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Search Results (534)

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12 pages, 234 KB  
Article
Beyond the Lockdown Kitchen: Young Adult Dietary Choices at the Crossroads of Convenience and Health
by Alice Yip, Wing Kiu Shek, Yee Man Kiki Lee, Ka Ka Lau, Shuk Wai Sip, Tsz Wing Lam, Suet Ching Cheung and Fei Lung Tang
Hygiene 2026, 6(1), 15; https://doi.org/10.3390/hygiene6010015 - 18 Mar 2026
Viewed by 97
Abstract
Background: In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the dietary landscapes of young adults have been profoundly reshaped. As social restrictions ease, the resurgence of dining out presents new behavioral shifts regarding health and safety. Objective: This study investigates the post-pandemic experiences of [...] Read more.
Background: In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, the dietary landscapes of young adults have been profoundly reshaped. As social restrictions ease, the resurgence of dining out presents new behavioral shifts regarding health and safety. Objective: This study investigates the post-pandemic experiences of young adults in Hong Kong, focusing on the burgeoning phenomenon of eating out of home and its complex influence on eating habits and food hygiene consciousness. Methods: This qualitative study utilized a phenomenological approach to explore participants’ lived experiences. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 12 young adults in Hong Kong to gather narratives regarding their dining practices. The data were analyzed using thematic analysis to identify recurring patterns associated with their return to public dining spaces. Results: Three core themes emerged: (i) confined palates: the remaking of the Hong Kong meal in the shadow of a pandemic; (ii) shared screen: mediating hunger from the home-as-hub; and (iii) watchful guard: the moralization of the meal amidst viral uncertainty. Conclusions: These findings dissect the critical, evolving relationship between contemporary consumption patterns and health maintenance. While the small size limits statistical generalizability, the study suggests that post-pandemic dining involves a modified reality of sustained hypervigilance. These insights offer a basis for developing sensitive and targeted public health strategies that resonate with the altered dietary realities of young adults in a post-pandemic world. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Health Promotion, Social and Behavioral Determinants)
16 pages, 614 KB  
Article
Loan Defaults and Credit Risk in Microfinance
by Perpetual Andam Boiquaye, Bernadette Aidoo and Samuel Asante Gyamerah
Risks 2026, 14(3), 66; https://doi.org/10.3390/risks14030066 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 139
Abstract
This study investigates the probability of consumer default across both secured and unsecured assets, with a particular focus on borrower behavior and the role of moral hazard in shaping individual credit risk. It examines how different borrower decisions, such as investing in secured [...] Read more.
This study investigates the probability of consumer default across both secured and unsecured assets, with a particular focus on borrower behavior and the role of moral hazard in shaping individual credit risk. It examines how different borrower decisions, such as investing in secured and unsecured projects after loan disbursement, affect default outcomes, especially under limited lender supervision. The Ornstein–Uhlenbeck process is used to capture the dynamics of risky asset returns and identifies the conditions under which borrowers are likely to switch from safer to riskier investments. We assume that borrowers may allocate loan funds to both secured and unsecured projects, thereby recognizing that credit risk assessment inherently involves behavioral factors that are difficult to quantify. Monte Carlo simulations are used to assess how return volatility influences borrower decision-making, showing that higher uncertainty increases the probability of returns exceeding the repayment obligation, thereby incentivizing risk-shifting behavior. The results indicate that unsecured lending is more exposed to strategic risk shifting and experiences more frequent and severe default outcomes than secured lending. As a result, this study recommends that microfinance institutions prioritize collateral-backed lending as a more effective strategy for mitigating credit risk and reducing exposure to borrower opportunism. Full article
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32 pages, 1189 KB  
Article
From Sustainability Awareness to Sustainable Consumption Behavior Among Sports Science Students: The Serial Mediating Roles of Attitudes and Perceived Global Social Responsibility
by Uğur Caba, Sevim Kır, Mehmet Behzat Turan, Osman Pepe, Tekmil Sezen Soyal, Burcu Sanin, İbrahim Dalbudak and Mert Armut
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 2827; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18062827 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 197
Abstract
Background: This study aims to examine the relationship between sustainability consciousness and sustainable consumption behavior among sports science students and to reveal the serial mediating roles of attitudes toward sustainable development and perceived global social responsibility in this relationship. Methods: The sample consisted [...] Read more.
Background: This study aims to examine the relationship between sustainability consciousness and sustainable consumption behavior among sports science students and to reveal the serial mediating roles of attitudes toward sustainable development and perceived global social responsibility in this relationship. Methods: The sample consisted of 758 university students from different sports science departments who voluntarily participated in the study and were recruited through convenience sampling. Data were collected using a personal information form, the Sustainability Consciousness Scale, the Attitudes of Sustainable Development Scale, the Global Social Responsibility Scale, and the Sustainable Consumption Behavior Scale. Data were analyzed using SPSS software, including descriptive statistics, tests of normality, Pearson correlation, and regression analyses. Serial mediation effects were tested using the PROCESS Macro Model 6 developed by Hayes with the bootstrap method, and sample adequacy was confirmed through Monte Carlo simulation-based power analysis. Results: The findings demonstrated significant relationships between sustainability consciousness and sustainable consumption behavior. Attitudes toward sustainable development and global social responsibility were found to play significant mediating roles in this relationship, both independently and sequentially. Conclusions: The results indicate that sustainable consumption behaviors are shaped not only by cognitive awareness but also through attitudinal and moral social processes, providing a strong scientific basis for sustainability-oriented educational policies in sports science education. Full article
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12 pages, 190 KB  
Opinion
When Advice Becomes Infrastructure: Ethical Governance of Conversational AI in Psychoactive Substance Information Ecosystems
by Jaewon Lee
Psychoactives 2026, 5(1), 6; https://doi.org/10.3390/psychoactives5010006 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 118
Abstract
Public debates about psychoactive substances have traditionally been organized around the pharmacology of compounds and the institutional control of supply. In digitally mediated societies, however, the pathways through which people encounter psychoactives are increasingly informational: search engines, recommender systems, social platforms, and—distinctively—conversational AI. [...] Read more.
Public debates about psychoactive substances have traditionally been organized around the pharmacology of compounds and the institutional control of supply. In digitally mediated societies, however, the pathways through which people encounter psychoactives are increasingly informational: search engines, recommender systems, social platforms, and—distinctively—conversational AI. These systems do not merely deliver neutral facts. They rank, frame, personalize, and conversationally validate claims in ways that can shape perceived norms, acceptable risk thresholds, and willingness to seek help. This opinion advances the concept of AI-mediated exposure to capture how algorithmic curation and interactive dialogue become upstream determinants of psychoactive-related harms and benefits across the continuum from everyday medicines to non-medical use. From a social-scientific ethics perspective, the central question is not whether AI is “good” or “bad,” but what obligations apply when AI performs interpretive authority in contexts characterized by vulnerability, stigma, and unequal access to trusted expertise. The paper argues for an ethics-centered governance framework grounded in four commitments: epistemic responsibility (how claims are generated, warranted, and communicated), relational responsibility (how users are treated in moments of uncertainty, distress, and stigma), distributive justice (who benefits and who bears risk under unequal conditions), and accountability (how behavior is evaluated, contested, and corrected over time). The aim is to treat conversational AI as a public-facing institution whose design choices must be ethically legible and publicly contestable, oriented toward harm reduction without intensifying surveillance, moralization, or inequity. Full article
18 pages, 1388 KB  
Article
How Guilt Shapes Public Health Compliance: Distinct Moral–Emotional Pathways During the COVID-19 Pandemic
by Carolina Papa, Alessandra Mancini, Barbara Basile, Katia Tenore and Francesco Mancini
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(3), 177; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15030177 - 10 Mar 2026
Viewed by 258
Abstract
The COVID-19 pandemic posed unprecedented challenges, requiring compliance with public health measures. Notably, guilt is a powerful motivator for rule adherence; however, different types of guilt could have fueled the decision to stay home. This study investigated how guilt propensity influenced Italians’ self-reported [...] Read more.
The COVID-19 pandemic posed unprecedented challenges, requiring compliance with public health measures. Notably, guilt is a powerful motivator for rule adherence; however, different types of guilt could have fueled the decision to stay home. This study investigated how guilt propensity influenced Italians’ self-reported motivations for adhering to containment rules. The propensity to different types of guilt, namely deontological and altruistic, was assessed in a total of 393 participants (261 females, 66.4%; 132 males, 33.6%; M age = 34.4, SD = 12.6) in May 2020, between the first and the second phases of Italian lockdown. The survey assessed four guilt dispositions—Moral Norm Violation (MNV), Moral Dirtiness (MODI), Harm-based guilt (HARM), and Empathy-based guilt (EMPATHY)—alongside fear of COVID-19, trust in authorities, and motivations for rule compliance (e.g., protecting one’s own and others’ well-being, respecting authorities, and avoiding sanctions). MNV emerged as a positive predictor of prosocial, authority-based and personal motivations, whereas MODI predicted lower prosocial motivation. HARM selectively predicted prosocial motivation and was negatively associated with authority-based motivations, while EMPATHY negatively predicted self-focused motivations. Moderation analyses revealed small but significant interaction effects, indicating that fear of COVID-19 slightly amplified the influence of EMPATHY and attenuated the effect of HARM, whereas trust in authorities strengthened the link between EMPATHY and prosocial compliance and reduced the association between MNV and prosocial motivations. These findings suggest that compliance during the pandemic was shaped by distinct emotional–moral pathways and that the motivational impact of guilt depends on perceived threat and institutional trust, highlighting the relevance of specific guilt profiles in promoting cooperative and health-protective behaviors. Full article
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27 pages, 2555 KB  
Article
Tourist Ethics and Environmental Awareness Under Overtourism Pressure: A Systematic Review and Qualitative Study of Behavioral Intention
by Diena M. Lemy, Juliana Juliana, Henricus Kurniawan Elang Kusumo and Reagan Brian
Societies 2026, 16(3), 87; https://doi.org/10.3390/soc16030087 - 9 Mar 2026
Viewed by 609
Abstract
Overtourism has intensified socio-environmental pressures in popular destinations, raising concerns about ethical responsibility and sustainable behavior among tourism actors and visitors. In this study, we explored how environmental awareness and ethical values shape behavioral intentions under overtourism pressure by combining a systematic literature [...] Read more.
Overtourism has intensified socio-environmental pressures in popular destinations, raising concerns about ethical responsibility and sustainable behavior among tourism actors and visitors. In this study, we explored how environmental awareness and ethical values shape behavioral intentions under overtourism pressure by combining a systematic literature review with qualitative field data from Bali. Through a PRISMA-based review of 100 peer-reviewed journal articles published between 2015 and 2024, we synthesized evidence on environmental ethics, responsible tourism, and pro-environmental behavioral mechanisms. The review reveals that increasing scholarly attention is being paid to ethical norms, emotional engagement, and contextual constraints but shows that there is limited empirical understanding of how these factors are experienced in practice by local actors and domestic tourists. To address this gap, qualitative interviews were conducted with three key stakeholders, including accommodation and tourism service providers, and 10 domestic tourists. Thematic analysis identifies three interrelated mechanisms influencing behavioral intention: (a) recognition of environmental risk and destination vulnerability, (b) ethical reasoning and sense of collective responsibility, and (c) structural barriers shaped by convenience, economic pressures, and weak governance. While participants express strong environmental awareness and moral concern, behavioral intentions are often constrained by limited information, the perceived ineffectiveness of individual actions, and a lack of regulatory enforcement. This study contributes to the sociological literature on sustainable tourism by elucidating how ethics and awareness translate into intention under overtourism pressure. We report the practical implications for ethical communication, stakeholder collaboration, and participatory governance. Full article
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24 pages, 836 KB  
Systematic Review
Tax Evasion and the Informal Economy in Greece: A Systematic Review
by Aristidis Bitzenis, Nikos Koutsoupias and Marios Nosios
Businesses 2026, 6(1), 14; https://doi.org/10.3390/businesses6010014 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 294
Abstract
This study investigates tax evasion and the informal economy in Greece through an integrated research design that combines bibliometric analysis with large-scale survey data to examine both the structure of scholarly discourse and public perceptions of economic non-compliance. The analysis integrates a bibliometric [...] Read more.
This study investigates tax evasion and the informal economy in Greece through an integrated research design that combines bibliometric analysis with large-scale survey data to examine both the structure of scholarly discourse and public perceptions of economic non-compliance. The analysis integrates a bibliometric analysis of the academic literature with survey data from 1074 respondents, enabling patterns of scholarly attention to be assessed alongside public evaluations of institutional performance and economic behavior. The bibliometric findings indicate that academic research is organized around Greece and the tax system as central reference points, while governance-related themes such as transparency and public policy occupy comparatively peripheral positions within the thematic landscape, suggesting a field structured predominantly around country-specific institutional analysis. The survey results reveal a broadly comparable configuration, with political institutions, corruption, and tax evasion identified among the most salient national problems. Respondents differentiate among distinct forms of economic non-compliance and attribute tax evasion primarily to systemic factors, including high taxation, perceived injustice, ineffective revenue management, and corruption, rather than to individual moral failings. Overall, tax evasion in Greece is thus evaluated predominantly in institutional and governance-related terms. Future research could extend this approach through longitudinal bibliometric mapping, multivariate survey modelling, and sectoral or regional comparative analyses. Full article
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25 pages, 337 KB  
Article
A Belief Model for BDI Agents Derived from Roles and Personality Traits
by Eduardo David Martínez-Hernández, Bárbara María-Esther García-Morales, María Lucila Morales-Rodríguez, Claudia Guadalupe Gómez-Santillán and Nelson Rangel-Valdez
Math. Comput. Appl. 2026, 31(2), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/mca31020037 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 255
Abstract
Recent advancements in AI have enabled autonomous agents to interact within complex environments, with deliberative BDI (Belief–Desire–Intention) agents standing out for their human-inspired reasoning capabilities. However, defining the initial beliefs that constitute an agent’s cognitive profile remains a significant challenge. This process often [...] Read more.
Recent advancements in AI have enabled autonomous agents to interact within complex environments, with deliberative BDI (Belief–Desire–Intention) agents standing out for their human-inspired reasoning capabilities. However, defining the initial beliefs that constitute an agent’s cognitive profile remains a significant challenge. This process often relies on manual approaches that limit scalability and validation. This study proposes the Personality–Role–Belief (P–R–B) Model for BDI agents, introducing a novel architecture for generating cognitive profiles applicable to domains such as social simulation and non-player characters (NPCs). The model translates Five-Factor Model (FFM) scores into specific social roles, assigning base beliefs to each. A key contribution is a weighting mechanism designed to resolve conflicts between beliefs when multiple roles coexist. Inspired by Cohen’s effect size conventions, this mechanism establishes an influence hierarchy that quantifies belief strength based on social roles. Consequently, this approach not only enables agents to exhibit coherent behavior consistent with their personality but also establishes a foundation for modeling ethical decision-making through role–trait alignment, thereby facilitating the creation of agents capable of navigating morally complex social contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Numerical and Evolutionary Optimization 2025)
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19 pages, 988 KB  
Article
A Psychoanalytically Informed Pilot Study of Moral Competence in German Young Adults Linked to Personality Structure and Parenting Experiences
by Aslı Akın, Holger von der Lippe, Jonathan Henssler, Inge Seiffge-Krenke, Stephan Doering and Stefan Gutwinski
Behav. Sci. 2026, 16(3), 341; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs16030341 - 28 Feb 2026
Viewed by 261
Abstract
The present pilot study explored associations between moral competence, personality structure and perceived parenting experiences. While previous research on moral competence has mainly emphasized educational and cognitive determinants, this work represents a novel psychoanalytically informed investigation of this ability. A sample of 88 [...] Read more.
The present pilot study explored associations between moral competence, personality structure and perceived parenting experiences. While previous research on moral competence has mainly emphasized educational and cognitive determinants, this work represents a novel psychoanalytically informed investigation of this ability. A sample of 88 young adults aged 18 to 21 completed an online survey including the Moral Competence-Test, OPD-Structure-Questionnaire, and Zurich Brief Questionnaire for the Assessment of Parental Behaviors. Exploratory analyses revealed a positive association between moral competence and overall integration of personality structure. Perceived parenting behaviors showed observable relationships with both constructs: warm and supportive parenting was associated with higher structural integration and greater moral competence, whereas parental control, particularly psychological control, was linked to lower personality structural and moral abilities. An exploratory mediation analysis further suggested that paternal warmth may indirectly affect moral competence via personality structure. This finding aligns with psychoanalytic theory proposing that father–child experiences, conceptualized as triangulation, create a cognitive and emotional space that fosters reflection and the development of moral competence. Overall, these exploratory findings underscore the need for longitudinal research examining the interplay between parenting experiences, personality structure, and moral development. Full article
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15 pages, 787 KB  
Article
Psychological Drivers of Carbon Offset Choice and Spending in Air Travel: Extension of the Value–Belief–Norm Framework
by Jakkawat Laphet and Karun Kidrakarn
Tour. Hosp. 2026, 7(3), 62; https://doi.org/10.3390/tourhosp7030062 - 25 Feb 2026
Viewed by 321
Abstract
This study investigates the psychological mechanisms underlying tourists’ carbon offset behavior in air travel by distinguishing between offset choice (OC) and offset spending (OS). Grounded in the Value–Belief–Norm (VBN) framework, the model integrates Environmental Value and Literacy (EVL), Green Identity and Social Motives [...] Read more.
This study investigates the psychological mechanisms underlying tourists’ carbon offset behavior in air travel by distinguishing between offset choice (OC) and offset spending (OS). Grounded in the Value–Belief–Norm (VBN) framework, the model integrates Environmental Value and Literacy (EVL), Green Identity and Social Motives (GISM), Trust and Risk Perception (TRP), Personal Norm Activation (PNA), and Perceived Effectiveness (PEF). Data were collected onsite from 500 international and domestic tourists at Suvarnabhumi International Airport, Thailand, between June and July 2025, and analyzed using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM). The results indicate that EVL and GISM significantly enhance both PNA and PEF, which in turn exert strong positive effects on OC and OS. PNA emerges as the strongest predictor of both participation and financial commitment, highlighting the central role of moral obligation in motivating carbon offset behavior. While TRP significantly strengthens personal moral norms, its direct effect on Perceived Effectiveness is not significant, suggesting that trust primarily operates through ethical pathways rather than cognitive evaluations of program effectiveness. By distinguishing between participation decisions and spending behavior, this study extends VBN theory to the context of carbon offsets in aviation and demonstrates the mediating roles of moral norms and Perceived Effectiveness in translating environmental values and social identity into compensatory climate action. The findings offer practical implications for airlines and policymakers, emphasizing the importance of moral framing, transparency, and social identity engagement to promote voluntary carbon offset adoption in emerging carbon markets. Full article
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15 pages, 255 KB  
Article
Exploring the Interpretive Clarity of the TCCNI-RePract and Identifying Conceptual Barriers Encountered by Japanese Psychiatric Nurses: A Concurrent Mixed-Methods Study
by Yoshiyuki Takashima, Gil Platon Soriano, Allan Paulo Blaquera, Hirokazu Ito, Yuko Yasuhara, Kyoko Osaka and Tetsuya Tanioka
Nurs. Rep. 2026, 16(3), 77; https://doi.org/10.3390/nursrep16030077 - 24 Feb 2026
Viewed by 277
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Integrating technology with caring is essential in modern healthcare, yet the clinical applicability of nursing theories remains underexplored. Locsin’s Technological Competency as Caring in Nursing (TCCN) theory emphasizes the competent use of technology to address patients holistically, rather than focusing solely [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Integrating technology with caring is essential in modern healthcare, yet the clinical applicability of nursing theories remains underexplored. Locsin’s Technological Competency as Caring in Nursing (TCCN) theory emphasizes the competent use of technology to address patients holistically, rather than focusing solely on health concerns. Here, we explored the interpretive clarity of the TCCN Instrument–Revised for Practice (TCCNI-RePract) items and identified the conceptual barriers encountered by psychiatric nurses when engaging with its theoretical constructs. Methods: This concurrent mixed-methods study surveyed 291 psychiatric nurses across five large hospitals in the Kansai region of Japan. Quantitative data on the TCCNI-RePract perception dimension were examined using descriptive statistics and normality testing. Qualitative open-ended responses were analyzed using reflexive thematic analysis. To ensure rigor and integration, a joint display was utilized to bridge both data strands. Results: Quantitative findings indicated that nurses strongly endorsed core values of caring (high agreement) but perceived theoretical constructs (wholeness and technological knowing) as significantly more difficult to interpret than concrete, behavior-oriented items. Qualitative analysis revealed four major themes: (1) fragmented understanding of “technology and caring,” (2) struggles with abstract and philosophical language, (3) moral and emotional tensions in caring relationships, and (4) contextual barriers to integrating caring and technology. We found a “semantic gap,” where the professional endorsement of caring values was not automatically translated into the mastery of theoretical lexicon. Conclusions: While psychiatric nurses identify with the moral core of TCCN, a substantial gap exists between abstract theory and clinical practice. For effectiveness, middle-range theories require “clinical translation” that resonates with the moral, emotional, and organizational realities of psychiatric settings. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Psychiatric Nursing and Mental Health Service)
21 pages, 1834 KB  
Article
Compensatory Health Beliefs as a Double-Edged Sword: A Dual-Path Model of Licensing and Cognitive Erosion in Multiple Health Behaviors
by Xueyi Gu and Yueqin Hu
Behav. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 301; https://doi.org/10.3390/bs16020301 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 254
Abstract
Compensatory Health Beliefs (CHBs) are cognitions that the negative effects of unhealthy behaviors can be offset by healthy ones. While their role in single behaviors is established, their mechanisms in regulating multiple health behaviors remain empirically unclear, particularly whether CHBs facilitate or inhibit [...] Read more.
Compensatory Health Beliefs (CHBs) are cognitions that the negative effects of unhealthy behaviors can be offset by healthy ones. While their role in single behaviors is established, their mechanisms in regulating multiple health behaviors remain empirically unclear, particularly whether CHBs facilitate or inhibit actual cross-behavior compensation between physical activity (PA) and healthy eating (HE). This study tested a dual-path model proposing that CHBs are associated with immediate intention compensation via moral licensing and with long-term cross-behavior inhibition through reduced self-efficacy. A cross-sectional online survey of 366 university students assessed general CHBs, domain-specific social cognitive variables (self-efficacy, intention, planning), and self-reported PA (IPAQ-SF) and HE (calculated from reported food consumption as a dietary guideline adherence score). Data were analyzed using Structural Equation Modeling. We found that CHBs were positively associated with PA intention but negatively linked to HE intention, planning, and behavior. CHBs were also negatively related to HE self-efficacy, which was subsequently associated with lower PA planning, indicating a cross-behavior inhibition pathway. In conclusion, CHBs are linked to lower health behavior engagement through two pathways: short-term intention-based licensing across domains and self-efficacy erosion that inhibits integrated planning. This integrated model highlights the importance of addressing both CHBs and self-efficacy in health interventions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Psychological Mechanisms of Health Behavior in Contemporary Contexts)
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22 pages, 722 KB  
Article
Islamic Bankers’ Niyyah Toward Green Sukuk for Attaining Sustainable Finance: Evidence from Bangladesh
by Mohammad Ali Ashraf, Mir Rafiul Islam Ratul and Md. Kaium Hossain
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(2), 159; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19020159 - 20 Feb 2026
Viewed by 613
Abstract
This study investigates the factors associated with niyyah (worshipful intention) of Islamic bankers toward issuing green sukuk (G-sukuk) investment instruments. In particular, it analyses how bankers’ empathy, moral and ethical responsibilities, and self-efficacy are related with environmental awareness, perceived social support, [...] Read more.
This study investigates the factors associated with niyyah (worshipful intention) of Islamic bankers toward issuing green sukuk (G-sukuk) investment instruments. In particular, it analyses how bankers’ empathy, moral and ethical responsibilities, and self-efficacy are related with environmental awareness, perceived social support, and green tech innovation, respectively. These factors then predicted bankers’ niyyah toward issuing G-sukuk. The present research employed the theory of bounded rational planned behavior as its theoretical foundation. Data were collected from 390 bankers employed in different Islamic banks. Random sampling technique was employed for this cross-sectional study and for analyzing data, this study applied structural equation modeling. Findings indicate that all predictors are statistically significant and positively associated with bankers’ niyyah toward G-sukuk for ensuring sustainable finance. Furthermore, G-sukuk initiatives can help to lower the carbon emissions and other harmful substances, which would improve overall environmental sustainability and ecological contexts related to SDG-13. There is limited empirical evidence available on the G-sukuk perspective in Bangladesh. This study will provide practical insights for the bankers and policymakers. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Finance and Corporate Responsibility)
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34 pages, 832 KB  
Article
The Moral Architecture of Green Performance: Building Sequential Identity from Values and Virtues to Sustained Action in Hospitality
by Wagih M. E. Salama, Moataz Bellah Farid, Mohamed Ahmed Suliman and Samy Wageh Mahmoud
Sustainability 2026, 18(4), 2044; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18042044 - 17 Feb 2026
Viewed by 331
Abstract
This study addresses a critical gap in sustainable human resource management research by examining the psychological mechanisms through which Green Human Resource Management (GHRM) influences Sustainable Employee Performance in hospitality organizations. Data were collected through a two-wave time-lagged design from 392 hotel employees [...] Read more.
This study addresses a critical gap in sustainable human resource management research by examining the psychological mechanisms through which Green Human Resource Management (GHRM) influences Sustainable Employee Performance in hospitality organizations. Data were collected through a two-wave time-lagged design from 392 hotel employees in Egypt’s hospitality sector. Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM) was employed to test direct effects, parallel mediation, and sequential mediation pathways. The results reveal that GHRM significantly shapes both Moral Self and Moral Integrity, which in turn drive Sustainable Employee Performance. The sequential mediation pathway through which GHRM influences Moral Self, subsequently cultivating Moral Integrity and ultimately enhancing performance, was strongly supported, with approximately 81% of GHRM’s total effect operating through these moral identity mechanisms. Sustainable performance was found to be explained by over 61% of variance in the model, illustrating substantial predictive validity, thus confirming that moral identity is the central psychological conduit for the direct effect of the organizational sustainability system on employee behavior. Full article
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25 pages, 337 KB  
Article
Acts of Good Neighborliness as Pathways to Social Cohesion in South African Communities
by Nicolette V. Roman, Olaniyi J. Olabiyi, Tolulope V. Balogun, Dominique Caswell, Janine De Lange, Anja Human-Hendricks, Fundiswa T. Khaile and Kezia R. October
Societies 2026, 16(2), 66; https://doi.org/10.3390/soc16020066 - 15 Feb 2026
Viewed by 617
Abstract
Cohesion among individuals reflects the quality of relationships and interpersonal interaction within a community. Elements such as social connections, trust, and a sense of belonging serve as key indicators of societal cohesion and are often rooted in acts of good neighborliness. Despite this, [...] Read more.
Cohesion among individuals reflects the quality of relationships and interpersonal interaction within a community. Elements such as social connections, trust, and a sense of belonging serve as key indicators of societal cohesion and are often rooted in acts of good neighborliness. Despite this, limited knowledge exists regarding perceptions and behaviors related to good neighborliness within South African society. The present study examines how perceptions and practices of good neighborliness contribute to the development of cohesive communities. Research was conducted in four South African communities: Philippolis, Lambert’s Bay, Caledon, and Grabouw. Utilizing an interpretivist approach, the study adopted a qualitative methodology involving interviews with 25 participants, including family members and community stakeholders. Data were collected through in-depth interviews, and thematic analysis facilitated the identification of recurring patterns and key themes. The principal themes identified were everyday mutual support and practical assistance, moral norms and values of care, social familiarity and community connectedness, trust and good neighborliness, and intergroup relations and cohesion across diversity. The findings demonstrate the crucial role of good neighborliness in advancing social cohesion. For communities and families to thrive, it is vital that members experience safety and cultivate trusting relationships, which often requires openness about their vulnerabilities and needs. Full article
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