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Keywords = intergenerational accounting

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30 pages, 595 KB  
Review
Rethinking Land Systems Evaluation in Hybrid Physical–Digital Spaces: A Spatial and Stock–Flow Perspective for Urban and Territorial Transitions
by Rubina Canesi and Eugenio Leanza
Land 2026, 15(4), 578; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040578 - 31 Mar 2026
Viewed by 246
Abstract
Rapid digitalization and artificial intelligence are restructuring land systems by altering the functional relationship between built environments, socio-ecological processes, and territorial capital accumulation. This paper provides a conceptual and literature-based analysis of how hybrid physical–digital infrastructures are reshaping urban–rural interactions, land-use intensity, and [...] Read more.
Rapid digitalization and artificial intelligence are restructuring land systems by altering the functional relationship between built environments, socio-ecological processes, and territorial capital accumulation. This paper provides a conceptual and literature-based analysis of how hybrid physical–digital infrastructures are reshaping urban–rural interactions, land-use intensity, and long-term sustainability conditions. Rather than developing a fully operational measurement model, the study critically examines the limitations of aggregate productivity indicators and existing evaluation frameworks in capturing spatial reorganization processes, capital durability, and long-term dynamics. Building on insights from sustainability economics and socio-ecological systems research, the paper proposes a stock–flow interpretative perspective to better understand the interaction between physical, natural, and intangible capital within evolving land systems. The analysis focuses on three structural drivers of land system transformation: (i) the virtualization of services and the expansion of cyberspace-based infrastructures; (ii) demographic contraction and aging processes affecting land demand and settlement structures; and (iii) capital deepening in energy-intensive digital networks with implications for land–climate interactions. Within this context, particular attention is given to infrastructure life-cycle dynamics, entropy-related capital decay, and the role of artificial intelligence in reshaping labor–land relationships. The paper highlights the need for new evaluation approaches capable of distinguishing between value generated through material land transformation and value emerging from intangible and digital layers. In this sense, it aims to contribute to ongoing debates on land management and spatial planning by outlining a research agenda for the development of spatially grounded, stock–flow-based sustainability metrics. The findings suggest that future land governance and urban development strategies will need to explicitly account for hybrid spatial architectures and their long-term resource and climate implications in order to preserve territorial resilience and intergenerational equity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Systems and Global Change)
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22 pages, 294 KB  
Article
What Makes Ecological Responsibility Endure? Sustainability Grammars Under Planetary Limits
by Michael Carolan
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 3091; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18063091 - 21 Mar 2026
Viewed by 293
Abstract
In climate adaptation plans, national sustainability strategies, and agency-level resilience frameworks, planetary limits are routinely acknowledged, yet proposed responses continue to center on expansion, replication, and scalability. This paper argues that this tension is not merely political or technical but grammatical. It reflects [...] Read more.
In climate adaptation plans, national sustainability strategies, and agency-level resilience frameworks, planetary limits are routinely acknowledged, yet proposed responses continue to center on expansion, replication, and scalability. This paper argues that this tension is not merely political or technical but grammatical. It reflects the dominance of the grammar of scale—a patterned way of organizing, evaluating, and legitimizing sustainability action through expansion, metrics, piloting, and exit. While indispensable in many contexts, scale increasingly struggles to secure durable ecological responsibility amid irreversibility, uneven exposure, and intergenerational harm. The paper advances a framework of plural sustainability grammars to diagnose this mismatch. In addition to scale, it identifies six alternative grammars—attachment, settlement, sufficiency, inheritance, exposure, and refusal—that already circulate, often implicitly, within sustainability discourse. Each grammar foregrounds dimensions of responsibility that scalability tends to background, including permanence, restraint, cumulative consequence, and ethical limits. The paper traces these grammars through climate adaptation planning frameworks across governance levels, showing how plural grammars are prominent in problem framing and diagnosis but are progressively narrowed as plans move toward implementation, monitoring, and accountability, where scale becomes dominant. The paper concludes by reflecting on the implications of this grammatical narrowing for practitioners, policymakers, and scholars concerned with adaptation, justice, and the governance of sustainability under planetary limits. Full article
15 pages, 262 KB  
Article
Intuition Without Objects Phenomenology, Futurity and Responsibility
by Riccardo Valenti
Religions 2026, 17(3), 335; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17030335 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 602
Abstract
This article investigates how intuition operates when its referent is structurally absent or non-objectifiable. While phenomenology has traditionally linked intuition to fulfilment and object-givenness, a growing range of contemporary experiences, such as climate change, future generations, and technologically mediated processes, resist such modes [...] Read more.
This article investigates how intuition operates when its referent is structurally absent or non-objectifiable. While phenomenology has traditionally linked intuition to fulfilment and object-givenness, a growing range of contemporary experiences, such as climate change, future generations, and technologically mediated processes, resist such modes of presentation in principle. Their absence is not contingent but structural. The article argues that phenomenology can nonetheless account for these experiences by articulating a mode of intuition that does not depend on presentable objects, but arises through mediation, temporal articulation, and responsiveness. Drawing on Husserl’s analyses of intuition and temporality, the first part identifies the limits of object-centred accounts of evidence in contexts characterized by mediation and diachronic dispersion. The second part turns to Levinas, whose account of diachrony and responsibility discloses a relation to the future that is ethically binding without being anticipable or reciprocable. The third part elaborates this insight through Waldenfels’s phenomenology of the alien and of responsiveness, showing how experience is structured by pathos, delay, and asymmetry. Here, intuition without objects appears not as a lack of evidence, but as a specific mode of experiential articulation grounded in interruption and answerability. The article concludes by showing how this phenomenological reconstruction clarifies central problems in contemporary climate ethics, particularly those concerning intergenerational responsibility. It suggests that what is often described as a motivational or institutional deficit can also be understood as a failure to recognize a distinctive intuitive relation to the future, i.e., one that binds without presenting and calls for response despite structural absence. In doing so, the notion of intuition without objects contributes to broader reflections on temporality, responsibility, and ethical agency under conditions of deep temporal asymmetry. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Experience and Non-Objects: The Limits of Intuition)
22 pages, 392 KB  
Review
The Health-Related Consequences of Gender-Based Violence Against Women in South Africa
by Andrew Enaifoghe and Ayobami Precious Adekola
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(3), 298; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23030298 - 27 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1001
Abstract
Purpose: The study explores the health-related consequences of gender-based violence against women in South Africa. Accordingly, gender-based violence (GBV) has become a serious and pervasive issue in South Africa, affecting practically every aspect of life. Gender-based violence (GBV) persists as a widespread public [...] Read more.
Purpose: The study explores the health-related consequences of gender-based violence against women in South Africa. Accordingly, gender-based violence (GBV) has become a serious and pervasive issue in South Africa, affecting practically every aspect of life. Gender-based violence (GBV) persists as a widespread public health emergency in South Africa, disproportionately impacting women across various socio-economic and cultural contexts. This study examines the many health-related effects of gender-based violence, utilising both quantitative data from healthcare facilities and qualitative insights from survivor accounts. The results indicate a significant association between gender-based violence and a heightened prevalence of chronic medical ailments, including hypertension, reproductive health issues, and gastrointestinal diseases. The study also emphasizes a notable increase in mental health illnesses, such as sadness, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), among survivors. The research reveals increasing patterns of intergenerational health effects, indicating that offspring of GBV survivors have increased risks of emotional and behavioural issues. These observations highlight the pressing necessity for cohesive health and social support systems, legislative change, and community-based interventions to mitigate the enduring health impact of gender-based violence on women in South Africa. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Behavioral and Mental Health)
29 pages, 3504 KB  
Article
REGENA: Financial Engineering for Carbon Farming
by Georgios Karakatsanis, Dimitrios Managoudis and Emmanouil Makronikolakis
Land 2026, 15(2), 349; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15020349 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 518
Abstract
Our work develops the financial engineering module of the REGENerative Agriculture (REGENA) Production Function, with Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) as ecosystem service and contract underlying index, contributing to the global literature and business practices. Specifically, we design and engineer a 30-year Net Present [...] Read more.
Our work develops the financial engineering module of the REGENerative Agriculture (REGENA) Production Function, with Soil Organic Carbon (SOC) as ecosystem service and contract underlying index, contributing to the global literature and business practices. Specifically, we design and engineer a 30-year Net Present Value (NPV) intergenerational ecological bond instrument tailored for carbon farming (CF) as a part of regenerative practices. With SOC constituting a fundamental soil health indicator for the European Union Soil Observatory (EUSO), we model the flow of value from atmospheric CO2 removal and its metabolism into SOC within a stochastic SOC Value at Risk (VaR) framework. We assess the SOC VaR in five experimental plots in five Mediterranean countries in South Europe and North Africa for three different treatments in each plot. In turn, the SOC VaR is incorporated into an adjusted Shannon entropy index (H(X)ADJ) to estimate the coefficient of a positive, net-zero, or negative carbon balance and further assess the risk-adjusted discount rate. The monetary value per gram of carbon per kilogram of soil (g C/kg Soil) signifies a clear advantage of combined regenerative treatments. Finally, three selected extensions of our work are discussed, such as the application of the framework to other nutrients, the establishment full cost–benefit accounting methods for monetizing the environmental benefits of CF to upscale investments and the lifecycle accounting of ecosystem services. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Economic Perspectives on Land Use and Valuation)
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16 pages, 323 KB  
Review
Intergenerational Transmission of Family Violence: A Narrative Review of Pathways from Childhood Exposure to Family Violence to Adult Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration
by Sejung Yang, Yangjin Park and Pa Thor
Behav. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 299; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs16020299 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 1231
Abstract
Purpose: A substantial body of research indicates that exposure to violence during childhood is linked to long-term harmful effects. More specifically, child abuse and exposure to parental intimate partner violence (IPV) may increase the likelihood of IPV perpetration in adulthood. This narrative review [...] Read more.
Purpose: A substantial body of research indicates that exposure to violence during childhood is linked to long-term harmful effects. More specifically, child abuse and exposure to parental intimate partner violence (IPV) may increase the likelihood of IPV perpetration in adulthood. This narrative review integrates theoretical and empirical perspectives to provide a comprehensive understanding of the intergenerational transmission of family violence, while identifying gaps in the literature and suggesting directions for future research. Methods: Relevant peer-reviewed empirical studies were identified through major academic databases and reference searches, with a focus on research addressing pathways from childhood exposure to family violence (CEFV) to adult IPV perpetration. The review synthesizes empirical findings to consolidate current knowledge and identify areas for further investigation. Findings: Existing studies have extensively examined associations between CEFV and adult IPV perpetration based on various theoretical frameworks, such as social learning theory, emotional regulation perspective, and the adverse childhood experiences framework. Collectively, these theoretical perspectives underscore that intergenerational transmission of family violence is shaped by behavioral, emotional, cognitive, and contextual factors. However, most studies have focused predominantly on individual and familial characteristics, with limited attention to community or broader socioecological influences. Furthermore, most of the studies have primarily been grounded in the victim–perpetrator binary framework, which treats IPV perpetration and victimization as distinct phenomena. Multidimensional aspects of violence and abuse, such as duration, severity, context, and frequency, also remain underexplored. Conclusions: This review underscores the need to (1) examine the roles of socioecological factors in the intergenerational transmission of family violence, (2) shift the paradigm beyond the gendered victim–offender binary, (3) account for the multifaceted nature of violence and abuse, and (4) utilize diverse methodological approaches to advance the field. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Violence and Bullying: Risks, Intervention, Prevention)
18 pages, 314 KB  
Article
Beyond Modern Dualisms: Reconstructing Techno-Theology Through Animism and Divine Ethics
by Xu Xu
Religions 2026, 17(2), 190; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel17020190 - 4 Feb 2026
Viewed by 622
Abstract
Techno-theology is reconsidered from a standpoint beyond modern dualisms (spirit/matter; human/nonhuman), asking how contemporary technologies come to mediate ultimate concern and thereby reconfigure meaning, agency, and moral responsibility. The article argues that techno-theology is not a new religious movement but an analytic lens [...] Read more.
Techno-theology is reconsidered from a standpoint beyond modern dualisms (spirit/matter; human/nonhuman), asking how contemporary technologies come to mediate ultimate concern and thereby reconfigure meaning, agency, and moral responsibility. The article argues that techno-theology is not a new religious movement but an analytic lens for tracing the mutual mediation between technological systems and theological imaginaries. It shows, first, how technologies increasingly function as carriers of ultimacy, reorganizing authority, hope, and moral expectation. Second, it diagnoses a recurrent modern impasse: even where crude dualisms are rejected, responsibility is practically redistributed across sociotechnical arrangements in ways that diffuse accountability. Third, it proposes “divine ethics” as a minimal evaluative grammar for distinguishing idolatrous re-enchantment (salvation-by-escalation) from relational re-enchantment (limits, accountability, care). Divine ethics is operationalized through three constraints—capacity–responsibility alignment, precaution under irreversible and intergenerational risk, and future-oriented institutionalization—prioritizing prevention over post hoc blame. Full article
23 pages, 1322 KB  
Review
Impact of Early-Life Environmental Exposures and Potential Transgenerational Influence on the Risk of Coronary Artery Disease and Heart Failure
by Patrycja Obrycka, Julia Soczyńska, Kamila Butyńska, Agnieszka Frątczak, Jędrzej Hałaburdo, Wiktor Gawełczyk and Sławomir Woźniak
Cells 2026, 15(3), 222; https://doi.org/10.3390/cells15030222 - 24 Jan 2026
Viewed by 1251
Abstract
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) remain the leading cause of mortality worldwide and constitute a substantial economic burden. Despite population aging, recent years have witnessed an increasing prevalence of conditions such as heart failure (HF), including among young adults. In this context, coronary artery disease [...] Read more.
Cardiovascular diseases (CVDs) remain the leading cause of mortality worldwide and constitute a substantial economic burden. Despite population aging, recent years have witnessed an increasing prevalence of conditions such as heart failure (HF), including among young adults. In this context, coronary artery disease (CAD) has also become an increasingly discussed issue. It has long been recognized that control of risk factors is crucial for prevention. Researchers stress the need to monitor these factors from the earliest stages of life, and detailed analyses indicate an influence of the prenatal period on the development of chronic diseases, including cardiovascular disorders. Transgenerational and intergenerational epigenetic mechanisms are also taken into account. This review aims to systematically evaluate the existing literature and summarize the mechanisms that may link these factors. We consider epigenetic, metabolic, immunological, and inflammatory influences. We describe examples of environmental exposures, such as air pollution, maternal diet, toxins, and infections, and analyze data derived from clinical studies. We discuss gaps in the literature and identify limitations, outlining directions for future research and emphasizing the need for CVD prevention initiated at the earliest stages of life. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Cells of the Cardiovascular System)
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18 pages, 912 KB  
Article
An Economic Analysis of Rice Cultivation Pattern Selection
by Weiguang Wu, Li Zhou and MengLing Zhang
Agriculture 2026, 16(1), 129; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16010129 - 4 Jan 2026
Viewed by 712
Abstract
As the fundamental operational units of agricultural production, farmers make production decisions based on the principle of household income maximization. This study draws on data from a micro-level survey of rice farmers conducted in Jiangxi Province from November 2022 to August 2023, which [...] Read more.
As the fundamental operational units of agricultural production, farmers make production decisions based on the principle of household income maximization. This study draws on data from a micro-level survey of rice farmers conducted in Jiangxi Province from November 2022 to August 2023, which yielded 1014 valid observations to examine two rice cultivation patterns—double-cropping rice (DCR) and rice–rapeseed rotation (RRR)—in order to analyze the economic effects of farmers’ cultivation choices on rice production. Additionally, a heterogeneity analysis is performed, taking into account labor force size, intergenerational differences, and operational scale. The results indicate that (1) farmers adopting the RRR pattern experience a significant increase in per-unit-area profit, thereby enhancing household income, with gains ranging from 16.95% to 153.20%. (2) The heterogeneity analysis reveals that the economic effects of labor availability, generational differences, and operational scale are not uniform. Ample labor resources strongly support rice production; older-generation farmers’ intensive farming methods are more suitable for RRR, and land expansion is constrained by scale thresholds. Based on these findings, it is recommended to optimize the allocation of production factors such as land and labor, and to guide farmers in adapting their rice cultivation strategies accordingly. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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33 pages, 1037 KB  
Article
Revitalizing Rural Heritage Through an Intergenerational Alternate Reality Game: A Mixed-Methods Study in Taiwan
by Jui-Hsiang Lee and Chien Yao Wang
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 338; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010338 - 29 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 867
Abstract
Taiwan’s rural regions face aging populations, digital divides, and fragmented heritage narratives that limit sustainable cultural revitalization. This study investigates how a community-based Alternate Reality Game (ARG) can integrate dispersed cultural assets in Shiding District into a coherent, immersive experience that supports intergenerational [...] Read more.
Taiwan’s rural regions face aging populations, digital divides, and fragmented heritage narratives that limit sustainable cultural revitalization. This study investigates how a community-based Alternate Reality Game (ARG) can integrate dispersed cultural assets in Shiding District into a coherent, immersive experience that supports intergenerational learning and community engagement. Drawing on ARG/transmedia narrative theory, scaffolding theory, intergenerational learning, and value co-creation, the research adopts an exploratory sequential mixed-methods design: qualitative interviews and co-design workshops inform ARG system development, followed by field implementation and pre–post evaluation with 78 participants across three age groups. The results show large improvements in user experience and immersion, while quantitative changes in cultural understanding, perceived learning support, and community engagement are modest and not consistently positive, despite rich qualitative accounts of heightened awareness of local history and community life. Participants’ narratives highlight a reciprocal scaffolding dynamic, in which younger visitors provide digital assistance and older residents contribute local knowledge, as well as strong perceptions of co-creation with community hosts. These findings suggest that a low-cost, participatory ARG can effectively reduce on-site narrative fragmentation and foster emotionally engaging, intergenerational experiences, but that deeper and more durable cultural learning effects likely require refined measurement and longer-term engagement. The study contributes an integrated design and evaluation framework for rural ARG applications and offers practical guidelines for communities and policymakers seeking inclusive, story-driven models of digital heritage revitalization. Full article
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32 pages, 3783 KB  
Review
One Health Approaches to Ethical, Secure, and Sustainable Food Systems and Ecosystems: Plant-Based Diets and Livestock in the African Context
by Elahesadat Hosseini, Zenebe Tadesse Tsegay, Slim Smaoui, Walid Elfalleh, Maria Antoniadou, Theodoros Varzakas and Martin Caraher
Foods 2026, 15(1), 85; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods15010085 - 26 Dec 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 1355
Abstract
The contribution of members of the agri-food system to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals is a key element in the global transition to sustainable development. The use of sustainable management systems supports the development of an integrated approach with a spirit of continuous [...] Read more.
The contribution of members of the agri-food system to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals is a key element in the global transition to sustainable development. The use of sustainable management systems supports the development of an integrated approach with a spirit of continuous improvement. Such organization is based on risk-management tools that are applied to multiple stakeholders, e.g., those responsible for product quality, occupational health and safety, and environmental impact, thus enabling better global performance. In this review, the term “ethical food systems” is used in our discussion of the concrete methods that can be used to endorse fairness and concern across the food chain. This comprises safeguarding equitable access to nutritious foods, defending animal welfare, assisting ecologically accountable production, and addressing social and labor justice within supply chains. Ethical factors also include transparency, cultural respect, and intergenerational responsibility. Consequently, the objective of this review is to address how these ethical values can be implemented within a One Health framework, predominantly by assimilating plant-based diets, developing governance tools, and resolving nutritional insecurity. Within the One Health framework, decoding ethical principles into practice necessitates a set of concrete interventions: (i) raising awareness of animal rights; (ii) distributing nutritional and environmental knowledge; (iii) endorsing plant-based food research, commercialization, and consumption; (iv) development of social inclusion and positive recognition of vegan/vegetarian identity. At the same time, it should be noted that this perspective represents only one side of the coin, as many populations continue to consume meat and rely on animal proteins for their nutritional value; thus, the role and benefits of meat and other animal-derived foods must also be recognized and discussed. This operational definition provides a foundation for asking how ethical perspectives can be applied. A case study from Africa shows the implementation of a sustainable and healthy future through the One Health approach. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Food Security and Healthy Nutrition)
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24 pages, 522 KB  
Article
Time Preference, Perceived Value, and Farmers’ Adoption of Biopesticides
by Chang Xu and Yu Yan
Sustainability 2025, 17(23), 10851; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172310851 - 3 Dec 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 671
Abstract
Green agricultural technologies play a vital role in enhancing ecological quality, and biopesticides, as a key component, can reduce chemical pollution while improving soil health. Drawing on micro-level survey data from farmers in Sichuan Province, China, this study employs an ordered probit model [...] Read more.
Green agricultural technologies play a vital role in enhancing ecological quality, and biopesticides, as a key component, can reduce chemical pollution while improving soil health. Drawing on micro-level survey data from farmers in Sichuan Province, China, this study employs an ordered probit model to assess the effect of farmers’ time preferences on their willingness to adopt biopesticides. It examines the underlying mechanisms through the lens of perceived value theory. The results indicate that farmers with a stronger orientation toward future returns are significantly more likely to adopt. Time preference influences adoption decisions by shaping the perceived value of biopesticides in terms of ecological improvement, intergenerational health protection, and food safety assurance, with mediating effects accounting for 22.90%, 57.18%, and 26.14% of the total effect, respectively. Heterogeneity analysis shows that the influence of time preference is weaker among farmers with higher educational attainment, and that larger cultivated areas further attenuate its impact on large-scale farmers’ adoption willingness. These findings provide micro-level evidence and targeted policy insights to foster the adoption of green agricultural technologies. Full article
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20 pages, 752 KB  
Article
Healing Bodies, Healing Communities: A Community-Based Qualitative Study of Adult Survivors of Childhood Sexual Trauma in South Africa
by Leona Morgan, Sarojini Nadar and Ines Keygnaert
Healthcare 2025, 13(20), 2601; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13202601 - 15 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1508
Abstract
Background: While sexual trauma is inherently an embodied experience, research on psychological interventions that is cognisant of geographic and socio-political community contexts within which embodied, therapeutic interventions occur remains limited. Decolonial, African and feminist community psychologies have noted this epistemic–ethical gap. Objectives: This [...] Read more.
Background: While sexual trauma is inherently an embodied experience, research on psychological interventions that is cognisant of geographic and socio-political community contexts within which embodied, therapeutic interventions occur remains limited. Decolonial, African and feminist community psychologies have noted this epistemic–ethical gap. Objectives: This paper explores the co-development of trauma-informed care pathways for adult survivors of childhood sexual trauma (CST) in under-resourced communities in Cape Town, South Africa. The study aimed to integrate intergenerational community knowledge, embodied therapeutic practices and collaborative approaches into locally relevant models of care. Methods: Drawing on feminist mental health frameworks, this qualitative study engaged 13 adult female survivors who identify as “coloured”. Embodiment was central in guiding the deconstructive therapeutic praxis, informing both the co-development of care pathways and the conceptualization of integrative trauma-informed care (ITIC) beyond pathologizing, deficit-based narratives. The cultivation of trust and the situated lived realities of survivors were foregrounded to illustrate the relational dimensions of trauma recovery. Results: Establishing relational safety emerged as the foundation for therapeutic engagement, supported by non-directive therapeutic probing. Grounding practices, affective regulation and embodied awareness enabled participants to process trauma at their own pace. Somatic engagement allowed the integration of dissociative experiences while strengthening relational resilience. Recovery was a continuous process, with participants reporting increased peace, authenticity and capacity for social connection despite structural barriers to community support. Conclusions: The development of care pathways was embedded within the research process itself, offering an approach that is culturally sensitive and responsive to survivors’ lived experiences. ITIC accounted for temporal, intergenerational and embodied trauma and should be adaptable across age and community-specific needs. The ITIC approach offers a transferable framework for co-developing de-pathologizing, culturally responsive interventions that can be adapted across diverse global contexts to support sustainable trauma integration. Full article
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15 pages, 595 KB  
Article
Digital Divides in Older People: Assessment of Digital Competencies and Proposals for Meaningful Inclusion
by Rocío Fernández-Piqueras, Rómulo J. González-García, Roberto Sanz-Ponce and Joana Calero-Plaza
Eur. J. Investig. Health Psychol. Educ. 2025, 15(10), 196; https://doi.org/10.3390/ejihpe15100196 - 26 Sep 2025
Cited by 4 | Viewed by 2767
Abstract
Background: Currently, population aging and the growing incorporation of digital technologies into everyday life highlight the need to ensure the digital inclusion of older adults. This is due to the existence of a significant digital divide that affects this population group, limiting not [...] Read more.
Background: Currently, population aging and the growing incorporation of digital technologies into everyday life highlight the need to ensure the digital inclusion of older adults. This is due to the existence of a significant digital divide that affects this population group, limiting not only their access to services and opportunities but also their emotional well-being and quality of life. The lack of digital skills can generate feelings of exclusion, frustration, and dependence, negatively impacting their mental health and autonomy. Methods: The objective of this study is to assess the level of basic digital competence in 404 older adults using the Scale of Basic Digital Competence in Older Adults (DigCompB_PM) in order to identify existing digital divides and provide empirical evidence for the design of educational interventions that promote the digital inclusion of this population group. To this end, we start with the following research question: Are older adults prepared to face the digital and knowledge society, taking into account personal variables such as age, gender, geographical location, place of residence, and type of cohabitation? Results: The findings reveal that participants scored highest in the dimension related to safety and digital device usage while scoring lowest in online collaboration, indicating a disparity between basic digital skills and collaborative competencies. Cluster analysis further demonstrates that age and previous occupational experience significantly influence digital literacy levels. These results highlight the heterogeneity of digital competence among older adults. Conclusions: The study concludes by emphasising the importance of implementing tailored policies that enhance digital literacy in this population. Key factors such as accessibility, training, and motivation should guide such efforts. Additionally, intergenerational learning emerges as a promising strategy, facilitating the development of digital skills through knowledge exchange and sustained support from younger cohorts. Full article
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26 pages, 6020 KB  
Article
Exploring the Interface Between Orality, Text and Images: An Interplay of Black Drawings and Unfired Clay Figures Within the Depths of the Sierra Mixe of Oaxaca, Mexico
by Leslie F. Zubieta Calvert
Arts 2025, 14(5), 114; https://doi.org/10.3390/arts14050114 - 23 Sep 2025
Viewed by 2130
Abstract
Drawing on archaeological evidence, early ethnographic accounts, and historical documents, this article offers initial reflections on the possible past uses and meanings of a set of black drawings found deep within a cave in what is now known as the Sierra Mixe of [...] Read more.
Drawing on archaeological evidence, early ethnographic accounts, and historical documents, this article offers initial reflections on the possible past uses and meanings of a set of black drawings found deep within a cave in what is now known as the Sierra Mixe of Oaxaca, Mexico. Following this investigative approach, it explores the role of rock art as an interface between orality, imagery, and text in the context of ancient Mesoamerica. To understand the possible ontological perceptions of the creators of these images in the past, it is suggested that this imagery functioned as inscriptions in a dialogue with spatially related unfired figures modelled in clay, which are exceptionally well-preserved in this subterranean space. An interplay of media on various supports is proposed, wherein two-dimensional images and three-dimensional figures may have been used as a combined system for transmitting and circulating intergenerational cultural knowledge, serving as an anchor for collective memory. In this context, rock imagery played a role in a broader communication system in Mesoamerica. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advances in Rock Art Studies)
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