Sign in to use this feature.

Years

Between: -

Subjects

remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline
remove_circle_outline

Journals

Article Types

Countries / Regions

Search Results (73)

Search Parameters:
Keywords = geography of modernism

Order results
Result details
Results per page
Select all
Export citation of selected articles as:
25 pages, 2664 KB  
Article
Languages on the Periphery: Historical, Geographic, and Contact Factors in the Formation of Hunan’s Linguistic Ecosystem
by Robert Marcelo Sevilla
Languages 2026, 11(6), 115; https://doi.org/10.3390/languages11060115 - 3 Jun 2026
Viewed by 429
Abstract
The region today corresponding to modern Hunan province has been a site of stable language contact for over 2500 years, with the intensification of that contact occurring in particular between the 17th and 21st centuries. Major political developments during this time led to [...] Read more.
The region today corresponding to modern Hunan province has been a site of stable language contact for over 2500 years, with the intensification of that contact occurring in particular between the 17th and 21st centuries. Major political developments during this time led to massive population movements which reshaped the demographics and linguistic ecology of Hunan. The region has considerable language and phylogenetic diversity, being home to three top-level groupings (Sino-Tibetan, Kra-Dai, and Hmong-Mien) and representing at least 17 different language varieties within a condensed area of around 211,800 km2; it is therefore the ideal setting to explore long-term language contact as mediated by degrees of relatedness. Structural diversity, in terms of morphological and phonological typology, is relatively low, owing to convergence over several thousand years. All language varieties in the province converge towards the MSEA typological profile; however, those that entered the region latest, such as varieties of Tujia, still retain features from outside the region (SOV, multisyllabic roots, etc.). In this paper the case is made that Hunan, with its geography, history of settlement, and contact between related and unrelated language families, represents a microcosm of linguistic contact situations which have taken place in other periods and regions of China. This is attributed to a combination of geographic and demographic patterns, historical patterns of settlement and ethnic conflict, and a complex sociolinguistic situation. Taken together, these lead to the formation of a unique linguistic niche where stable near-relative contact, distant-relative contact, and non-relative contact take place. The case is made that instances of near-relative contact between Xiang varieties and Mandarin (Standard and Southwestern) represent instances of koineization. This is evidenced by the formation of regional koines, such as Plastic Mandarin in Changsha, which present a degree of local prestige and show evidence of regional standard formation. Meanwhile distant- and non-relative contact between Southwestern/Standard Mandarin and Tujia and Waxiang, and Xiangxi Miao and Kam-Dong, respectively, are seen to result in extensive grammatical hybridization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Chinese Languages and Their Neighbours in Southeast Asia)
Show Figures

Figure 1

21 pages, 2997 KB  
Article
Transforming Property Tax Governance: A Spatially Adaptive Land Value Determination (SALAD) Model for Fiscal Cadastre Modernization
by Andri Hernandi, Irwan Meilano, Asep Yusup Saptari, Deni Suwardhi, Rizqi Abdulharis, Alfita Puspa Handayani, Sella Lestari Nurmaulia, Nabila Sofia Eryan Putri, Ratri Widyastuti, Putri Merdekawati and Fitri Nur Cahyani
Geographies 2026, 6(2), 56; https://doi.org/10.3390/geographies6020056 - 31 May 2026
Viewed by 292
Abstract
Property taxation serves as a critical instrument for fiscal efficiency and equitable distribution, yet implementation faces significant challenges including valuation inaccuracies, insufficient administrative capacity, and diminished public trust. Indonesia’s Land and Building Tax (PBB-P2) utilizes the Sales Value of Taxable Objects (NJOP) as [...] Read more.
Property taxation serves as a critical instrument for fiscal efficiency and equitable distribution, yet implementation faces significant challenges including valuation inaccuracies, insufficient administrative capacity, and diminished public trust. Indonesia’s Land and Building Tax (PBB-P2) utilizes the Sales Value of Taxable Objects (NJOP) as an administrative proxy for market value, which frequently deviates from actual land prices. These disparities create horizontal inequities, diminish local revenue potential, and generate taxpayer resistance, especially in decentralized regions with constrained technical resources. This research presents the Spatially Adaptive Land Value Determination (SALAD) model as a comprehensive framework for enhancing property tax governance and modernizing fiscal cadastre systems. Unlike conventional mass appraisal methods, SALAD integrates spatial zoning, assessment ratio analysis, land-use characteristics, and the Index of Developing Villages (IDM) with socio-economic indicators including purchasing power and community fiscal behavior. The model incorporates structured social validation to improve public acceptance. Field validation in Lebak Regency employed mixed-methods design with surveys of 75 respondents across 20 villages and interviews with village heads and tax officials. Results demonstrate that transparency, fairness, and visible public benefits are essential for community support. Validation indices vary significantly by IDM category (ANOVA: F = 4.23, p = 0.03 for economic; F = 3.81, p = 0.04 for institutional), confirming that the SALAD model’s adaptive mechanism is empirically grounded. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

26 pages, 2007 KB  
Article
Empire, Race, and Gender: The Ancient Origins of White Supremacy and Patriarchy
by Bernd Reiter
Genealogy 2026, 10(2), 42; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy10020042 - 2 Apr 2026
Viewed by 2161
Abstract
This article argues that racism did not originate with the modern invention of race but crystallized out of a much older imperial grammar that had already learned how to naturalize domination through embodied difference. Long before race emerged as a named category, ancient [...] Read more.
This article argues that racism did not originate with the modern invention of race but crystallized out of a much older imperial grammar that had already learned how to naturalize domination through embodied difference. Long before race emerged as a named category, ancient and medieval empires developed durable ways of converting historically produced hierarchies into features of nature, the cosmos, and divine order. Through a comparative genealogy spanning early Mesopotamian epic, Near Eastern imperial inscriptions, Egyptian visual regimes, Greek philosophy and historiography, biblical scripture, South Asian metaphysics, late antique encyclopedism, and medieval Marian devotion, the article shows how inequality was repeatedly anchored in the body, in genealogy, in geography, and in moral psychology. Across these traditions, political authority is consistently masculinized, while subordination is feminized, animalized, or rendered reproductively vulnerable. Patriarchy and racialization thus emerge as co-constitutive imperial technologies rather than as separate or sequential phenomena. Modern racism did not invent hierarchy; it rendered an ancient logic portable, inheritable, and globally scalable by fastening domination to visible human difference. By situating race within a longue durée history of empire and male domination, the article reframes contemporary debates on racism as questions of imperial continuity rather than modern deviation. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

12 pages, 218 KB  
Article
The Architecture of Harm: Rumour, Routine, and Spatial Constraint in Anna Burns’ No Bones
by Ubaid Khursheed, Rayees Ahmad Bhat and Anudeep Kaur Bedi
Humanities 2026, 15(4), 54; https://doi.org/10.3390/h15040054 - 2 Apr 2026
Viewed by 709
Abstract
Anna Burns’ No Bones has extensively documented its depiction of trauma during the Troubles; less attention has been paid to the systematic mechanisms through which pervasive psychosocial harm is quietly administered and normalised. This article moves beyond readings of individual suffering to diagnose [...] Read more.
Anna Burns’ No Bones has extensively documented its depiction of trauma during the Troubles; less attention has been paid to the systematic mechanisms through which pervasive psychosocial harm is quietly administered and normalised. This article moves beyond readings of individual suffering to diagnose a collective condition, arguing that Burns constructs a veritable architecture of harm: a meticulously designed system operating not through overt aggression alone, but through the mundane, yet powerfully insidious, interplay of social forces governing everyday life. This synthesis reveals how these forces converge to produce what Achille Mbembe terms a death-world: a state of being where populations are subjected to conditions that confer upon them the status of the living dead. Within this necropolitical landscape, the protagonist Amelia’s routines are dictated by shrinking spatial affordances, while incessant rumour functions as a policing mechanism that enforces social death long before physical death is a threat. This analysis demonstrates that harm is not an atmospheric byproduct of conflict, but the very logic of this architecture, which compels the community to participate in its own subjugation. Ultimately, by mapping this architecture, this article reframes Burns’ novel from a historical text of the Troubles into a trenchant meditation on the governance of populations under duress. It offers a vital framework for understanding how quiet harm is spatially engineered, a dynamic with profound relevance for contemporary studies of carceral geographies, algorithm-driven social control, and the politics of atmospheric violence. It posits Burns’ work as a crucial resource for theorising the invisible structures that shape and constrain modern life. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Literature in the Humanities)
18 pages, 239 KB  
Review
Exploring Sustainable Rural Materiality in Remote Areas: A Geographical Perspective of Ten Years of Research
by Angel Paniagua
Sustainability 2026, 18(4), 2033; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18042033 - 16 Feb 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 767
Abstract
The scope of this research is to contribute, through qualitative bases and case studies, to the relevance of old and new materialities in the process of rural change and restructuring in remote rural areas. The research on rural materialities can be found in [...] Read more.
The scope of this research is to contribute, through qualitative bases and case studies, to the relevance of old and new materialities in the process of rural change and restructuring in remote rural areas. The research on rural materialities can be found in cultural studies of heritage, modern geographical history and postmodern rural geography, based on post-structural and Deleuzian geographies, mainly geographies of heterogeneous associations and experimental and vibrant materiality. Geographic materialities allow multiple approaches in rural geography. A first approximation allows us to distinguish between old and new materialities. In each old and new category, it is possible to use different approaches: qualities of place, more-than-human, rural change, assemblage theory, material design, emotional geographies and cultural heritage. The sustainability-related outcomes are the rural material styles reviewed. Styles of research on old materialism are based on (1) qualities on place, (2) heritage and its effects in place, and (3) rural restructuring. The new change in the conceptualization of the material world is based on reconstructed local materialism and dissolved traditional rural communities. The styles in new rural materialities in the rural geographical field are (1) rural restructuring processes and new materialities, (2) material values and sophisticated visions of the countryside, (3) ensembles and material lives, and (4) emotional negotiations and feelings. Full article
17 pages, 1408 KB  
Review
Decoding the Microbial Diversity of Indian Fermented Foods: Integrating Ethnobiology, Multi-Omics and Functional Insights
by Priyanka Samantaray and Sudeshna Saha
Foods 2026, 15(4), 687; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15040687 - 13 Feb 2026
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 1535
Abstract
India’s diverse culinary heritage includes a wide spectrum of traditional fermented foods that harbour complex microbial communities essential for flavour development, preservation, and nutritional enhancement. These microorganisms—primarily lactic acid bacteria, yeasts, and molds—contribute functional properties that extend beyond food transformation to confer health [...] Read more.
India’s diverse culinary heritage includes a wide spectrum of traditional fermented foods that harbour complex microbial communities essential for flavour development, preservation, and nutritional enhancement. These microorganisms—primarily lactic acid bacteria, yeasts, and molds—contribute functional properties that extend beyond food transformation to confer health benefits, including probiotic potential and metabolic regulation. This review integrates classical microbiological studies with modern molecular approaches such as metagenomics, metatranscriptomics, and metabolomics to elucidate the microbial diversity of Indian fermented foods. It highlights how geography, substrates, and ethnic traditions shape region-specific microbial consortia sustained through long-standing ethno-microbiological practices. Special focus is given to the glycemic modulation achieved through microbial fermentation, wherein organic acid production and resistant starch formation lower glycemic index and improve glucose metabolism. These processes, along with enhanced nutrient bioavailability, vitamin synthesis, and immunomodulation, illustrate the broader functional potential of fermentation. The review also examines interactions between food-borne microbes and the human gut microbiota, underscoring implications for personalized nutrition. Finally, it discusses modernization and commercialization strategies and outlines future directions involving multi-omics integration, indigenous starter cultures, and microbiome-based innovations to harness India’s microbial heritage for improved health and sustainable food development. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

32 pages, 950 KB  
Review
Gammaretrovirus Infections in Humans in the Past, Present, and Future: Have We Defeated the Pathogen?
by Antoinette Cornelia van der Kuyl
Pathogens 2026, 15(1), 104; https://doi.org/10.3390/pathogens15010104 - 19 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1676
Abstract
Gammaretroviruses are ubiquitous pathogens, often associated with the induction of neoplasia, especially leukemia, lymphoma, and sarcoma, and with a propensity to target the germline. The latter trait has left extensive evidence of their infectious competence in vertebrate genomes, the human genome being no [...] Read more.
Gammaretroviruses are ubiquitous pathogens, often associated with the induction of neoplasia, especially leukemia, lymphoma, and sarcoma, and with a propensity to target the germline. The latter trait has left extensive evidence of their infectious competence in vertebrate genomes, the human genome being no exception. Despite the continuing activity of gammaretroviruses in mammals, including Old World monkeys, apes, and gibbons, humans have apparently evaded novel infections by the virus class for the past 30 million years or so. Nevertheless, from the 1970s onward, cell culture studies repeatedly discovered gammaretroviral components and/or virus replication in human samples. The last novel ‘human’ gammaretrovirus, identified in prostate cancer tissue, culminated in the XMRV frenzy of the 2000s. In the end, that discovery was shown to be due to lab contamination with a murine gammaretrovirus. Contamination is also the likely source of the earlier findings. Complementation between genes of partially defective endogenous proviruses could have been another source of the virions observed. However, the capacity of many gammaretroviruses to replicate in human cell lines, as well as the presence of diverse infectious gammaretroviral species in our animal companions, for instance in mice, cats, pigs, monkeys, chickens, and bats, does not make a transmission to humans an improbable scenario. This review will summarize evidence for, or the lack of, gammaretrovirus infections in humans in the past, present, and near future. Aspects linked to the probabilities of novel gammaretrovirus infections in humans, regarding exposure risk in connection to modern lifestyle, geography, diet, and habitat, together with genetic and immune factors, will also be part of the review, as will be the estimated consequences of such novel infections. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Viral Pathogens)
Show Figures

Figure 1

22 pages, 468 KB  
Article
Charting the “Geography of the Heart”: The Diyanet’s Civilizational Vision and Its European Frontiers
by Tuğberk Yakarlar and Efe Peker
Religions 2025, 16(12), 1572; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16121572 - 14 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1781
Abstract
Recent scholarship has studied the extensive transformation of Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet) over the past two decades as embodying a form of religious populism that mobilizes civilizational antagonisms. Based on a directed qualitative content analysis of Friday sermons, official publications, online [...] Read more.
Recent scholarship has studied the extensive transformation of Turkey’s Directorate of Religious Affairs (Diyanet) over the past two decades as embodying a form of religious populism that mobilizes civilizational antagonisms. Based on a directed qualitative content analysis of Friday sermons, official publications, online material, broadcasts, and public statements by Diyanet leaders, this article makes three contributions. First, while confirming that the Diyanet promotes the civilizational unity of the ummah and casts Turkey as the spiritual custodian of a transhistorical Islamic world, the analysis shows that anti-elitist framings characteristic of populism are barely present in its rhetoric. Second, the article provides a detailed examination of gönül coğrafyası (geography of the heart), a widely invoked yet understudied concept through which the Diyanet reimagines Ottoman-Islamic heritage as a sacred topography of civilizational belonging and responsibility. Third, it examines how Europe is situated both outside and within this imagined geography: at once a constitutive and menacing “other” marked by Islamophobia and cultural decay yet also a moral frontier inhabited by Muslim diasporas through whom Turkish Islam extends its reach. By drawing such symbolic boundaries, the Diyanet frames Islam as both religious patrimony and ethical alternative to Western modernity, portraying itself as a key actor in the re-sacralization of modern life across borders. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Europe, Religion and Secularization: Trends, Paradoxes and Dilemmas)
30 pages, 509 KB  
Article
Natural Metaphors: Expressions of Mystical Experience in John of the Cross, Etty Hillesum, and Björk
by Anderson Fabián Santos Meza
Religions 2025, 16(12), 1531; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16121531 - 4 Dec 2025
Viewed by 1648
Abstract
In the twenty-first century, academic approaches to mysticism often risk reducing the Mystery to an object of erudition and historical distance, as if mystical experience belonged solely to a pre-modern past. Yet, when one encounters the “natural metaphors” that emerge within mystical writings—images [...] Read more.
In the twenty-first century, academic approaches to mysticism often risk reducing the Mystery to an object of erudition and historical distance, as if mystical experience belonged solely to a pre-modern past. Yet, when one encounters the “natural metaphors” that emerge within mystical writings—images of rivers, gardens, fire, and wind—it becomes almost impossible to silence the invitation to perceive the sacred as still unfolding in the present. This article proposes an embodied and associative reflection that brings into conversation the poetry of John of the Cross (1542–1591), the intimate diaries of Etty Hillesum (1914–1943), and the musical and visual work of the contemporary artist Björk Guðmundsdóttir (b. 1965). Through this triadic encounter, I argue that natural metaphors are not mere literary ornaments but symbolic languages that articulate the ineffable through the elemental languages of the earth. They sustain a theology of embodiment, relationality, and transformation that traverses epochs and artistic media. The study also seeks to fracture rigid and hegemonic readings that have confined mystical texts within colonial geographies of interpretation—readings that domesticate spiritual experience through rigid doctrinal frameworks. In contrast, this essay advocates for a decolonial hermeneutics of the mystical imagination, one that recognizes how the natural, the esthetic, and the spiritual interweave in the polyphony of the world. By reading John of the Cross, Hillesum, and Björk together, I suggest that mystical experience continues to unfold today through poetry, diary, and sound—where theology becomes not only a matter of thought but of vibration, beauty, and embodied openness to the Mystery. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Mysticism and Nature)
25 pages, 1437 KB  
Review
The Irreversible March of Time: Ischemic Delay and Impact on Outcomes in ST-Segment Elevation Myocardial Infarction
by Artur Dziewierz, Barbara Zdzierak, Wojciech Wańha, Giuseppe De Luca and Tomasz Rakowski
J. Cardiovasc. Dev. Dis. 2025, 12(12), 474; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcdd12120474 - 2 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 3223
Abstract
ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) represents a time-critical medical emergency where complete coronary artery occlusion initiates progressive myocardial necrosis. The fundamental principle of modern STEMI care—“Time is Muscle”—establishes that ischemic duration directly determines infarct size and clinical outcomes. Each minute of delay correlates [...] Read more.
ST-segment elevation myocardial infarction (STEMI) represents a time-critical medical emergency where complete coronary artery occlusion initiates progressive myocardial necrosis. The fundamental principle of modern STEMI care—“Time is Muscle”—establishes that ischemic duration directly determines infarct size and clinical outcomes. Each minute of delay correlates with increased mortality, larger infarcts, and a higher risk of heart failure development. Total ischemic time encompasses both patient-mediated delays (often the largest component) and system-related delays, each influenced by distinct factors requiring targeted interventions. This comprehensive review analyzes the components of total ischemic time, quantifies the clinical consequences of delay, and evaluates evidence-based mitigation strategies. We examine the evolution from fibrinolysis to primary percutaneous coronary intervention and the resulting logistical challenges. System-level interventions—including public awareness campaigns, regionalized STEMI networks, pre-hospital ECG acquisition, and standardized hospital protocols—have dramatically reduced treatment times. However, persistent disparities based on geography, presentation timing, sex, race, and age remain problematic. Emerging technologies, particularly artificial intelligence for ECG interpretation, offer promise for further time reduction. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

29 pages, 10044 KB  
Article
Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam Performance: Kṛṣṇa Devotion, Ritual Ecology, and Colonial Transformation in South India
by Aswathy Mohan P, Muhammed Niyas Ashraf and Anna Varghese
Religions 2025, 16(12), 1503; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16121503 - 27 Nov 2025
Viewed by 1514
Abstract
This paper critically explores Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam, a Sanskrit ritual dance-theater tradition from Kerala, as a product of socio-political and religious transformations in early modern South India. Conceived in the mid-17th century by the Zamorin King Mānavēda, author of the Sanskrit text Kṛṣṇagīti, Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam was [...] Read more.
This paper critically explores Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam, a Sanskrit ritual dance-theater tradition from Kerala, as a product of socio-political and religious transformations in early modern South India. Conceived in the mid-17th century by the Zamorin King Mānavēda, author of the Sanskrit text Kṛṣṇagīti, Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam was both a devotional offering to Lord Kṛṣṇa and a strategic expression of ritual sovereignty. Rooted in Kṛṣṇa bhakti (devotion), the tradition reflects how religious performance was mobilized to assert political legitimacy, particularly amid rivalry with regional powers such as Travancore. The Guruvayur Sri Krishna Temple, situated in the Malabar region of northern Kerala and central to the performance of Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam, emerged as a vital sacred space where royal patronage, ritual authority, and caste hierarchy intersected. The performance’s exclusivity restricted to Hindu audiences within temple premises reinforced patterns of spatial control and caste-based exclusion. Institutional support codified the tradition, sustaining it across generations within a narrow sociocultural framework. With the decline of Zamorin rule and the onset of colonialism, Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam faced structural disruptions. Colonial interventions in temple administration, landholding, and religious patronage weakened its ritual foundations. Guruvayur’s transformation into a public devotional center reflected wider shifts in ritual ecology and sacred geography under colonial modernity. In both the colonial and postcolonial periods, Kṛṣṇanāṭṭam struggled to survive, nearly facing extinction before its revival under the Guruvayur temple’s custodianship. By examining Kṛṣṇa devotion, royal ambition, caste dynamics, and colonial transformation, this paper offers a critical lens on Kerala’s evolving religious and cultural landscapes. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Encounter of Colonialism and Indian Religious Traditions)
Show Figures

Figure 1

28 pages, 2113 KB  
Article
The Role of New-Quality Productivity in the Sustainable Development of the Economic–Social–Environmental System: Evidence from 67 Ethnic Counties in Sichuan Province
by Siyao Du and Jie Yang
Sustainability 2025, 17(21), 9609; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219609 - 29 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1392
Abstract
Fostering and steering New-Quality Productivity (NQP) to underwrite the sustainable development of the Economic–Social–Environmental System (ESES) in ethnic-minority regions is both an intrinsic requirement and a strategic fulcrum for advancing modernization at the sub-national level. Despite growing policy attention, county-level evidence on how [...] Read more.
Fostering and steering New-Quality Productivity (NQP) to underwrite the sustainable development of the Economic–Social–Environmental System (ESES) in ethnic-minority regions is both an intrinsic requirement and a strategic fulcrum for advancing modernization at the sub-national level. Despite growing policy attention, county-level evidence on how NQP translates into sustainability outcomes—and through which mechanisms—remains insufficient. Embedding NQP within a region-specific sustainability framework, this study first articulates the theoretical channels through which NQP can transform and sustain ethnic areas. It then exploits panel data covering 67 ethnic counties in Sichuan Province from 2005 to 2024 and applies benchmark regressions, multiple-mediator models, and spatial Durbin specifications to identify the mechanisms and impact footprints of NQP. Three core findings emerge: (1) NQP exerts a robust, positive effect on ESE sustainability that varies across geography, development stages, and sectoral structures. (2) Technological innovation, industrial upgrading, and optimized resource allocation all transmit NQP’s influence, with industrial upgrading displaying the strongest mediating power. (3) NQP generates positive spatial spillovers that extend its sustainability dividends to neighboring ethnic counties. These results sharpen the academic understanding of the NQP–sustainability nexus in ethnic contexts, expand NQP assessment frameworks, and furnish county-level policymakers with evidence to design differentiated strategies that align NQP cultivation with broader goals of regionally inclusive and sustainable development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Regional Economics, Policies and Sustainable Development)
Show Figures

Figure 1

16 pages, 1010 KB  
Systematic Review
Towards Sustainable Vertical Farming: A Systematic Review of Energy Return on Investment Efficiency and Optimization Strategies
by Abdulaziz Aborujilah
Sustainability 2025, 17(18), 8142; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188142 - 10 Sep 2025
Cited by 7 | Viewed by 7952
Abstract
Vertical farming offers one potential sustainable solution to food production in cities as populations increase and available farmland decreases. However, the large-scale adoption of vertical farms is still impeded by high energy requirements and costs. This research attempts to assess how energy optimization [...] Read more.
Vertical farming offers one potential sustainable solution to food production in cities as populations increase and available farmland decreases. However, the large-scale adoption of vertical farms is still impeded by high energy requirements and costs. This research attempts to assess how energy optimization strategies that improve the sustainability and feasibility of vertical farming systems are applied systematically. Following the PRISMA guidelines, a systematic review of 52 articles published between 2014 and early 2024 was conducted on four major academic databases: ScienceDirect, Scopus, Web of Science, and Google Scholar. These reviews revealed that some modern technologies like high-efficiency LED lights, smart HVAC control, and IoT-based smart irrigation systems provided great advancements in reducing electricity consumption. However, even with these innovations, energy savings were heavily impacted by factors such as crop variety, climate, facility layout, system design, and geography. Other critical factors like high upfront spending, limited access to qualified personnel, inconsistent reporting standards, and a lack of real-world data further impede widespread adoption of the technology. This review emphasizes the need for multidisciplinary longitudinal field studies, standardized metric definitions, strategic integration of renewable resources, and supplementary training for operators. These analyses provide a foundation which can assist policymakers, researchers, and investors in developing energy-efficient, low-cost, and eco-friendly vertical farming systems. Full article
Show Figures

Figure 1

27 pages, 1502 KB  
Review
Monitoring of Air Pollution from the Iron and Steel Industry: A Global Bibliometric Review
by Ekaterina Zolotova, Natalya Ivanova and Sezgin Ayan
Atmosphere 2025, 16(8), 992; https://doi.org/10.3390/atmos16080992 - 21 Aug 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 4275
Abstract
The iron and steel industry is one of the main industrial contributors to air pollution. The aim of our study is to analyze modern studies on air pollution by the iron and steel industry, as a result of which the geography and research [...] Read more.
The iron and steel industry is one of the main industrial contributors to air pollution. The aim of our study is to analyze modern studies on air pollution by the iron and steel industry, as a result of which the geography and research directions and the degree of development of current issues will be assessed, and the most cited articles and journals will be identified. A review of contemporary research (2018–2024) was conducted on the basis of articles with a digital object identifier (DOI) using machine learning methodologies (VOSviewer software version 1.6.20). The number of articles selected was 80. The heat map of study density clearly showed that the geographic distribution of studies was extremely uneven. A total of 65% of the studies were conducted in China, 9% in Nigeria, 6% in Russia, 3% in Poland, and 3% in Turkey. The remaining 14% of articles represent a series of single studies conducted in 11 countries. The revealed geographical imbalance between countries with developed production and the number of studies conducted in them shows a significant shortcoming in monitoring research. Most of the studies (20%) were devoted to the assessment of multicomponent emissions. A special place among them was occupied by the inventory of emissions using various methods. The next main directions in terms of the number of articles were aimed at studying the toxic metal emissions (19%), at the analysis of organic emissions (19%), at the modeling and forecasting of emissions (18%), and at particulate matter studies (15%). The main features of the articles for each direction are briefly noted. Citation analysis made it possible to compile a rating of articles of greatest scientific interest and the most authoritative journals. Citation network analysis revealed important insights into the structure of scientific communication in the monitoring of atmospheric pollution from the iron and steel industry. The results of our review will contribute to the consolidation of scientists, the identification of gaps in scientific knowledge, and the improvement of environmental policy and technological solutions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Air Pollution Control)
Show Figures

Figure 1

28 pages, 2414 KB  
Article
Spatial and Temporal Distribution Characteristics and Influencing Factors of Red Industrial Heritage in Hebei, China
by Xi Cao and Xin Liu
Sustainability 2025, 17(16), 7532; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17167532 - 20 Aug 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 2748
Abstract
Red industrial heritage is a crucial component of global socialist industrial civilization, embodying both industrial memory and revolutionary spirit. However, its preservation faces significant challenges, including insufficient policy attention, homogenized revitalization models, and a lack of systematic research. This study uses Hebei Province, [...] Read more.
Red industrial heritage is a crucial component of global socialist industrial civilization, embodying both industrial memory and revolutionary spirit. However, its preservation faces significant challenges, including insufficient policy attention, homogenized revitalization models, and a lack of systematic research. This study uses Hebei Province, a key region where modern industry and revolutionary history intersect, as a case study. By employing Geographic Information System (GIS) spatial analysis and historical geography, the research explores the spatiotemporal patterns and underlying factors that influence the distribution of red industrial heritage. The findings reveal: (1) the spatial distribution is irregular, exhibiting concentration, with high density in the central and southern parts of Hebei, while the northern and eastern areas are more dispersed; (2) The spatiotemporal evolution aligns with significant historical events; (3) The distribution pattern is shaped by multiple factors, with the dynamics of modern Chinese warfare and historical policies serving as the primary driving forces, interacting with natural geographical factors. This study enhances our comprehension of the significance of red industrial heritage and, based on its spatiotemporal variations, proposes a tiered, sustainable preservation strategy. It provides valuable insights into the preservation of socialist industrial heritage both in China and globally. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Cultural Heritage Conservation and Sustainable Development)
Show Figures

Figure 1

Back to TopTop