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14 pages, 778 KB  
Article
Determination and Evaluation of Three-Wheeled Tilting Vehicle Prototype Dynamic Characteristics Using Pacejka Tire Model
by Deividas Navikas, Aurelijus Pitrėnas, Saulius Stravinskas and Artūras Mikalauskas
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(7), 3358; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16073358 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
When a new vehicle is being created or developed, many technical parameters that affect dynamic characteristics must be investigated not only on a theoretical level, but also by natural experiments. Especially one of the most important characteristics for a vehicle that can tilt [...] Read more.
When a new vehicle is being created or developed, many technical parameters that affect dynamic characteristics must be investigated not only on a theoretical level, but also by natural experiments. Especially one of the most important characteristics for a vehicle that can tilt is tire–road contact, which later helps to calculate and simulate different driving conditions in different driving scenarios, applying internal and external forces. This paper presents a unique construction of a three-wheeled tilting vehicle prototype, tire–road contact determination, and evaluation of vehicle behaviour using the Pacejka tire model. To achieve this, the tire and road surface area were investigated. Using the computed method, experimentally determined contact areas were refined and compared with the actual measured. Determined tire–road contact areas were evaluated by applying dynamic external forces for further investigation. Selected a scenario to predict the behavior of a three-wheeled tilting vehicle and the force distribution during tilting, then determined certain vehicle parameters in the static position (load distribution, tire–road contact areas). The inclusion of asymmetric front-left and front-right tire loads under tilt resulted in observable differences in force distribution. The inner front tire unloaded while the outer tire gained load, introducing asymmetry in both lateral and longitudinal forces. This behaviour was not captured in the symmetric model. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Transportation and Future Mobility)
24 pages, 426 KB  
Article
Does the Market Value Corporate ESG Ratings? A Complex System Driven by Institutional Investors
by Changjiang Zhang, Sihan Zhang, Zhepeng Zhou and Yuqi Yang
Systems 2026, 14(4), 368; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14040368 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Against the backdrop of China’s dual-carbon goals and the growing emphasis on sustainable development, ESG information has become an important non-financial signal in capital markets; yet whether and how it is priced by investors remains unclear. Using a sample of 2018–2024 Chinese A-share [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of China’s dual-carbon goals and the growing emphasis on sustainable development, ESG information has become an important non-financial signal in capital markets; yet whether and how it is priced by investors remains unclear. Using a sample of 2018–2024 Chinese A-share listed firms, this study examines the relationship between corporate ESG ratings and firm market value, with a particular focus on the mediating role of institutional ownership and investor heterogeneity. We find that firms with higher ESG ratings exhibit significantly higher market value, indicating that the market assigns a valuation premium to favorable ESG evaluations. Mediation analyses further show that higher ESG ratings are associated with increased institutional ownership, which in turn enhances firm value. Heterogeneity analyses reveal that this mediating effect is primarily driven by long-term institutional investors, whereas medium-term and short-term institutions neither respond systematically to ESG ratings nor transmit ESG rating information into firm valuation. In additional analyses, we show that ESG rating divergence significantly weakens the positive valuation effect of ESG ratings by increasing informational uncertainty and reducing the credibility of ESG rating signals. Overall, this study provides new evidence on the investor-based mechanisms underlying ESG rating-based pricing and highlights the importance of improving the transparency and comparability of ESG ratings in China’s capital market. Full article
19 pages, 801 KB  
Article
Measuring Governance-Enabled Sustainability in Central and Eastern Europe: Development of a Corporate Governance–Sustainability Index (CGSI–CEE)
by Mariana Ciurel and Corina-Ionela Dumitrescu
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3350; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073350 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Corporate governance is increasingly recognised as a key mechanism supporting sustainability transparency, accountability, and long-term value creation. While prior research has examined governance–performance relationships and sustainability outcomes using proprietary ESG ratings, evidence on how governance structures enable sustainability disclosure remains limited, particularly in [...] Read more.
Corporate governance is increasingly recognised as a key mechanism supporting sustainability transparency, accountability, and long-term value creation. While prior research has examined governance–performance relationships and sustainability outcomes using proprietary ESG ratings, evidence on how governance structures enable sustainability disclosure remains limited, particularly in Central and Eastern Europe (CEE). This gap reflects heterogeneous institutional environments and uneven ESG data availability in emerging European markets. To address this limitation, this study develops and applies a Corporate Governance–Sustainability Index for Central and Eastern Europe (CGSI–CEE). The index integrates core governance mechanisms (such as board effectiveness, leadership structure and ownership discipline) with sustainability transparency indicators, namely ESG report publication and CO2 emissions disclosure. The CGSI–CEE is constructed using publicly available firm-level data from CEE blue-chip companies over the 2018–2024 period and follows a transparent, theory-driven weighting scheme. The results reveal substantial heterogeneity in governance-enabled sustainability capacity across firms, sectors, and countries. Bivariate results indicate a negative association with short-term accounting profitability and a positive association with market valuation; however, these relationships weaken once firm-level characteristics are controlled for, reinforcing the interpretation of CGSI–CEE as a structural governance-capacity measure rather than a direct performance determinant. Full article
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22 pages, 753 KB  
Article
Network Position in Global Trade Systems and Cyberattack Risk: Evidence from Country-Level Trade Networks, 2010–2020
by Zlatan Morić, Siniša Urošev and Robert Kopal
Systems 2026, 14(4), 367; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14040367 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Cyberattacks increasingly generate systemic economic and geopolitical effects in an era of dense global interdependence. While prior research emphasises geopolitical rivalry, institutional capacity, and technological sophistication as determinants of national cyber risk, less attention has been given to structural vulnerabilities arising from countries’ [...] Read more.
Cyberattacks increasingly generate systemic economic and geopolitical effects in an era of dense global interdependence. While prior research emphasises geopolitical rivalry, institutional capacity, and technological sophistication as determinants of national cyber risk, less attention has been given to structural vulnerabilities arising from countries’ positions within global economic networks. This study advances a relational theory of national cyber risk, arguing that structurally central countries provide greater systemic leverage to attackers because disruptions to highly accessible nodes can propagate widely across interconnected trade systems. Using annual bilateral trade data from 2010 to 2020, we construct directed, weighted global trade networks and derive centrality measures capturing accessibility, brokerage, and embeddedness. These indicators are linked to country-level cyber incident data to evaluate both the probability and intensity of cyberattacks. Logistic and negative binomial models with lagged network metrics show that countries occupying more accessible positions face significantly higher cyberattack risk. The findings demonstrate that national cyber vulnerability emerges from relational exposure within interconnected economic systems, underscoring the importance of systems-based cybersecurity risk assessment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Systems Approaches to Risk Management)
11 pages, 354 KB  
Article
Massive Pulmonary Hemorrhage After Pulmonary Endarterectomy: Updated Outcomes of a Standardized Management Protocol over 14 Years
by Cagatay Cetinkaya, Sehnaz Olgun Yildizeli, Altug Sagir, Mustafa Emre Kavlak and Bedrettin Yildizeli
Surgeries 2026, 7(2), 44; https://doi.org/10.3390/surgeries7020044 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background: Massive pulmonary hemorrhage is a life-threatening complication of pulmonary endarterectomy (PEA) with limited evidence to guide standardized management. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated consecutive PEA procedures performed at a high-volume center and analyzed the incidence, perioperative characteristics, management strategies, and early outcomes of [...] Read more.
Background: Massive pulmonary hemorrhage is a life-threatening complication of pulmonary endarterectomy (PEA) with limited evidence to guide standardized management. Methods: We retrospectively evaluated consecutive PEA procedures performed at a high-volume center and analyzed the incidence, perioperative characteristics, management strategies, and early outcomes of patients who developed massive pulmonary hemorrhage. Results: Among 1123 patients who underwent PEA, massive pulmonary hemorrhage occurred in 51 (4.54%) and developed intraoperatively after completion of PEA and separation from total circulatory arrest. Primary suturing achieved hemostasis in 12 patients (23.5%), and bronchial isolation was applied in 18 (35.3%). Local adjuncts included intraoperative bronchial clamping in 1 patient (2.0%) and biological glue occlusion in 2 (3.9%). Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) was required in 25 patients (49.0%), initiated intraoperatively in 22 and postoperatively in 3. Overall in-hospital mortality was 41.2%, while 30 patients (58.8%) survived to hospital discharge; among survivors, mean hospital length of stay was 16.1 ± 6.8 days. Conclusions: Massive pulmonary hemorrhage after PEA remains associated with substantial early mortality and resource utilization; a stepwise institutional algorithm combining bronchoscopy-guided localization, targeted airway/surgical control, and timely ECMO support may help standardize management in this critical setting. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cardiothoracic and Vascular Surgery)
17 pages, 614 KB  
Article
Abductive Discretization and Residual Politics: From Kantian Schematism to “Open Schema” AI Governance
by Se Hoon Son
Philosophies 2026, 11(2), 51; https://doi.org/10.3390/philosophies11020051 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Fairness and minority exclusion have emerged as the central concerns of contemporary Artificial Intelligence (AI) ethics. However, standard auditing and documentation practices often fail to capture harms affecting edge cases and marginalized groups. This article argues that this failure is structural: the act [...] Read more.
Fairness and minority exclusion have emerged as the central concerns of contemporary Artificial Intelligence (AI) ethics. However, standard auditing and documentation practices often fail to capture harms affecting edge cases and marginalized groups. This article argues that this failure is structural: the act of “discretization”—converting continuous reality into discrete governance categories—inevitably produces a “residual.” Drawing on German Idealism (Kant, Fichte, Schelling) and continental philosophy (Dilthey, Gadamer, Merleau-Ponty), we reconceptualize residuals not as mere noise but as “surprising facts” that should trigger abductive hypothesis revision. We critique checklist-centered governance as a form of proceduralized auditing that can obscure these residuals. This article makes three key contributions: (i) a structural diagnosis of residual production using systems theory and topology; (ii) a philosophical reconstruction of abductive revision as a hermeneutic necessity; and (iii) an institutional design proposal—specifically, the Residual Ledger and Category Revision Protocols—to operationalize “Open Schema” governance. Full article
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22 pages, 1233 KB  
Article
Adapting Health Services in Forced Displacement: Operationalizing Surge Capacity Framework in the EMT Barco San Raffaele, Colombia
by Lina Echeverri, Ana Lucia Lopez, Diego Orlando Posso, Ives Hubloue, Luca Ragazzoni and Flavio Salio
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(4), 435; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040435 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
(1) Background: Colombia hosts one of the world’s largest mixed-displacement crises, combining longstanding internal displacement with the influx of Venezuelan migrants. This case study examines how the Emergency Medical Team (EMT) Hospital Barco San Raffaele (HBSR) adapted its service-delivery model to respond simultaneously [...] Read more.
(1) Background: Colombia hosts one of the world’s largest mixed-displacement crises, combining longstanding internal displacement with the influx of Venezuelan migrants. This case study examines how the Emergency Medical Team (EMT) Hospital Barco San Raffaele (HBSR) adapted its service-delivery model to respond simultaneously to internal displacement in the Colombian Pacific region and the Venezuelan refugee influx. Using the WHO EMT Surge Capacity Framework, the study analyses how health services were adapted across two concurrent displacement contexts. (2) Methods: A mixed-methods comparative case study was conducted using mission reports, epidemiological surveillance data, policy reports and institutional documents collected between November 2020 and May 2021. Data were analyzed through a thematic analysis structured around the four domains of the WHO EMT Surge Capacity Framework (Staff, Structure, Supplies and Systems), to examine how service adaptation was operationalized across different geographic, sociocultural and legal environments; (3) Results: EMT HBSR adapted staffing composition, supply chains, infrastructure, and operational systems across both settings. Its hybrid model, combining a hospital boat platform with mobile outreach teams, enabled continuity of primary care, mental, maternal and child health, and community-based services in geographically isolated and culturally diverse communities; (4) Conclusions: The findings illustrate how flexible EMT operational models can support the adaptation of health services, and reduce health access inequalities in displacement contexts characterized by high mobility, confinement and limited health system capacity. Mobile platforms, such as hospital boats, appear to be a viable strategy for ensuring continuity of care along migratory routes and in geographically isolated areas affected by protracted instability. Full article
13 pages, 373 KB  
Article
Safety and Oncologic Outcomes of Robotic Lobectomy in the Early Adoption Phase: First Single-Surgeon Experience from the Polish Healthcare System
by Wojciech Migal, Michał Wiłkojć, Agnieszka Majewska, Maciej Walędziak, Krzysztof Karol Czauderna and Anna Różańska-Walędziak
Cancers 2026, 18(7), 1115; https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers18071115 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background: Robotic-assisted thoracic surgery is increasingly recognized as an advanced minimally invasive technique for treating non-small cell lung cancer, offering technical advantages such as enhanced precision and visualization. Although numerous studies have been published worldwide, there are no comparable data from Poland. Therefore, [...] Read more.
Background: Robotic-assisted thoracic surgery is increasingly recognized as an advanced minimally invasive technique for treating non-small cell lung cancer, offering technical advantages such as enhanced precision and visualization. Although numerous studies have been published worldwide, there are no comparable data from Poland. Therefore, evidence on the perioperative safety and oncologic adequacy of robotic-assisted lobectomy during early phase of program implementation within the Polish healthcare system remains limited. Methods: This retrospective, single-institution observational study included 81 consecutive patients who underwent robotic-assisted lobectomy for primary NSCLC between January 2022 and December 2024. All procedures were carried out using the da Vinci Xi system with a standardized four-arm portal approach. Clinical, perioperative, and pathologic parameters were prospectively collected and analyzed descriptively. Postoperative complications were classified according to Clavien-Dindo. Results: The median patient age was 70 years (IQR: 65–74), 52% were male, and 67% had a history of smoking. Adenocarcinoma was the predominant histologic subtype (51%). The median operative time was 176 min (IQR: 149–220). There were no conversions to thoracotomy and no 30-day mortalities. Postoperative complications occurred in 24% of cases, with prolonged air leak being most common (17%). The median hospital stay was 8 days (IQR: 6–10). R0 resection was achieved in 96% of patients, with a median of 14 lymph nodes dissected across 5 nodal stations. Conclusions: Robotic-assisted lobectomy performed during the early implementation phase of a national program demonstrated low morbidity, high rates of complete (R0) resection, and adequate lymph node yields consistent with international benchmarks. These results support the feasibility of robotic lobectomy within the Polish healthcare setting; however, the single-surgeon, single-center design limits generalizability. Further multicenter prospective studies are needed to confirm reproducibility, assess learning curves, and evaluate long-term oncologic outcomes. Full article
16 pages, 560 KB  
Article
Urgent Admission and Inequities in Acute Hospital Stay in Canada
by Kisalaya Basu
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(4), 432; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23040432 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background: The Canada Health Act (CHA), enacted in 1984, guarantees universal access to medically necessary care, yet inequities in hospital use persist. Acute length of stay (ALOS) is a key indicator of hospital efficiency, patient recovery, and healthcare system performance, with prolonged stays [...] Read more.
Background: The Canada Health Act (CHA), enacted in 1984, guarantees universal access to medically necessary care, yet inequities in hospital use persist. Acute length of stay (ALOS) is a key indicator of hospital efficiency, patient recovery, and healthcare system performance, with prolonged stays linked to higher costs, avoidable infections, and strain on acute care capacity. Understanding patterns in ALOS is critical not only for hospital management but also for public health, as extended stays can limit timely access to care and exacerbate population-level health inequities. Objective: This study examines social, geographic, and clinical gradients in ALOS and investigates whether the effects of admission urgency vary by sex, neighbourhood income, and rural–urban residence within a universal healthcare system. Methods: Using 2024–2025 hospital discharge data from the Canadian Institute for Health Information, this study examined ALOS as a function of comorbidity, sex, socioeconomic status, rural–urban residence (geography), and admission type (urgent versus elective). Interaction effects between admission urgency and key social and geographic variables were evaluated to assess subgroup differences in ALOS. Results: Disparities in ALOS were evident. Older age, male sex, urgent admission, and greater comorbidity were associated with longer stays, whereas higher neighbourhood income and urban residence were linked to shorter stays. Interaction analyses revealed substantial heterogeneity: compared with elective rural admissions, urgent urban admissions had 30.4% longer ALOS. Urgent admissions also amplified socioeconomic and sex-based differences, with male patients experiencing 27.9% longer stays than females. Conclusions: From a public health perspective, these findings highlight how system capacity constraints and social inequities jointly shape hospital use. Reducing avoidable variation in ALOS will require policies that strengthen acute care surge capacity, improve coordination for urgent admissions, and address upstream socioeconomic and geographic barriers to care, thereby promoting more equitable and efficient hospital services. Full article
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22 pages, 2400 KB  
Article
Land-Use Transformation in a Post-Mining Landscape: The Interplay Between Social Legitimacy, Territorial Governance and Development Trajectories
by Petr Hlaváček and Martin Mata
Land 2026, 15(4), 566; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040566 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
The transformation of post-mining landscapes represents a critical challenge for structurally affected coal regions undergoing decarbonisation. This study examines land-use transformation in a former brown coal mining area in the north-west of the Czech Republic, focusing on the interplay between social legitimacy, territorial [...] Read more.
The transformation of post-mining landscapes represents a critical challenge for structurally affected coal regions undergoing decarbonisation. This study examines land-use transformation in a former brown coal mining area in the north-west of the Czech Republic, focusing on the interplay between social legitimacy, territorial governance, and development trajectories. The research aims to assess (i) the level of public awareness of the transformation process, (ii) the alignment between residents’ and key local actors’ preferences regarding future land-use trajectories, and (iii) the acceptance of renewable energy as part of the area’s future development. The empirical analysis combines a CAWI survey of residents with structured CATI interviews conducted with local stakeholders. The findings reveal strong support for environmental and landscape restoration, alongside conditionally positive but more ambivalent attitudes towards renewable energy development. While ecological renewal is widely perceived as desirable, the long-term sustainability of the transformation process depends on social legitimacy, institutional trust, and the degree of alignment between strategic planning and local preferences. The results highlight that successful post-mining land-use transformation requires not only environmental and economic planning but also systematic engagement with social acceptance and territorially embedded governance. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Socio-Economic and Political Issues)
21 pages, 1879 KB  
Article
Phenotypic and Genomic Analysis of Antimicrobial Resistance in Escherichia coli Isolated from Food-Transport Containers Used in Institutional Catering
by Levente Hunor Husz, Gergely Álmos Tornyos, Eszter Kaszab, Enikő Fehér, András Bittsánszky, András József Tóth, Miklós Süth, Ákos Jerzsele and Ádám Kerek
Antibiotics 2026, 15(4), 358; https://doi.org/10.3390/antibiotics15040358 (registering DOI) - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Background: Public catering is an underexplored One Health interface where structurally complex food-transport equipment may sustain reservoirs of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. We investigated Escherichia coli from reusable institutional catering food-transport containers, focusing on a difficult-to-clean pressure-relief/ventilation valve compartment. Our objectives were to quantify [...] Read more.
Background: Public catering is an underexplored One Health interface where structurally complex food-transport equipment may sustain reservoirs of antimicrobial-resistant bacteria. We investigated Escherichia coli from reusable institutional catering food-transport containers, focusing on a difficult-to-clean pressure-relief/ventilation valve compartment. Our objectives were to quantify phenotypic resistance using applied clinical breakpoints, assess inhibitor-synergy outcomes in ESBL confirmatory testing, and contextualize inhibitor-positive isolates by whole-genome sequencing (WGS). Methods: E. coli was isolated from containers sourced from 17 institutions and three central kitchens using ISO 16649-2. Minimum inhibitory concentrations (MICs) were determined by broth microdilution. Extended-spectrum β-lactamase (ESBL) confirmatory testing used cefotaxime/ceftazidime ± clavulanate; inhibitor positivity was defined as a ≥3 two-fold MIC decrease in the presence of clavulanate in isolates meeting CLSI screening thresholds. Inhibitor-positive isolates underwent WGS and CARD-based resistome profiling. Results: Resistance was most frequent to colistin (10, 10.8%), followed by doxycycline (8, 8.6%), florfenicol (7, 7.5%), enrofloxacin (4, 4.3%), and gentamicin (3, 3.2%). Third-generation cephalosporin resistance by clinical breakpoints was uncommon (cefotaxime: 2, 2.2%; ceftazidime: 1, 1.1%). Inhibitor-positive ESBL confirmatory phenotypes occurred in 30 isolates (32.3%), which were sequenced. WGS identified 45 resistance-associated genes across inhibitor-positive isolates but detected no classical ESBL genes; all carried chromosomal ampC/ampH alongside ubiquitous efflux-associated determinants. All WGS isolates belonged to phylogroup A, with serotype O154:H9 (20, 66.7%) and ST5549 (17, 56.7%) predominating. Conclusions: Institutional catering food-transport containers can harbor AMR E. coli, with colistin as the most frequent resistance phenotype and frequent inhibitor-positive ESBL confirmatory profiles that, in this set, were not explained by classical ESBL gene carriage. Integrating phenotype, WGS resistomics, and lineage structure supports targeted hygiene surveillance and risk-informed One Health monitoring in mass catering systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Antimicrobial Resistance in the Food Chain)
18 pages, 941 KB  
Article
External Ecosystem Resources and SME Sustainable Environmental Performance: Evidence from Ghana
by Collins Kankam-Kwarteng, Dennis Yao Dzansi and Victor Yawo Atiase
Businesses 2026, 6(2), 16; https://doi.org/10.3390/businesses6020016 (registering DOI) - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Sustainable environmental performance (SEP) among small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) has attracted researchers and practitioners’ attention. The achievement of sustainable environmental performance has been largely dependent on the prevailing external ecosystem conditions. Yet in emerging economies such as Ghana, there is limited research [...] Read more.
Sustainable environmental performance (SEP) among small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) has attracted researchers and practitioners’ attention. The achievement of sustainable environmental performance has been largely dependent on the prevailing external ecosystem conditions. Yet in emerging economies such as Ghana, there is limited research and evidence on the extent to which external ecosystem resources influence sustainable environmental performance. This study aims to investigate how external entrepreneurial ecosystem resources including policy, access to finance, market availability, institutional support, human capital and culture influence the sustainable environmental performance (SEP) of small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) using sample data from Ghana. A total of 386 SME manufacturing and service firms were sampled to participate. Structural equation modeling (PLS-SEM) tested a multi-theory framework grounded in the Resource-based View (RBV), Resource Dependency Theory (RDT) and Stakeholder Theory. The results indicate that policy, finance, institutional support, and markets exert significant positive effects on SMEs’ SEP. Culture and human capital were found to have a weaker contribution to SMEs’ SEP. The novelty of this study lies in empirically demonstrating the primacy of ecosystem structural levers over softer ecosystem factors in driving SME sustainable environmental performance, thereby offering a new explanatory hierarchy of ecosystem drivers for sustainability in developing economies. We advance the RBV, RDT and the Stakeholder Theory by showing that external ecosystem resources act as critical environmental enablers for SMEs in developing economies. The findings offer globally relevant policy insights for advancing SDGs 12 (Responsible Consumption and Production) and 13 (Climate Action) through targeted ecosystem interventions. Full article
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20 pages, 1551 KB  
Article
Unlocking Natural Capital Through Land Tenure Reform and Spatial Reconfiguration: Evidence from the “Spatial-First” Mode in Nanhai, China
by Zhi Li and Xiaomin Jiang
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3336; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073336 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
Efficiently converting natural capital into economic assets is a critical challenge in urban–rural transformation, yet the interactive mechanism between institutional land reform and physical spatial restructuring remains underexplored. While traditional frameworks emphasize institutional design, this study identifies a “Spatial-First” mechanism where physical reconfiguration [...] Read more.
Efficiently converting natural capital into economic assets is a critical challenge in urban–rural transformation, yet the interactive mechanism between institutional land reform and physical spatial restructuring remains underexplored. While traditional frameworks emphasize institutional design, this study identifies a “Spatial-First” mechanism where physical reconfiguration serves as a spatial mediator to catalyze property rights breakthroughs. Using an entropy-weighted coupling coordination model, we analyzed policy dynamics in Nanhai District, China, a unique “dual-pilot” zone, from 2020 to 2024. The results indicate a nonlinear leap in the Coupling Coordination Degree (D) from 0.100 to 0.978. We interpret this surge as a policy-driven shock during the intensive pilot phase, where substantive spatial integration (0.719) effectively bypassed high transaction costs inherent in collective tenure, outpacing institutional progress (0.281). However, an Ecological Lag was observed; the disproportionately low weighting of the ecological carrier index (7.09%) suggests that current gains are primarily driven by green industrialization rather than the expansion of absolute ecological stock. This study concludes that while spatial tools can effectively unlock natural capital value in the short term, long-term sustainability necessitates a strategic shift from administrative-led economic efficiency to market-based ecological restoration. Full article
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32 pages, 312 KB  
Article
Exploring Digital Competence in Foreign Language Education: An Integrated SELFIE and SELFIE for TEACHERS Study of Bulgarian Secondary School Teachers
by Irena Dimova, Plamen Tsvetkov and Mihal Pavlov
Societies 2026, 16(4), 114; https://doi.org/10.3390/soc16040114 - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
This study explores the digital competence of foreign language teachers in Bulgarian secondary education by focusing on the institutional context of which they are a part, the strengths and gaps of their competence, and their levels of competence. It draws upon empirical data [...] Read more.
This study explores the digital competence of foreign language teachers in Bulgarian secondary education by focusing on the institutional context of which they are a part, the strengths and gaps of their competence, and their levels of competence. It draws upon empirical data that were collected and analyzed within an integrated, dual-instrument framework, combining the SELFIE (Self-reflection on Effective Learning by Fostering the Use of Innovative Educational Technologies) and SELFIE for TEACHERS (Self-reflection on Effective Learning by Fostering the Use of Innovative Educational Technologies for Teachers) EU-aligned assessment tools. The results from the questionnaire data show that the foreign language teachers state that they work in a relatively good technological environment and evaluate the usage of digital technologies for teaching and communication purposes within the school context as a salient aspect of their digital competence. The results also reveal three areas in the study participants’ digital competence that are in need of improvement: (1) empowering learners/personalizing the educational process, (2) assessment and (3) facilitating learners’ digital competence. In addition, the findings indicate that the foreign language educators rate their digital competence at a low to medium level. By blending institutional and teacher-oriented perspectives into a single integrated study of Bulgarian secondary school foreign language teachers, this investigation extends the existing research and makes evidence-based recommendations for institutional capacity building, teacher education policy and targeted professional development aimed at improving the educators’ digital competence. Full article
25 pages, 1873 KB  
Article
An Empirical Assessment of Digital Forensic Process Reliability Using Integrated ISO/IEC 27037 and 27041 Standards
by Zlatan Morić, Vedran Dakić and Ivana Ogrizek Biškupić
J. Cybersecur. Priv. 2026, 6(2), 57; https://doi.org/10.3390/jcp6020057 (registering DOI) - 30 Mar 2026
Abstract
The escalating scale and complexity of cybercrime necessitate standardized digital forensic protocols to ensure the integrity and admissibility of digital evidence. This study empirically assesses the use of ISO/IEC 27037 and ISO/IEC 27041 through three real-world digital forensic case studies conducted in organizational [...] Read more.
The escalating scale and complexity of cybercrime necessitate standardized digital forensic protocols to ensure the integrity and admissibility of digital evidence. This study empirically assesses the use of ISO/IEC 27037 and ISO/IEC 27041 through three real-world digital forensic case studies conducted in organizational settings. A multi-case methodology was employed, encompassing a multinational corporate criminal investigation, an internal employee misbehaviour probe, and an examination into mobile- and cloud-based data leaks. The effect of synchronized standard implementation was evaluated using audit-based and quantitative indicators that measure forensic process quality as a system attribute. The findings demonstrate that the systematic implementation of ISO/IEC 27037 and ISO/IEC 27041 improves investigative traceability, documentation quality, and evidentiary robustness. In the worldwide case study, documentation completeness increased by 18%, and all digital evidence was deemed admissible in judicial proceedings, surpassing the institutional baseline admissibility rate of 82%. In other instances, evidence gathered within the same framework was acknowledged in organizational or disciplinary review processes, resulting in similar enhancements in documentation quality and procedural consistency, notwithstanding technological and organizational limitations. The paper develops and empirically substantiates an integrated procedural validation model that connects evidence-handling practices with method and instrument validation. The results indicate that the synchronized implementation of ISO/IEC forensic standards improves the transparency, dependability, and auditability of digital forensic investigations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Security Engineering & Applications)
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