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Keywords = mainstreaming resilience

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20 pages, 1090 KiB  
Article
Reforming Water Governance: Nordic Lessons for Southern Europe
by Eleonora Santos
Sustainability 2025, 17(15), 7079; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17157079 - 5 Aug 2025
Abstract
Water governance in Europe faces mounting challenges from climate change, demographic pressures, and aging infrastructure—especially in Southern regions increasingly affected by drought and institutional fragmentation. In contrast, Nordic countries such as Denmark and Sweden exhibit coherent, integrated governance systems with strong regulatory oversight. [...] Read more.
Water governance in Europe faces mounting challenges from climate change, demographic pressures, and aging infrastructure—especially in Southern regions increasingly affected by drought and institutional fragmentation. In contrast, Nordic countries such as Denmark and Sweden exhibit coherent, integrated governance systems with strong regulatory oversight. This study introduces the Water Governance Maturity Index (WGMI), a document-based assessment tool designed to evaluate national water governance across five dimensions: institutional capacity, operational effectiveness, environmental ambition, equity, and climate adaptation. Applying the WGMI to eight EU countries—four Nordic and four Southern—reveals a persistent North–South divide in governance maturity. Nordic countries consistently score in the “advanced” or “model” range, while Southern countries face systemic gaps in implementation, climate integration, and territorial inclusion. Based on these findings, the study offers actionable policy recommendations, including the establishment of independent regulators, strengthening of river basin coordination, mainstreaming of climate-water strategies, and expansion of affordability and participation mechanisms. By translating complex governance principles into measurable indicators, the WGMI provides a practical tool for benchmarking reform progress and supporting the EU’s broader agenda for just resilience and climate adaptation. Unlike broader frameworks like SDG 6.5.1, the WGMI’s document-based, dimension-specific approach provides granular, actionable insights for governance reform, enhancing its utility for EU and global policymakers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainability in Urban Water Resource Management)
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45 pages, 1090 KiB  
Review
Electric Vehicle Adoption in Egypt: A Review of Feasibility, Challenges, and Policy Directions
by Hilmy Awad, Michele De Santis and Ehab H. E. Bayoumi
World Electr. Veh. J. 2025, 16(8), 423; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj16080423 - 28 Jul 2025
Viewed by 607
Abstract
This study evaluates the feasibility and visibility of electric vehicles (EVs) in Egypt, addressing critical research gaps and proposing actionable strategies to drive adoption. Employing a systematic review of academic, governmental, and industry sources, the paper identifies underexplored areas such as rural–urban adoption [...] Read more.
This study evaluates the feasibility and visibility of electric vehicles (EVs) in Egypt, addressing critical research gaps and proposing actionable strategies to drive adoption. Employing a systematic review of academic, governmental, and industry sources, the paper identifies underexplored areas such as rural–urban adoption disparities, lifecycle assessments of EV batteries, and sociocultural barriers, including gender dynamics and entrenched consumer preferences. Its primary contribution is an interdisciplinary framework that integrates technical aspects, such as grid resilience and climate-related battery degradation, with socioeconomic dimensions, providing a holistic overview of EV feasibility in Egypt tailored to Egypt’s context. Key findings reveal infrastructure limitations, inconsistent policy frameworks, and behavioral skepticism as major hurdles, and highlight the untapped potential of renewable energy integration, particularly through synergies between solar PV generation (e.g., Benban Solar Park) and EV charging infrastructure. Recommendations prioritize policy reforms (e.g., tax incentives, streamlined tariffs), solar-powered charging infrastructure expansion, public awareness campaigns, and local EV manufacturing to stimulate economic growth. The study underscores the urgency of stakeholder collaboration to transform EVs into a mainstream solution, positioning Egypt as a regional leader in sustainable mobility and equitable development. Full article
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23 pages, 2274 KiB  
Review
Nature-Based Solutions for Water Management in Europe: What Works, What Does Not, and What’s Next?
by Eleonora Santos
Water 2025, 17(15), 2193; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17152193 - 23 Jul 2025
Viewed by 474
Abstract
Nature-based solutions (NbS) are increasingly recognized as strategic alternatives and complements to grey infrastructure for addressing water-related challenges in the context of climate change, urbanization, and biodiversity decline. This article presents a critical, theory-informed review of the state of NbS implementation in European [...] Read more.
Nature-based solutions (NbS) are increasingly recognized as strategic alternatives and complements to grey infrastructure for addressing water-related challenges in the context of climate change, urbanization, and biodiversity decline. This article presents a critical, theory-informed review of the state of NbS implementation in European water management, drawing on a structured synthesis of empirical evidence from regional case studies and policy frameworks. The analysis found that while NbS are effective in reducing surface runoff, mitigating floods, and improving water quality under low- to moderate-intensity events, their performance remains uncertain under extreme climate scenarios. Key gaps identified include the lack of long-term monitoring data, limited assessment of NbS under future climate conditions, and weak integration into mainstream planning and financing systems. Existing evaluation frameworks are critiqued for treating NbS as static interventions, overlooking their ecological dynamics and temporal variability. In response, a dynamic, climate-resilient assessment model is proposed—grounded in systems thinking, backcasting, and participatory scenario planning—to evaluate NbS adaptively. Emerging innovations, such as hybrid green–grey infrastructure, adaptive governance models, and novel financing mechanisms, are highlighted as key enablers for scaling NbS. The article contributes to the scientific literature by bridging theoretical and empirical insights, offering region-specific findings and recommendations based on a comparative analysis across diverse European contexts. These findings provide conceptual and methodological tools to better design, evaluate, and scale NbS for transformative, equitable, and climate-resilient water governance. Full article
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35 pages, 3265 KiB  
Article
Cyber Edge: Current State of Cybersecurity in Aotearoa-New Zealand, Opportunities, and Challenges
by Md. Rajib Hasan, Nurul I. Sarkar, Noor H. S. Alani and Raymond Lutui
Electronics 2025, 14(14), 2915; https://doi.org/10.3390/electronics14142915 - 21 Jul 2025
Viewed by 390
Abstract
This study investigates the cybersecurity landscape of Aotearoa-New Zealand through a culturally grounded lens, focusing on the integration of Indigenous Māori values into cybersecurity frameworks. In response to escalating cyber threats, the research adopts a mixed-methods and interdisciplinary approach—combining surveys, focus groups, and [...] Read more.
This study investigates the cybersecurity landscape of Aotearoa-New Zealand through a culturally grounded lens, focusing on the integration of Indigenous Māori values into cybersecurity frameworks. In response to escalating cyber threats, the research adopts a mixed-methods and interdisciplinary approach—combining surveys, focus groups, and case studies—to explore how cultural principles such as whanaungatanga (collective responsibility) and manaakitanga (care and respect) influence digital safety practices. The findings demonstrate that culturally informed strategies enhance trust, resilience, and community engagement, particularly in rural and underserved Māori communities. Quantitative analysis revealed that 63% of urban participants correctly identified phishing attempts compared to 38% of rural participants, highlighting a significant urban–rural awareness gap. Additionally, over 72% of Māori respondents indicated that cybersecurity messaging was more effective when delivered through familiar cultural channels, such as marae networks or iwi-led training programmes. Focus groups reinforced this, with participants noting stronger retention and behavioural change when cyber risks were communicated using Māori metaphors, language, or values-based analogies. The study also confirms that culturally grounded interventions—such as incorporating Māori motifs (e.g., koru, poutama) into secure interface design and using iwi structures to disseminate best practices—can align with international standards like NIST CSF and ISO 27001. This compatibility enhances stakeholder buy-in and demonstrates universal applicability in multicultural contexts. Key challenges identified include a cybersecurity talent shortage in remote areas, difficulties integrating Indigenous perspectives into mainstream policy, and persistent barriers from the digital divide. The research advocates for cross-sector collaboration among government, private industry, and Indigenous communities to co-develop inclusive, resilient cybersecurity ecosystems. Based on the UTAUT and New Zealand’s cybersecurity vision “Secure Together—Tō Tātou Korowai Manaaki 2023–2028,” this study provides a model for small nations and multicultural societies to create robust, inclusive cybersecurity frameworks. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Intelligent Solutions for Network and Cyber Security)
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17 pages, 1205 KiB  
Article
Evaluating the Characteristics of Disaster Waste Management in Practice: Case Studies from Queensland and New South Wales, Australia
by Savindi Caldera, Chamari Jayarathna and Cheryl Desha
Sustainability 2025, 17(14), 6300; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17146300 - 9 Jul 2025
Viewed by 316
Abstract
Disaster waste management (DWM) has gained much attention due to the issues associated with the enormous amount of disaster waste generated by natural disasters. However, moving beyond ad hoc and champion-based take-up by practitioners, there is generally a lack of momentum towards mainstreaming [...] Read more.
Disaster waste management (DWM) has gained much attention due to the issues associated with the enormous amount of disaster waste generated by natural disasters. However, moving beyond ad hoc and champion-based take-up by practitioners, there is generally a lack of momentum towards mainstreaming such DWM practices to achieve resilient outcomes. This study aims to explore the characteristics of DWM practices, drawing on the lived experiences of industry practitioners and government decision-makers. An interpretive case study method was used to investigate how local government organisations could readily engage in effective DWM processes using the “Resilient disaster management framework” previously established by the research team. Insights include a lack of documented plans for DWM and at best a moderate focus on recovery processes for disaster waste. With these issues counterproductive to community resilience outcomes, there is an urgent need to better manage disaster waste, which we propose can be enabled and supported through DWM plans. The extended ‘resilient DWM framework’ proposed in this study provides a useful reference to prepare practical, agile, and comprehensive DWM plans. Full article
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29 pages, 3813 KiB  
Article
Addressing Climate Resilience in the African Region: Prioritizing Mental Health and Psychosocial Well-Being in Disaster Preparedness and Response Planning for Mainstream Communities and Migrants
by Belayneh Fentahun Shibesh and Nidhi Nagabhatla
Climate 2025, 13(7), 139; https://doi.org/10.3390/cli13070139 - 3 Jul 2025
Viewed by 605
Abstract
Climate change represents a complex and multifaceted challenge for health systems, particularly in the African region, where the research has predominantly focused on physical health impacts while overlooking critical mental health dimensions. Our central hypothesis is that integrating culturally adapted mental health and [...] Read more.
Climate change represents a complex and multifaceted challenge for health systems, particularly in the African region, where the research has predominantly focused on physical health impacts while overlooking critical mental health dimensions. Our central hypothesis is that integrating culturally adapted mental health and psychosocial support (MHPSS) into climate resilience frameworks and disaster response planning will significantly reduce psychological distress (e.g., anxiety, depression, and trauma) and enhance adaptive capacities among both mainstream and migrant communities in disaster-prone African regions. This rapid review methodology systematically explores the intricate relationships between climate change, mental health, and migration by examining the existing literature and identifying significant information gaps. The key findings underscore the urgent need for targeted research and strategic interventions that specifically address mental health vulnerabilities in the context of climate change. This review highlights how extreme weather events, environmental disruptions, and forced migration create profound psychological stressors that extend beyond immediate physical health concerns. This research emphasizes the importance of developing comprehensive adaptation strategies integrating mental health considerations into broader climate response frameworks. Recommendations emerging from this assessment call for immediate and focused attention on developing specialized research, policies, and interventions that recognize the unique mental health challenges posed by climate change in African contexts. We also note the current limitations in the existing national adaptation plans, which frequently overlook mental health dimensions, thereby underscoring the necessity of a more holistic and nuanced approach to understanding climate change’s psychological impacts. In this exploratory study, we intended to provide a crucial preliminary assessment of the complex intersections between climate change, mental health, and migration, offering valuable insights for policymakers, researchers, and healthcare professionals seeking to develop more comprehensive and responsive strategies in an increasingly challenging environmental landscape. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Coping with Flooding and Drought)
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27 pages, 4101 KiB  
Article
Smart Agriculture and Technological Innovation: A Bibliometric Perspective on Digital Transformation and Sustainability
by Claudia Gherțescu, Alina Georgiana Manta and Roxana Maria Bădîrcea
Agriculture 2025, 15(13), 1388; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture15131388 - 27 Jun 2025
Viewed by 470
Abstract
Technological progress in agriculture plays an essential role in enhancing productivity, sustainability, and resilience. This study conducts a bibliometric analysis of the concept of technological progress in agriculture using data extracted from the Web of Science database for the period 1979–2025. The main [...] Read more.
Technological progress in agriculture plays an essential role in enhancing productivity, sustainability, and resilience. This study conducts a bibliometric analysis of the concept of technological progress in agriculture using data extracted from the Web of Science database for the period 1979–2025. The main aim is to identify emerging trends, the structure of collaborative networks, and the influence of research on the development of smart agriculture. The methodology is based on a co-occurrence analysis of keywords, co-author networks, and institutional and international collaborations, providing a detailed insight into the dynamics of research in this field. The results show an accelerated growth of studies on the digitization of agriculture, with a particular focus on technologies such as artificial intelligence, precision agriculture, the Internet of Things, and agricultural process automation. According to the bibliometric analysis, China accounts for the largest share of publications in this field, followed by the United States and Australia. These countries also exhibit high levels of centrality in international collaboration networks, indicating their pivotal role in knowledge production and dissemination. Europe shows a fragmented but active collaborative network, while emerging countries are starting to strengthen their position through strategic partnerships. The findings suggest the need for transdisciplinary collaborations in order to mainstream technological progress in agriculture, emphasizing the importance of policies to support technology transfer and sustainable innovation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainability and Energy Economics in Agriculture—2nd Edition)
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27 pages, 5172 KiB  
Article
Hyperband-Optimized CNN-BiLSTM with Attention Mechanism for Corporate Financial Distress Prediction
by Yingying Song, Monchaya Chiangpradit and Piyapatr Busababodhin
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(11), 5934; https://doi.org/10.3390/app15115934 - 24 May 2025
Viewed by 781
Abstract
In the context of new quality productive forces, enterprises must leverage technological innovation and intelligent management to enhance financial risk resilience. This article proposes a financial distress prediction model based on deep learning, combined with a CNN, BiLSTM, and attention mechanism, using SMOTE [...] Read more.
In the context of new quality productive forces, enterprises must leverage technological innovation and intelligent management to enhance financial risk resilience. This article proposes a financial distress prediction model based on deep learning, combined with a CNN, BiLSTM, and attention mechanism, using SMOTE for sample imbalance and Hyperband for hyperparameter optimization. Among four CNN-BiLSTM-AT model structures and seven mainstream models (CNN, BiLSTM, CNN-BiLSTM, CNN-AT, BiLSTM-AT, CNN-GRU, and Transformer), the 1CNN-1BiLSTM-AT model achieved the highest validation accuracy and relatively faster training speed. We conducted 100 repeated experiments using data from two companies, with validation on 2025 data, confirming the model’s stability and effectiveness in real-world scenarios. This article lays a solid empirical foundation for further optimization of financial distress warning models. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Computing and Artificial Intelligence)
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26 pages, 936 KiB  
Article
SC-Route: A Scalable Cross-Layer Secure Routing Method for Multi-Hop Inter-Domain Wireless Networks
by Yanbing Li, Yang Zhu and Shangpeng Wang
Mathematics 2025, 13(11), 1741; https://doi.org/10.3390/math13111741 - 24 May 2025
Viewed by 385
Abstract
Multi-hop inter-domain wireless networks play a vital role in future heterogeneous communication systems by improving data transmission efficiency and security assurance. Despite the advances in secure routing techniques in areas such as node authentication and encryption, they still suffer from the shortcomings of [...] Read more.
Multi-hop inter-domain wireless networks play a vital role in future heterogeneous communication systems by improving data transmission efficiency and security assurance. Despite the advances in secure routing techniques in areas such as node authentication and encryption, they still suffer from the shortcomings of frequent key updates, high computational overhead, and poor adaptability to large-scale dynamic topologies. To address these limitations, we propose a new routing method—the Secure Cross-Layer Route—designed for multi-hop inter-domain wireless networks to achieve unified optimization of security, delay, and throughput. First, we construct a multi-objective optimization model that integrates authentication delay, link load, and resource states, enabling balanced trade-offs between security and transmission performance in dynamic conditions. Second, we introduce a cross-layer information fusion mechanism that allows nodes to adapt routing costs in real time under heterogeneous network conditions, thereby improving path reliability and load balancing. Furthermore, a risk-aware dynamic key update strategy is developed to handle behavioral uncertainty among nodes, reducing authentication overhead and enhancing attack resilience. Experimental evaluations conducted on four datasets with varying network scales demonstrate the superior performance of the proposed method. Experimental results demonstrated that the proposed method achieves at least 28% improvement in effective throughput, reduces average authentication delay by approximately 30%, and increases the secure link ratio by at least 10%, outperforming mainstream routing algorithms under multi-constraint conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue New Advances in Network and Edge Computing)
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22 pages, 1676 KiB  
Review
Millets: Journey from an Ancient Crop to Sustainable and Healthy Food
by Mrudula M. Mohanan, Akshitha Vijayakumar, Claus Heiner Bang-Berthelsen, Kiran Kumar Mudnakudu-Nagaraju and Radhakrishna Shetty
Foods 2025, 14(10), 1733; https://doi.org/10.3390/foods14101733 - 13 May 2025
Viewed by 1870
Abstract
Millets, often known as “nutri-cereals”, have garnered renewed global interest due to their numerous health benefits, rich nutritional composition, resilience to extreme climatic conditions, and minimal environmental footprint. The advent of rice and wheat as staple foods in the 1960s led to drastic [...] Read more.
Millets, often known as “nutri-cereals”, have garnered renewed global interest due to their numerous health benefits, rich nutritional composition, resilience to extreme climatic conditions, and minimal environmental footprint. The advent of rice and wheat as staple foods in the 1960s led to drastic decline in millet cultivation worldwide. Recognizing the importance of millet, the United Nations (UN) declared 2023 as the International Year of Millets in an effort to accomplish Sustainable Development Goal 2 (SDG-2), i.e., zero hunger, by increasing millet production and fostering research and development to improve the integration of these grains into mainstream food systems. In recent years, global production of millets has surged, with India leading as the top producer. Millets are nutritionally advantageous, consisting of carbohydrates, antioxidants, and biologically active compounds such as flavonoids, carotenoids, phenolic acids, minerals, and vitamins. Incorporating millets into a balanced diet can help control and prevent diseases such as cardiovascular disease, diabetes, inflammation, and malnutrition due to their enriched vital nutrients, low glycemic index, and gluten-free nature. This indicates a transition of millets from an “orphan crop” to being used as ingredients for products (with or without fermentation) that are nutrient-rich, climate-resilient, sustainable, and health-promoting. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Feature Review on Plant Foods)
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22 pages, 8673 KiB  
Article
Analysis of the Projected Climate Impacts on the Interlinkages of Water, Energy, and Food Nexus Resources in Narok County, Kenya, and Vhembe District Municipality, South Africa
by Nosipho Zwane, Joel O. Botai, Siyabonga H. Nozwane, Aphinda Jabe, Christina M. Botai, Lucky Dlamini, Luxon Nhamo, Sylvester Mpandeli, Brilliant Petja, Motochi Isaac and Tafadzwanashe Mabhaudhi
Water 2025, 17(10), 1449; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17101449 - 11 May 2025
Viewed by 873
Abstract
The current changing climate requires the development of water–energy–food (WEF) nexus-oriented systems capable of mainstreaming climate-smart innovations into resource management. This study demonstrates the cross-sectoral impacts of climate change on interlinked sectors of water, energy, and food in Narok County, Kenya, and Vhembe [...] Read more.
The current changing climate requires the development of water–energy–food (WEF) nexus-oriented systems capable of mainstreaming climate-smart innovations into resource management. This study demonstrates the cross-sectoral impacts of climate change on interlinked sectors of water, energy, and food in Narok County, Kenya, and Vhembe District, South Africa. This study used projected hydroclimatic extremes across past, present, and future scenarios to examine potential effects on the availability and accessibility of these essential resources. The projected temperature and rainfall are based on nine dynamically downscaled Coupled Model Intercomparison Project Phase 5 (CMIP 5) of the Global Climate Models (GCMs). The model outputs were derived from two IPCC “Representative Concentration Pathways (RCPs)’’, the RCP 4.5 “moderate scenario”, and RCP 8.5 “business as usual scenario”, also defined as the addition of 4.5 W/m2 and 8.5 W/m2 radiative forcing in the atmosphere, respectively, by the year 2100. For the climate change projections, outputs from the historical period (1976–2005) and projected time intervals spanning the near future, defined as the period starting from 2036 to 2065, and the far future, spanning from 2066 to 2095, were considered. An ensemble model to increase the skill, reliability, and consistency of output was formulated from the nine models. The statistical bias correction based on quantile mapping using seven ground-based observation data from the South African Weather Services (SAWS) for Limpopo province and nine ground-based observation data acquired from the Trans-African Hydro-Meteorological Observatory (TAHMO) for Narok were used to correct the systematic biases. Results indicate downscaled climate change scenarios and integrate a modelling framework designed to depict the perceptions of future climate change impacts on communities based on questionnaires and first-hand accounts. Furthermore, the analysis points to concerted efforts of multi-stakeholder engagement, the access and use of technology, understanding the changing business environment, integrated government and private sector partnerships, and the co-development of community resilience options, including climate change adaptation and mitigation in the changing climate. The conceptual climate and WEF resource modelling framework confirmed that future climate change will have noticeable interlinked impacts on WEF resources that will impact the livelihoods of vulnerable communities. Building the resilience of communities can be achieved through transformative WEF nexus solutions that are inclusive, sustainable, equitable, and balance adaptation and mitigation goals to ensure a just and sustainable future for all. Full article
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21 pages, 14050 KiB  
Article
Bitcoin vs. the US Dollar: Unveiling Resilience Through Wavelet Analysis of Price Dynamics
by Essa Al-Mansouri
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2025, 18(5), 259; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm18050259 - 9 May 2025
Viewed by 2921
Abstract
This paper investigates Bitcoin’s resilience against the U.S. dollar—widely recognized as the global reserve currency—by applying a multi-method wavelet analysis framework to daily price data of Bitcoin, the USD strength index (DXY), the euro, and other assets ranging from August 2015 to June [...] Read more.
This paper investigates Bitcoin’s resilience against the U.S. dollar—widely recognized as the global reserve currency—by applying a multi-method wavelet analysis framework to daily price data of Bitcoin, the USD strength index (DXY), the euro, and other assets ranging from August 2015 to June 2024. Quantitative measures—particularly the Frobenius norm of wavelet coherence and an exponential decay phase-weighting scheme—reveal that Bitcoin’s out-of-phase relationship with the dollar is lower and more sporadic than that of mainstream assets, indicating it is not tightly governed by dollar fluctuations. Even after controlling for the euro’s dominant influence in the DXY, BTC continues to show weaker coupling than mainstream assets—reinforcing the idea that it may serve as a partial hedge against dollar-driven volatility. These results support the hypothesis that Bitcoin may serve as a resilient store of value and hedge against dollar-driven market volatility, placing Bitcoin within the broader debate on global monetary frameworks. As global monetary conditions evolve, the resilience of Bitcoin (BTC) relative to the world’s leading reserve currency—the U.S. dollar—has significant implications for both investors and policymakers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Risk Management and Return Predictability in Global Markets)
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40 pages, 5081 KiB  
Article
Social Network Analysis of Information Flow and Opinion Formation on Indonesian Social Media: A Case Study of Youth Violence
by Irwanto Irwanto, Tuti Bahfiarti, Andi Alimuddin Unde and Alem Febri Sonni
Adolescents 2025, 5(2), 18; https://doi.org/10.3390/adolescents5020018 - 30 Apr 2025
Viewed by 1961
Abstract
This study examines the dynamics of information dissemination and opinion formation in Indonesian social media through a comprehensive analysis of a high-profile youth violence case. Using social network analysis (SNA), we analyzed 264,155 activities from 83,097 accounts on platform X (formerly Twitter) to [...] Read more.
This study examines the dynamics of information dissemination and opinion formation in Indonesian social media through a comprehensive analysis of a high-profile youth violence case. Using social network analysis (SNA), we analyzed 264,155 activities from 83,097 accounts on platform X (formerly Twitter) to understand the patterns of information flow, cluster formation, and inter-group interactions. The analysis revealed four distinct clusters with unique characteristics: a dominant support cluster (40.12%), a context-focused cluster (26.93%), a mainstream media cluster (14.14%), and a peripheral engagement cluster (6.05%). This study found significant patterns in information dissemination, with retweets dominating at 68% of total activities and strategic hashtag usage at 28%. Cross-cluster interactions comprised 20% of total activities, challenging assumptions about echo chambers in digital discourse. The network showed high resilience with 85% path reliability and demonstrated a consistent multiplier effect with a 1:5:15 ratio in message amplification. Bridge nodes (10–15% of accounts) played crucial roles in facilitating cross-cluster dialogue and maintaining network cohesion. The temporal evolution of discourse showed distinct phases, from initial factual reporting to later systemic analysis, with each phase characterized by different engagement patterns and narrative focuses. These findings extend existing theoretical frameworks while highlighting the need for more culturally nuanced approaches to understanding digital discourse in contexts of collectivist cultural dimensions. This study’s results have significant implications for digital literacy education, social media intervention strategies, and youth violence prevention efforts, suggesting the need for sophisticated, network-aware approaches that consider both structural dynamics and cultural contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Risky Behaviors in Social Media and Metaverse Use during Adolescence)
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17 pages, 313 KiB  
Perspective
A Critical Theoretical Approach to Sport-Based Youth Development Research: Yosso’s Community Cultural Wealth Framework
by Doo Jae Park, Wonjun Choi, Wonju Lee and NaRi Shin
Youth 2025, 5(2), 40; https://doi.org/10.3390/youth5020040 - 24 Apr 2025
Viewed by 1021
Abstract
This paper proposes the application of Yosso’s Community Cultural Wealth (CCW) framework, rooted in the critical race theory (CRT), as a transformative lens for sport-based youth development (SBYD) research. Moving beyond traditional deficit-based models, which often depict youth as problematic or at-risk, CCW [...] Read more.
This paper proposes the application of Yosso’s Community Cultural Wealth (CCW) framework, rooted in the critical race theory (CRT), as a transformative lens for sport-based youth development (SBYD) research. Moving beyond traditional deficit-based models, which often depict youth as problematic or at-risk, CCW emphasizes recognizing and building upon the cultural strengths and assets of marginalized youth. We begin by reviewing the development of theoretical applications within the youth development, positive youth development (PYD), and SBYD literature to highlight the criticisms against conventional deficit-focused approaches. CCW offers an asset-oriented lens by offering six forms of capital—aspirational, linguistic, familial, social, navigational, and resistant—that are typically overlooked in mainstream frameworks. We illustrate how these forms of capital can reposition SBYD programs as spaces for cultivating resilience, identity, and social justice while addressing systemic inequities. By incorporating CCW with participatory research methods and critical theories, such as intersectionality and CRT, researchers can broaden the theoretical and methodological scope of SBYD. This paper concludes by suggesting practical implications for program design, organizational advocacy, and policy development, advocating for culturally responsive, community-led initiatives that prioritize the active engagement and empowerment of marginalized youth. In sum, CCW provides the “why” for critical SBYD research and practice. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Critical Approaches to Youth Development through Sport)
23 pages, 6397 KiB  
Article
Resilience Enhancement Paths Assessment Based on City Networks Synergistic Response Under Disaster Strike—A Case Study of Yangtze River Delta City Cluster
by Longbin Kou, Hanping Zhao, Ye Yang and Xiao Zhang
Land 2025, 14(4), 752; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14040752 - 1 Apr 2025
Viewed by 493
Abstract
In the face of increasingly polarized disasters, interregional synergistic emergency responses have become a mainstream means of enhancing disaster response and recovery. Given the holistic and networked nature of city clusters under regional synergy, it is necessary to fully consider the balance between [...] Read more.
In the face of increasingly polarized disasters, interregional synergistic emergency responses have become a mainstream means of enhancing disaster response and recovery. Given the holistic and networked nature of city clusters under regional synergy, it is necessary to fully consider the balance between the overall region and individual cities when analyzing regional resilience enhancement. Taking the Yangtze River Delta (YRD) city cluster as the study area, this study proposes three resilience enhancement paths under the perspective of network synergy, including promoting the resource allocation of cities, strengthening the development of inter-city transportation systems, and improving the integration of sub-metropolitan areas. The dynamic resilience status of the whole city cluster system and each individual city under three enhancement paths are compared based on synergistic network simulation. Firstly, the optimal resilience model is for each city to allocate 60% of its resources for self-recovery and invest 40% of its resources for other recovery. Secondly, among the existing transportation planning policies, railway development will more significantly enhance YRD’s resilience. Thirdly, for the resilient impact of the integration of the six metropolitan areas, the Shanghai metropolitan area has the most significant influence. Full article
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