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Search Results (323)

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Keywords = governmental regulations

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22 pages, 4346 KB  
Article
Agent-Based Modeling of the Greenwashing Behavior of Building Material Enterprises Under Public Opinion Influence
by Xingwei Li, Sijing Liu and Yuxi Zou
Buildings 2026, 16(9), 1791; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16091791 - 30 Apr 2026
Viewed by 91
Abstract
While most existing studies addressing greenwashing emphasize governmental regulation, they often overlook the role of public participation. This study examines how managers’ risk preferences affect enterprise decision-making under public scrutiny. In this study, an agent-based simulation model incorporating enterprises, media, and consumers is [...] Read more.
While most existing studies addressing greenwashing emphasize governmental regulation, they often overlook the role of public participation. This study examines how managers’ risk preferences affect enterprise decision-making under public scrutiny. In this study, an agent-based simulation model incorporating enterprises, media, and consumers is established on the basis of signaling theory and the wolf-sheep model. The conclusions are as follows: (1) Both positive and negative public opinion can curb greenwashing behavior in building material enterprises, but negative public opinion intensity is more effective in this context. (2) Regardless of whether building material enterprises operate in positive or negative public opinion scenarios, constraining managers’ risk preferences consistently serves as an effective internal mechanism for curbing greenwashing behavior. (3) The effectiveness of constraint managers’ risk preferences in suppressing greenwashing behavior is influenced by the external public opinion scenario, with its inhibitory effect being more pronounced under negative public opinion scenarios. This study incorporates public opinion as a key external factor and integrates dynamic managers’ risk preferences into a behavioral simulation framework. It expands the theoretical understanding of greenwashing decision-making mechanisms and offers practical implications for regulatory enforcement and enterprise governance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Construction Management, and Computers & Digitization)
25 pages, 1949 KB  
Article
Utilization of Abandoned Farmland in China: A Four-Actor Evolutionary Game Analysis of Local Government–Village Collective–Family Farm–Farmer Interactions
by Zhe Zhu, Leyi Shao, Lu Zhang, Ping Li and Bingkui Qiu
Sustainability 2026, 18(8), 3902; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18083902 - 15 Apr 2026
Viewed by 274
Abstract
Promoting the effective use of abandoned farmland has become a key policy priority for strengthening food security in China. However, disentangling the decision-making processes among diverse participating actors is a foundational prerequisite for addressing the governance challenge of abandoned farmland utilization. Building on [...] Read more.
Promoting the effective use of abandoned farmland has become a key policy priority for strengthening food security in China. However, disentangling the decision-making processes among diverse participating actors is a foundational prerequisite for addressing the governance challenge of abandoned farmland utilization. Building on this, the present study employs a four-actor evolutionary game model and sensitivity analysis of key parameters to systematically examine the interactions among four key actors—local governments, village collectives, family farms, and farmers—and to identify the corresponding evolutionarily stable strategies (ESSs) across different stages of abandoned farmland utilization. The results show that: (1) Multi-actor strategic interactions in abandoned farmland utilization exhibit a multi-stage evolutionary trajectory, in which all actors gradually shift their strategic choices under changing cost–benefit structures, regulatory intensity, and coordination conditions, leading to different evolutionary stable equilibria across governance stages. (2) The configuration in which local governments adopt loose regulation, the village collective plays an active coordinating role, family farms pursue long-term operations, and farmers choose recultivation is a key condition for achieving a Pareto-optimal equilibrium. (3) Although farmers’ production willingness and behavioral choices form the basis for the utilization of abandoned farmland, spontaneous individual action alone is insufficient to address the structural contradictions currently facing abandoned farmland utilization in China. To effectively promote the evolution of abandoned farmland governance toward a stable collaborative equilibrium and ultimately realize sustainable utilization, it is necessary to further optimize governmental administrative control models and incentive mechanisms, strengthen the organizational and coordinating functions of village collectives, and improve long-term operational support systems for family farms. This study systematically elucidates the underlying logic of China’s abandoned farmland utilization from the perspective of multi-actor behavioral decision-making, providing policy-referential insights for optimizing policy design, reducing coordination costs, and improving the efficiency of abandoned farmland utilization. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Land Use and Management, 2nd Edition)
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10 pages, 220 KB  
Article
Foucauldian Biopolitics and Homo virtualis in the Context of Anticipatory Governance, Algorithms, and Transhumanism
by Mariam Margaryan, Aghavni Harutyunyan, Silva Petrosyan, Ashot Gevorgyan and Hayarpi Sahakyan
Philosophies 2026, 11(2), 54; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies11020054 - 3 Apr 2026
Viewed by 432
Abstract
This article examines contemporary forms of algorithmic governance through a biopolitical framework grounded in Michel Foucault’s analysis of security, risk, and governmentality. Rather than treating algorithmic systems as a rupture with earlier modes of power, the article argues that they intensify a security-based [...] Read more.
This article examines contemporary forms of algorithmic governance through a biopolitical framework grounded in Michel Foucault’s analysis of security, risk, and governmentality. Rather than treating algorithmic systems as a rupture with earlier modes of power, the article argues that they intensify a security-based rationality already oriented toward probabilistic reasoning, anticipatory intervention, and the indirect regulation of conduct. Governance increasingly operates by organizing environments in advance, shaping the conditions under which action becomes possible rather than correcting behavior after the fact. Situating transhumanism within this framework, the article approaches enhancement-oriented projects not as speculative or external developments, but as an extension of biopolitical governance from the regulation of life toward its optimization and redesign. Human capacities become objects of assessment and intervention, shifting the biopolitical subject from a bearer of risk to an upgrade-eligible profile oriented toward projected futures. To conceptualize the form of subjectivity produced at the intersection of algorithmic prediction and transhumanist optimization, the article introduces the heuristic figure of Homo virtualis. This figure describes a form of subjectivity in which individuals are approached through predictive profiles rather than stable identities, and responsibility shifts toward managing expected outcomes rather than accounting for past actions. By examining these shifts, the article contributes to debates on algorithmic governance by clarifying how biopolitics, prediction, and subjectivity are reconfigured as futures become increasingly organized in advance. This article adopts a descriptive and analytical approach rather than a normative one. Full article
33 pages, 9054 KB  
Article
Bridging the Compliance Gap in Indonesia Green Building Projects Through a Systems Thinking Approach
by Dyah Puspagarini, Arfenia Nita and Irene Pluchinotta
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3243; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073243 - 26 Mar 2026
Viewed by 497
Abstract
Despite pressure to scale green building (GB) adoption in Indonesia, many government building projects underperform against their initial intended design, creating a compliance gap between the design and construction phases and reducing the GB rating and its potential benefits. This study investigated the [...] Read more.
Despite pressure to scale green building (GB) adoption in Indonesia, many government building projects underperform against their initial intended design, creating a compliance gap between the design and construction phases and reducing the GB rating and its potential benefits. This study investigated the barriers and drivers affecting the Indonesian government’s GB projects’ compliance using a systems thinking (ST) approach. A causal loop diagram (CLD) was constructed from stakeholder interviews and literature scoping, followed by semi-qualitative analysis, combining systems archetype identification, eigenvector centrality (EC), and influence mapping to propose potential leverage points as a basis for policy analysis of the current regulatory scenario. Key findings show that knowledge development, sustained stakeholder integration, project documentation readiness, and government support reinforce GB compliance, but are undermined by financial constraints. CLD analysis identified that the more sustainable factors, including regulation alignment, capacity building, and enhancing collaboration, should become a focus of interventions in the system, instead of focusing solely on the provision of funding. This study presents a novel exploration of the GB adoption problem in an Indonesian governmental context through a comprehensive and systems approach. Further research might require narrowing the system boundaries, broadening the literature and stakeholder validation, and performing quantitative modelling to test intervention scenarios to support rigorous decision-making processes. Full article
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19 pages, 874 KB  
Review
Medical Emergencies and Operational Preparedness Among Dentists: A Scoping Review
by Radu-Alexandru Iacobescu, Teofil Blaga, Raluca Dragomir, Ștefania-Crina Mihai, Petruța Moroșan and Anca Hăisan
Dent. J. 2026, 14(4), 190; https://doi.org/10.3390/dj14040190 - 24 Mar 2026
Viewed by 364
Abstract
Background: Medical emergencies occur at varying rates across the globe. Given the significant effort invested in identifying them and assessing dentists’ preparedness to deliver treatment in these life-threatening conditions, a global overview was needed. Materials and Methods: In this scoping review, [...] Read more.
Background: Medical emergencies occur at varying rates across the globe. Given the significant effort invested in identifying them and assessing dentists’ preparedness to deliver treatment in these life-threatening conditions, a global overview was needed. Materials and Methods: In this scoping review, data from PubMed, Cochrane Library, and Google Scholar databases were examined to identify all relevant studies reporting on the impact of medical emergencies on dentists and determine their operational preparedness at a national or regional level. Operational preparedness was determined in accordance with existing emergency operational preparedness frameworks across six domains: Anticipate, Assess, Prevent, Prepare, Respond, and Recover. Significant Findings: Global data show that dentists will invariably encounter medical emergencies across their careers. However, our investigation found that in countries where there is strong foundational training and regular refresher training, fewer frequent emergencies and stronger operational preparedness are reported. Governmental regulation emerged as a key facilitator of operational preparedness. Still, barriers exist, primarily limited access to medical emergency courses, shortages of office supplies for emergency drugs and materials, and the absence of medical emergency registries. Conclusions: A reassessment of the medical emergency training courses’ content appropriateness is paramount. Training interventions should also focus on raising awareness about the importance of preventive measures and office optimization through planning. Further research is needed to identify any overlooked facilitators and barriers to operational preparedness in medical emergencies. This will help identify opportunities for improvement and minimize the impact of emergencies on dental practices. Full article
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38 pages, 7486 KB  
Article
Analysis of Local-to-Remote Source Variability During the First 2020 COVID-19 Lockdown in Calabria, Southern Italy: New Insights from the Implementation of the ONRPI Methodology
by Francesco D’Amico, Daniel Gullì, Ivano Ammoscato, Teresa Lo Feudo, Maurizio Busetto and Claudia Roberta Calidonna
Pollutants 2026, 6(1), 19; https://doi.org/10.3390/pollutants6010019 - 5 Mar 2026
Viewed by 638
Abstract
Air pollution is among the key topics in environmental policies and mitigation policies. Governments and institutions worldwide are working towards a better understanding of the phenomenon and means to reduce its impact on the environment and human health. In early 2020, the COVID-19 [...] Read more.
Air pollution is among the key topics in environmental policies and mitigation policies. Governments and institutions worldwide are working towards a better understanding of the phenomenon and means to reduce its impact on the environment and human health. In early 2020, the COVID-19 pandemic forced many countries to introduce strict regulations, effectively stopping non-essential anthropic activities. Italy had a pioneering role in this regard, anticipating other countries in Europe and across the world. These exceptional circumstances caused the concentrations of pollutants in the atmosphere to reach lower levels, thus allowing researchers to evaluate a number of hypotheses concerning the contribution of anthropogenic emissions. At the Lamezia Terme (code: LMT) World Meteorological Organization—Global Atmosphere Watch (WMO/GAW) regional station in Calabria, Italy, previous research highlighted the effects of governmental restrictions on the concentrations of gases (carbon monoxide, CO; carbon dioxide, CO2; methane, CH4, nitrogen oxides, NOx) and aerosols (black carbon, BC). In this work, sulfur dioxide (SO2) and ozone (O3) are also evaluated and all parameters are subject to the analysis based on the O3/NOx ratio, the ONRPI (Ozone to Nitrogen Oxides Ratio Proximity Indicator), which has been widely used at LMT to verify the balance between local and remote sources of emission. The implementation of this method to the first 2020 COVID-19 lockdown in the country has allowed significant improvement in our understanding of the variability of all evaluated parameters at the site, assessing with greater detail weekly cycles and day–night contrasts, and the influence of local and remote sources of emission. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Emerging Pollutants)
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30 pages, 457 KB  
Article
Is Africa Ready for AI? Digital Information Privacy Awareness and AI Adoption on the Continent
by Njeri Chege
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(3), 155; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15030155 - 1 Mar 2026
Viewed by 1090
Abstract
Respect for privacy has been identified as a guiding principle for the development and use of responsible or ethical artificial intelligence (AI), but also as an endangered value in many countries, including those in Africa. Yet, on the African continent, awareness of personal [...] Read more.
Respect for privacy has been identified as a guiding principle for the development and use of responsible or ethical artificial intelligence (AI), but also as an endangered value in many countries, including those in Africa. Yet, on the African continent, awareness of personal information privacy remains in its early stages, and awareness-raising initiatives are still limited, fragmented, and non-governmental-driven. Given the current global and local enthusiasm surrounding the adoption and development of AI technologies, I examine the key interrelated factors driving the poor digital information privacy awareness and limited awareness-raising in African countries. Key factors include limited digital literacy; the widespread use and reliance on free and freemium services offered by global North digital technology multinationals; the lack of harmonized data protection legislation and regulation across the continent, which facilitates corporate neocolonialism; and the general apathy of many African governments towards privacy awareness-raising, given their own involvement in privacy-violating surveillance. Subsequently, I recommend strategic actions applicable to diverse stakeholders that could contribute towards reinforcing digital information privacy awareness, particularly within the context of the ongoing adoption and anticipated widespread use of AI technologies on the continent. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Technology, Digital Transformation and Society)
16 pages, 316 KB  
Commentary
Genomic Medicine and Individual Autonomy: Reflections on Knowledge Societies and Governmentality
by Richard H. Parrish
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(2), 234; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23020234 - 13 Feb 2026
Viewed by 641
Abstract
This paper offers a comprehensive analysis of the multifaceted implications of genomic medicine’s evolving regulatory frameworks on individual autonomy. As genomic technologies increasingly permeate healthcare and society, they fundamentally reshape the boundaries of health and disease, profoundly impacting personal identity and self-understanding. The [...] Read more.
This paper offers a comprehensive analysis of the multifaceted implications of genomic medicine’s evolving regulatory frameworks on individual autonomy. As genomic technologies increasingly permeate healthcare and society, they fundamentally reshape the boundaries of health and disease, profoundly impacting personal identity and self-understanding. The expansion of genomic surveillance and risk classification introduces new forms of scrutiny and vigilance, as individuals are redefined according to probabilistic genetic markers rather than traditional clinical symptoms. Regulatory developments facilitate compulsory interventions and challenge established notions of informed consent, as genetic risk factors in otherwise healthy individuals prompt preemptive medicalization and intervention. These changes heighten the risk of genetic discrimination and reinforce social stratifications, as access to care, insurance, and employment may become contingent upon genomic profiles. Furthermore, the commodification of genetic information raises significant concerns about privacy, ownership, and the potential misuse of personal data by commercial and governmental entities. The increasingly blurred lines between medical necessity and social control highlight constitutional and ethical dilemmas, particularly regarding the balance of public health priorities and the preservation of individual freedoms. Drawing on theoretical frameworks such as Stehr’s knowledge society and governmentality, the paper critically examines how regulatory responses both reflect and shape broader societal values, often introducing persistent uncertainty and vulnerability into the core of personal and collective identity. Ultimately, the analysis underscores the urgent need for innovative governance models that can effectively balance the promise of scientific and technological advances with the protection of personal autonomy, democratic knowledge control, and social justice in the genomic era. Lay statement: This paper explores how new rules and regulations around genetic medicine can impact people’s personal freedoms and sense of identity. It highlights concerns about privacy, discrimination, and the ways in which our understanding of health and disease is changing, calling for better protections and fairer policies as genetic technologies become more common. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Effects of Public Policies on Health)
19 pages, 571 KB  
Article
Managing Poland’s Transition to Circular Economy: Regulatory Implementation and Governance Challenges in Plastic Packaging Sector
by Agnieszka Czaplicka-Kotas and Joanna Kulczycka
Sustainability 2026, 18(4), 1762; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18041762 - 9 Feb 2026
Viewed by 765
Abstract
Plastic packaging represents a critical focus in the European Union’s transition to a circular economy owing to its resource-intensive production and substantial greenhouse gas emissions. This article examines Poland’s implementation of plastic packaging regulations within the evolving European Union regulatory framework, alongside complementary [...] Read more.
Plastic packaging represents a critical focus in the European Union’s transition to a circular economy owing to its resource-intensive production and substantial greenhouse gas emissions. This article examines Poland’s implementation of plastic packaging regulations within the evolving European Union regulatory framework, alongside complementary policy instruments. It employs legal-normative analysis of European Union and Polish legislation, documentary review of national strategic frameworks, and statistical assessment of packaging generation and recycling performance. Poland has introduced substantial legislative measures, including carrier-bag fees, charges on single-use plastic products, recycled-content mandates for polyethylene terephthalate bottles, and a deposit-return system launched in October 2025. Moreover, national voluntary agreements created by non-governmental organisations and industry stakeholders to improve collection and sorting have been active on the Polish market. Nevertheless, performance indicators reveal significant gaps between regulatory ambitions and operational outcomes. To diagnose these implementation gaps and prioritise the most critical interventions, the article applies a governance-oriented MoSCoW analysis. The article concludes that while the deposit-return system constitutes an essential intervention, achieving European Union circular economy objectives requires comprehensive policy integration encompassing upstream prevention, eco-design standards, extended producer responsibility mechanisms, and coherent strategic planning. An effective regulatory system, sound management practices, and improved information sharing among stakeholders are crucial for promoting eco-innovation and advancing circularity, reuse, and waste reduction. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
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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 - 31 Jan 2026
Viewed by 291
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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38 pages, 1281 KB  
Article
Socio-Technical Transitions: Dynamic Interactions Between Actors and Regulatory Responses in Regulatory Sandboxes
by Youngdae Kim and Keuntae Cho
Sustainability 2026, 18(3), 1345; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18031345 - 29 Jan 2026
Viewed by 520
Abstract
This study draws on socio-technical transition theory to examine how multi-actor dynamics among producers, consumers, and the media within an experimental niche—Korea’s regulatory sandbox—shape policy responsiveness and the regulatory speed of governmental responses to emerging technologies, thereby influencing socio-technical transitions. We construct a [...] Read more.
This study draws on socio-technical transition theory to examine how multi-actor dynamics among producers, consumers, and the media within an experimental niche—Korea’s regulatory sandbox—shape policy responsiveness and the regulatory speed of governmental responses to emerging technologies, thereby influencing socio-technical transitions. We construct a longitudinal dataset of 2136 sandbox approvals between 2019 and 2025 and 1374 cases in which related legal or administrative adjustments have been completed. Changes in actor couplings before and after sandbox approval are first assessed using Pearson correlation analysis, while temporal lead–lag relationships are identified via vector autoregression (VAR) and Granger causality tests. Building on these dynamic analyses, the study subsequently investigates the determinants of regulatory response speed using ordered logistic regression, incorporating government policy orientation (progressive vs. conservative) as a moderating variable. The results show, first, that the strong producer–consumer coupling observed prior to sandbox approval weakens afterwards, whereas the consumer–media linkage becomes substantially stronger. Second, the time-series analysis of technologies within the regulatory sandbox reveals a typical technology-push pattern and a self-reinforcing feedback loop. Specifically, producer activity initiates the signal sequence, preceding consumer reactions; subsequently, media coverage significantly drives consumer engagement, and the resulting increase in consumer attention, in turn, stimulates further media coverage. Third, in the ordered logit model, media activity accelerates legal and regulatory reform, whereas consumer activity acts as a delaying factor, with producer activity showing no significant direct effect. Finally, government policy orientation systematically moderates the magnitude and direction of these effects. Overall, the study proposes an actor-centered mechanism in which learning generated in the sandbox is externalized through consumer–media channels and translated into regulatory pacing. Based on these findings, we derive practical implications for firms and regulators regarding proactive media engagement, transparent use of evidence, institutionalized channels for consumer input, and robust feedback standards that support sustainable commercialization of emerging technologies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Environmental Planning and Governance for Sustainable Cities)
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15 pages, 1290 KB  
Article
Assessing the Practical Feasibility of Characterizing the Sustainability of Arable Farms by Measuring and Judging Ecosystem Services
by Jan Adriaan Reijneveld, Nico Rodenburg, Marius Heinen and Johan Bouma
Soil Syst. 2026, 10(1), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/soilsystems10010018 - 21 Jan 2026
Cited by 2 | Viewed by 432
Abstract
A recent report on the future of agriculture by the European Commission emphasizes the need for sustainable development on a farm level to be characterized by measuring ecosystem services with indicators and corresponding thresholds. This case study raises the question whether or not [...] Read more.
A recent report on the future of agriculture by the European Commission emphasizes the need for sustainable development on a farm level to be characterized by measuring ecosystem services with indicators and corresponding thresholds. This case study raises the question whether or not operational methods are currently available to allow such measurements under practical field conditions. To broaden the scope of this case study to the international policy arena, the measurement of ecosystem services was linked to selected UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The case study showed that operational methods are currently available to measure and judge ecosystem services related to the following: the production of healthy food, water quality, greenhouse gas emissions, biodiversity, and soil health. This conclusion was, however, only possible when applying innovative sensing and laboratory techniques to measure pesticide and heavy metal contents and soil microbiology. Soil health is not only important as an ecosystem service, as such, but also plays a major role in realizing the other ecosystem services. Once all ecosystem services are satisfied on a particular farm, a farmer is free to follow his own unique management practices free from top-down governmental rules and regulations that focus now on required management measures. Each farmer can pursue the goals in a way that best aligns with his own vision, context, and creativity. Full article
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32 pages, 1568 KB  
Article
Sustainable Development Agenda Pilot Zones Policy, Entrepreneurial Green Attention and Corporate Green Development
by Jiahui Wang, Weifeng Zhao, Siyuan Deng and Aobo Pi
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 418; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010418 - 1 Jan 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 429
Abstract
Sustainable development represents a fundamental pathway for advancing high-quality economic and social transformation. Taking China’s Sustainable Development Agenda Pilot Zones Policy as a quasi-natural experiment and drawing on data from A-share listed firms from 2013 to 2022, this study constructs a difference-in-differences model [...] Read more.
Sustainable development represents a fundamental pathway for advancing high-quality economic and social transformation. Taking China’s Sustainable Development Agenda Pilot Zones Policy as a quasi-natural experiment and drawing on data from A-share listed firms from 2013 to 2022, this study constructs a difference-in-differences model to systematically assess the policy’s impact on corporate green development and the underlying mechanisms. The empirical results indicate that the policy significantly improves corporate green development and that entrepreneurial green attention exerts a significant positive moderating effect. The mechanism analysis shows that improvements in the digital–real integration, the strengthening of regional green innovation capability, and increases in media attention constitute the primary channels through which the policy takes effect. The heterogeneity analysis further reveals that the policy impact is more pronounced among non-state-owned enterprises, firms in non-heavily polluting industries, regions oriented toward modern urban development, and cities with higher levels of governmental environmental concern. Additional analyses suggest that, while fostering green development, the policy is also associated with a greater tendency toward inflation in green invention patents and a decline in the quality of environmental information disclosure. These findings deepen the understanding of the micro-level effects of differentiated environmental regulation and provide empirical evidence for improving the green governance system and promoting high-quality development in China. Full article
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29 pages, 1170 KB  
Article
Religion, State, and Moral Re-Education: Imam and Murshidat in the Algerian Prison System from a Maghrebi Perspective
by Mohammed Khalid Brandalise Rhazzali and Djilali El Mestari
Religions 2026, 17(1), 46; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17010046 - 31 Dec 2025
Viewed by 917
Abstract
This article examines the configuration of carceral Islam in Algeria as an instrument of moral governance and civic re-education. Drawing on a multi-year qualitative investigation conducted within several research projects and framed by a comparative Maghrebi perspective, the study analyses how imam and [...] Read more.
This article examines the configuration of carceral Islam in Algeria as an instrument of moral governance and civic re-education. Drawing on a multi-year qualitative investigation conducted within several research projects and framed by a comparative Maghrebi perspective, the study analyses how imam and Murshidat contribute to the construction of an “administered religion,” in which spiritual authority is translated into institutional competence and a tool of moral regulation. Through the examination of institutional sources, interviews, and field observations, the research shows how faith becomes a language of discipline, how Tawba (moral and spiritual repentance) is converted into a form of moral capital, and how spirituality functions as a technology of civic conformity. The Algerian prison thus emerges as a laboratory of religious governmentality, where the spiritual dimension is incorporated into logics of security and social control. The comparison with Tunisia—and, to a lesser extent, Morocco—highlights both convergences and divergences among Maghrebi models of religious management, opening new avenues for research on the public function of religion and on the contemporary forms through which states moralize the sacred in Muslim societies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Religions and Humanities/Philosophies)
19 pages, 1766 KB  
Article
Simulating Public Ecological Product Supply Systems: An Agent-Based Model Integrating Government, Enterprises, Public and ENGO
by Yuchen Dong and Weijia You
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 253; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010253 - 26 Dec 2025
Viewed by 681
Abstract
Public ecological products constitute the most fundamental public goods supporting human well-being. Enhancing the high-quality supply of public ecological products is critical for maintaining ecological safety, ensuring the ecological regulation function, and promoting the harmonious coexistence of humans and nature. To deeply investigate [...] Read more.
Public ecological products constitute the most fundamental public goods supporting human well-being. Enhancing the high-quality supply of public ecological products is critical for maintaining ecological safety, ensuring the ecological regulation function, and promoting the harmonious coexistence of humans and nature. To deeply investigate the supply process and behavioral mechanisms of public ecological products, this study constructs a simulation model based on Agent-Based Modeling (ABM) to simulate the behavior rules and dynamic processes of four main subjects involved in the supply of public ecological products: government, enterprises, the public, and environmental non-governmental organizations (ENGOs). After calibrating the model parameters with relevant data from the water production and supply industry in Beijing, the good fit of the model output results verifies the effectiveness of the model. This study reveals the operating mechanism of multi-subject collaborative supply of public ecological products, providing a basic model for investigating the mechanism and evolution process of ecological product supply under more complex conditions, and also providing a powerful tool for the ex-ante evaluation of the implementation effect of public ecological product supply policies. Full article
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