategy for unlisted sector-specific real estate over both rate-easing and rate-tightening phases to investigate how the structural change shapes portfolio asset allocation strategy resulting from the rising interest rates. Overall, the findings show that unlisted sector-specific real estate played a substantial role in the US institutional mixed-asset portfolios during rate-hike phases in the period before the COVID-19 recession. The allocation to unlisted sector-specific real estate was close to the maximum 10% cap, averaging 9.5% during rate-easing phases but decreasing to 7.5% during rate-tightening phases. At a sector level, unlisted office real estate allocations were higher across constrained mixed-asset and real estate portfolios in rate-tightening phases relative to those in rate-easing phases, while portfolio asset allocations to unlisted real estate sectors were lower in rate-easing phases relative to those in rate-tightening phases. These empirical findings provide real estate investment stakeholders with practical and crucial insights into rebalancing portfolios’ tactical asset allocation strategies for unlisted sector-specific real estate responding to interest rate phases and macro-financial markets, albeit static asset allocation strategies being insufficient in phases of heightened rate volatility. The investment implications of empirical outcomes are identified and further discussed. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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16 pages, 830 KB  
Article
Stakeholder Perspectives on Implementing DiabeText: Exploring Barriers and Facilitators for a Personalized Diabetes Self-Management SMS Intervention in Spain
by Elena Gervilla-García, Patricia García-Pazo, Mireia Guillén-Solà, Federico Leguizamo, Ignacio Ricci-Cabello, María Jesús Serrano-Ripoll, Miquel Bennasar-Veny, Maria Antònia Fiol-deRoque, Escarlata Angullo-Martínez and Rocío Zamanillo-Campos
Diabetology 2026, 7(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/diabetology7010017 - 8 Jan 2026
Viewed by 274
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Mobile health (mHealth) interventions can enhance chronic disease management, but their integration into public healthcare systems remains complex. DiabeText is the first SMS-based intervention in Spain delivering personalized diabetes self-management support using electronic health record data. This study explored perceived barriers and [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Mobile health (mHealth) interventions can enhance chronic disease management, but their integration into public healthcare systems remains complex. DiabeText is the first SMS-based intervention in Spain delivering personalized diabetes self-management support using electronic health record data. This study explored perceived barriers and facilitators to the implementation of DiabeText in the Spanish public health context from the perspective of key stakeholders. Methods: A qualitative study was conducted using semi-structured interviews with 14 purposively selected stakeholders involved in digital health, diabetes care, data protection, and healthcare management across several Spanish regions. Interviews were thematically analyzed using Braun and Clarke’s approach and guided by the Implementation Research Logic Model. Results: Participants reported several barriers, including concerns regarding data protection, uncertainty about long-term sustainability, insufficient training and engagement of healthcare professionals and low digital literacy among certain patient groups. Facilitators included favorable institutional momentum for digital innovation, funding availability, perceived clinical utility and scalability of DiabeText, and growing patient familiarity with digital tools. Recommended strategies included integration into existing healthcare systems and workflows, professional training and use of familiar communication platforms. Conclusions: Effective implementation of DiabeText requires addressing regulatory, organizational, and equity-related barriers while leveraging institutional support and readiness for innovation. Early involvement of healthcare professionals, robust data governance, and investment in digital literacy are essential to ensure sustainable and equitable adoption. These findings provide actionable insights to support the integration of mHealth tools into chronic disease care in Spain and similar settings. Full article
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22 pages, 688 KB  
Article
Socio-Economic Drivers of Cultural Heritage Digitization in the EU
by Daina Kleponė, Paulius Šūmakaris, Kristina Kovaitė and Karolina Šūmakarienė
Heritage 2026, 9(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9010017 - 6 Jan 2026
Viewed by 237
Abstract
Cultural heritage digitization (CHD) has become a strategic priority in European cultural and digital policies, driving efforts to enhance accessibility, preservation, and economic engagement. As digital technologies reshape the cultural sector, CHD increasingly intersects with the digital economy, fostering new forms of value [...] Read more.
Cultural heritage digitization (CHD) has become a strategic priority in European cultural and digital policies, driving efforts to enhance accessibility, preservation, and economic engagement. As digital technologies reshape the cultural sector, CHD increasingly intersects with the digital economy, fostering new forms of value creation. Despite this, empirical research on the socioeconomic drivers of CHD remains limited, with existing studies focused mainly on conceptual discussions, expert-based assessments, or institutional case studies. This study systematically analyzes the socioeconomic drivers shaping CHD across Europe using large-scale data from ENUMERATE and Eurostat. An econometric approach combining Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) and Generalized Additive Models (GAMs) is employed to capture both linear and non-linear relationships. The findings show that CHD is shaped by a complex interplay of economic capacity, digital infrastructure, institutional strategy, and societal demand, rather than by targeted funding initiatives alone. By bridging conceptual discussions and systematic econometric analysis, the study provides a robust empirical framework for understanding the external conditions that influence CHD and offers evidence-based insights to support more targeted digital transformation strategies in the European cultural sector. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue A 360° View of Heritage Management)
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31 pages, 3358 KB  
Article
Exploring Sierra Leone’s Water Sector: A Governance and Stakeholder Analysis
by Henrietta E. M. George-Williams, Dexter V. L. Hunt and Christopher D. F. Rogers
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 491; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010491 - 3 Jan 2026
Viewed by 806
Abstract
Sierra Leone’s water sector faces a “paradox of scarcity in abundance”: despite plentiful natural water resources, access to safe, reliable, and affordable supply remains limited, particularly for vulnerable populations. This paper investigates the governance dynamics and stakeholder relationships that underpin these challenges, drawing [...] Read more.
Sierra Leone’s water sector faces a “paradox of scarcity in abundance”: despite plentiful natural water resources, access to safe, reliable, and affordable supply remains limited, particularly for vulnerable populations. This paper investigates the governance dynamics and stakeholder relationships that underpin these challenges, drawing on a mixed-methods approach combining desktop research, surveys, and 37 semi-structured interviews. Using stakeholder and social network analysis, the study identifies key actors and their roles, interests, influence, and interdependencies, while also examining systemic barriers across social, technical, economic, environmental, and political dimensions. The findings reveal a highly fragmented governance landscape, characterised by overlapping mandates, donor dependency, weak enforcement, and the marginalisation of community voices. Although recent reforms—including new regulatory institutions, donor-funded infrastructure projects, and community-based initiatives—represent progress, they remain largely piecemeal, reactive, and insufficient to address entrenched structural deficiencies. The paper concludes that Sierra Leone’s water crisis is less a problem of resource scarcity than one of governance. Achieving sustainable water security requires integrated, system-wide reforms that strengthen institutional capacity, enhance coordination, enforce accountability, and embed inclusive stakeholder participation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Water Management)
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31 pages, 707 KB  
Article
An Empirical Framework for Evaluating and Selecting Cryptocurrency Funds Using DEMATEL-ANP-VIKOR
by Mostafa Shabani, Sina Tavakoli, Hossein Ghanbari, Ronald Ravinesh Kumar and Peter Josef Stauvermann
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(1), 29; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19010029 - 2 Jan 2026
Viewed by 712
Abstract
The acceleration of financial innovation and pro-crypto regulations in the digital asset space have spurred interest in cryptocurrencies among funds, and institutional and retail investors. Like any risky assets, investment in digital assets offers opportunities in terms of returns and challenges in terms [...] Read more.
The acceleration of financial innovation and pro-crypto regulations in the digital asset space have spurred interest in cryptocurrencies among funds, and institutional and retail investors. Like any risky assets, investment in digital assets offers opportunities in terms of returns and challenges in terms of risk. However, unlike traditional assets, digital assets like cryptocurrencies are highly volatile. Accordingly, applying conventional single-criterion financial metrics for portfolio construction may not be sufficient as the method falls short in capturing the complex, multidimensional risk-return dynamics of innovative financial assets like cryptocurrencies. To address this gap, this study introduces a novel, integrated hybrid Multi-Criteria Decision-Making (MCDM) framework that provides a structured, transparent, and robust approach to cryptocurrency fund selection. The framework seamlessly integrates three well-established operations research methodologies: the Decision-Making Trial and Evaluation Laboratory (DEMATEL), the Analytic Network Process (ANP), and the Vlse Kriterijumsk Optimizacija I Kompromisno Resenje (VIKOR) algorithm. DEMATEL is utilized to map and analyze the intricate causal interdependencies among a comprehensive set of evaluation criteria, categorizing them into foundational “cause” factors and resultant “effect” factors. This causal structure informs the ANP model, which computes precise criterion weights while accounting for complex feedback and dependency relationships. Subsequently, the VIKOR algorithm is invoked to use these weights to rank cryptocurrency fund alternatives, delivering a compromise between optimizing group utility and minimizing individual regret. To illustrate the application and efficacy of the proposed method, a diverse set of 20 cryptocurrency funds is analyzed. From the analysis, it is shown that foundational criteria, such as “Fee (%)” and “Annualized Standard Deviation,” are the primary causal drivers of financial performance outcomes of funds. This proposed framework supports strategic capital allocation in a rapidly evolving domains of digital finance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Financial Technology and Innovation)
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20 pages, 403 KB  
Article
Therapy Farms as Social Innovations Shaping Social Transformations in Rural Areas: Case Study Analysis
by Vitalija Simonaitytė and Erika Ribašauskienė
Societies 2026, 16(1), 13; https://doi.org/10.3390/soc16010013 - 1 Jan 2026
Viewed by 319
Abstract
Therapy farms are increasingly recognized as social innovations that respond to exclusion, mental health challenges, and youth disconnection, particularly in rural areas. While often praised for their inclusive and rehabilitative potential, their broader impact on structural social transformation remains under-examined. This study explores [...] Read more.
Therapy farms are increasingly recognized as social innovations that respond to exclusion, mental health challenges, and youth disconnection, particularly in rural areas. While often praised for their inclusive and rehabilitative potential, their broader impact on structural social transformation remains under-examined. This study explores the House of Educational Experiences, a therapeutic farm in rural Lithuania, to critically assess how such initiatives function as both agents of inclusion and stabilizers of existing socio-economic arrangements. Drawing on a qualitative case study approach, the research analyses in-depth interview data through the lens of the social innovation cycle, focusing on novelty, process, heterogeneity, impact, scalability, and transformative potential. Our findings reveal that the therapeutic farm generates significant individual and community benefits, particularly in psychosocial well-being, social skills, and pathways back into education and employment. However, the initiative also operates within institutional constraints, relying on project-based funding and reproducing aspects of conventional care systems. As such, its transformative capacity appears limited by structural dependencies and policy fragmentation. The study concludes that therapy farms represent an ambivalent form of social innovation: capable of creating inclusive, localized change, but often constrained in their ability to catalyze systemic transformation. Policy recommendations emphasize the need for long-term funding, institutional integration, and cross-sector collaboration. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Building Healthy Communities)
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28 pages, 2220 KB  
Article
Impact of Forest Ecological Compensation Policy on Farmers’ Livelihood: A Case Study of Wuyi Mountain National Park
by Chuyuan Pan, Hongbin Huang, Xiaoxia Sun and Shipeng Su
Forests 2026, 17(1), 53; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17010053 - 30 Dec 2025
Viewed by 227
Abstract
Forest ecological compensation policies (FECPs) are a key institutional arrangement for balancing ecological conservation and farmers’ development needs in national parks. Existing research has often treated such policies as a homogeneous whole, failing to clearly reveal the mechanisms through which different policy types [...] Read more.
Forest ecological compensation policies (FECPs) are a key institutional arrangement for balancing ecological conservation and farmers’ development needs in national parks. Existing research has often treated such policies as a homogeneous whole, failing to clearly reveal the mechanisms through which different policy types affect farmers’ livelihoods, while also paying insufficient attention to complex property-rights settings. This study takes Wuyi Mountain National Park—a typical representative of collective forest regions in southern China—as a case study. Based on 239 micro-survey datasets from farming households and employing the mprobit model and moderating effect models, it investigates the influence, mechanisms, and heterogeneity of farmers’ livelihood capital in terms of their livelihood strategy choices under the moderating roles of “blood-transfusion” and “blood-making” FECPs. The results show the following: (1) Among the sample farmers, livelihood strategies are distributed as follows: pure agricultural type (31.8%), out-migration for work type (20.5%), and commercial operation type (47.7%). (2) Farmers’ livelihood capital has a significant impact on their livelihood strategy choice, with different dimensions of capital playing distinct roles. (3) FECPs follow differentiated moderating pathways. “Blood-transfusion” policies emphasize compensation and buffering functions, reducing farmers’ livelihood transition pressure through direct cash transfers; “blood-making” policies reflect empowerment and restructuring characteristics, activating physical assets and reshaping the role of social capital through productive investment. Together, they constitute a complementary system of protective security and transformative empowerment. Accordingly, this study proposes policy insights such as building a targeted ecological compensation system that is categorized, dynamically linked, and precise; innovating compensation fund allocation mechanisms that integrate collective coordination with household-level benefits; optimizing policy design oriented toward enhancing productive capital; and establishing robust monitoring, evaluation, and adaptive management mechanisms for dynamic FECPs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Economics, Policy, and Social Science)
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20 pages, 1937 KB  
Article
Rethinking Urbanicity: Conceptualizing Neighborhood Effects on Women’s Mental Health in Kampala’s Urban Slums
by Monica H. Swahn, Peter Kalulu, Hakimu Sseviiri, Josephine Namuyiga, Jane Palmier and Revocatus Twinomuhangi
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(1), 41; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23010041 - 28 Dec 2025
Viewed by 582
Abstract
Urbanicity is a recognized determinant of mental health, yet conventional measures such as population density or the rural–urban divide often fail to capture the complex realities of informal settlements in low- and middle-income countries. This paper conceptualizes neighborhood effects through the lived experiences [...] Read more.
Urbanicity is a recognized determinant of mental health, yet conventional measures such as population density or the rural–urban divide often fail to capture the complex realities of informal settlements in low- and middle-income countries. This paper conceptualizes neighborhood effects through the lived experiences of young women in Kampala, Uganda, drawing on participatory research from the NIH-funded TOPOWA study. Using community mapping and Photovoice, participants identified neighborhood features that shape wellbeing, including sanitation facilities, drainage systems, alcohol outlets, health centers, schools, boda boda stages (motorcycle taxis), lodges, religious institutions, water sources, markets, and recreational spaces. These methods revealed both stressors—poor waste management, flooding, violence, gendered harassment, crime, and alcohol-related harms—and protective resources, including education, places of worship, health centers, social networks, identity, and sports activities. We argue that urbanicity in slum contexts should be understood as a multidimensional construct encompassing deprivation, fragmentation, exclusion, and resilience. This reconceptualization advances conceptual clarity, strengthens the validity of mental health research in low-resource settings, and informs interventions that simultaneously address structural risks and promote community assets. The case of Kampala demonstrates how participatory evidence can reshape the understanding of neighborhood effects with implications, for global mental health research and practice. Full article
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