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18 pages, 1651 KB  
Article
Possibilities of Producing Agricultural Biogas from Animal Manure in Poland
by Dorota Janiszewska and Luiza Ossowska
Agriculture 2026, 16(3), 301; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16030301 - 24 Jan 2026
Viewed by 72
Abstract
Biogas production from agricultural residues is a promising solution for renewable energy production, improved waste management, and beneficial impact on climate change mitigation. The aim of this study is to assess the actual use and theoretical potential of agricultural biogas produced from animal [...] Read more.
Biogas production from agricultural residues is a promising solution for renewable energy production, improved waste management, and beneficial impact on climate change mitigation. The aim of this study is to assess the actual use and theoretical potential of agricultural biogas produced from animal manure in Poland at the local level. The potential and actual use of agricultural biogas are presented regionally (16 voivodeships) and locally (314 districts). The theoretical potential of agricultural biogas was estimated based on data from the Agricultural Census conducted by the Central Statistical Office in Poland in 2020. Actual biogas production is based on data from the Register of Agricultural Biogas Producers maintained by the National Support Center for Agriculture. The study shows that Poland is only tapping into the existing potential for agricultural biogas production to a limited extent. Furthermore, both actual agricultural biogas production and the identified theoretical potential vary spatially (greater potential in the northern part of the country, significantly lower in the southern part). This situation is attributed to existing barriers that hinder the utilization of existing potential. Therefore, it is crucial to seek new solutions to reduce existing barriers of an organizational, legal, technical, economic, environmental, spatial, and social nature. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Biomass in Agricultural Circular Economy)
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19 pages, 12335 KB  
Article
Method for Monitoring the Safety of Urban Subway Infrastructure Along Subway Lines by Fusing Inter-Track InSAR Data
by Guosheng Cai, Xiaoping Lu, Yao Lu, Zhengfang Lou, Baoquan Huang, Yaoyu Lu, Siyi Li and Bing Liu
Sensors 2026, 26(2), 454; https://doi.org/10.3390/s26020454 - 9 Jan 2026
Viewed by 211
Abstract
Urban surface subsidence is primarily induced by intensive above-ground and underground construction activities and excessive groundwater extraction. Integrating InSAR techniques for safety monitoring of urban subway infrastructure is therefore of great significance for urban safety and sustainable development. However, single-track high-spatial-resolution SAR imagery [...] Read more.
Urban surface subsidence is primarily induced by intensive above-ground and underground construction activities and excessive groundwater extraction. Integrating InSAR techniques for safety monitoring of urban subway infrastructure is therefore of great significance for urban safety and sustainable development. However, single-track high-spatial-resolution SAR imagery is insufficient to achieve full coverage over large urban areas, and direct mosaicking of inter-track InSAR results may introduce systematic biases, thereby compromising the continuity and consistency of deformation fields at the regional scale. To address this issue, this study proposes an inter-track InSAR correction and mosaicking approach based on the mean vertical deformation difference within overlapping areas, aiming to mitigate the overall offset between deformation results derived from different tracks and to construct a spatially continuous urban surface deformation field. Based on the fused deformation results, subsidence characteristics along subway lines and in key urban infrastructures were further analyzed. The main urban area and the eastern and western new districts of Zhengzhou, a national central city in China, were selected as the study area. A total of 16 Radarsat-2 SAR scenes acquired from two tracks during 2022–2024, with a spatial resolution of 3 m, were processed using the SBAS-InSAR technique to retrieve surface deformation. The results indicate that the mean deformation rate difference in the overlapping areas between the two SAR tracks is approximately −5.54 mm/a. After applying the difference-constrained correction, the coefficient of determination (R2) between the mosaicked InSAR results and leveling observations increased to 0.739, while the MAE and RMSE decreased to 4.706 and 5.538 mm, respectively, demonstrating good stability in achieving inter-track consistency and continuous regional deformation representation. Analysis of the corrected InSAR results reveals that, during 2022–2024, areas exhibiting uplift and subsidence trends accounted for 37.6% and 62.4% of the study area, respectively, while the proportions of cumulative subsidence and uplift areas were 66.45% and 33.55%. In the main urban area, surface deformation rates are generally stable and predominantly within ±5 mm/a, whereas subsidence rates in the eastern new district are significantly higher than those in the main urban area and the western new district. Along subway lines, deformation rates are mainly within ±5 mm/a, with relatively larger deformation observed only in localized sections of the eastern segment of Line 1. Further analysis of typical zones along the subway corridors shows that densely built areas in the western part of the main urban area remain relatively stable, while building-concentrated areas in the eastern region exhibit a persistent relative subsidence trend. Overall, the results demonstrate that the proposed inter-track InSAR mosaicking method based on the mean deformation difference in overlapping areas can effectively support subsidence monitoring and spatial pattern identification along urban subway lines and key regions under relative calibration conditions, providing reliable remote sensing information for refined urban management and infrastructure risk assessment. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of SAR and Remote Sensing Technology in Earth Observation)
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19 pages, 1472 KB  
Article
Timeliness and Equity: An Analysis of Measles Herd Immunity in a Regional Area of Australia
by Megan Whitley, Katrina Clark, Michelle Butler, Peter Murray, Hannah Briggs, Sharon Saxby and David N. Durrheim
Vaccines 2026, 14(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14010001 - 19 Dec 2025
Viewed by 582
Abstract
Background: Global declines in immunisation rates and a resurgence in measles pose a threat, even in countries like Australia that have achieved elimination status. National coverage in Australia is measured at static timepoints, so it is unclear at what age children received their [...] Read more.
Background: Global declines in immunisation rates and a resurgence in measles pose a threat, even in countries like Australia that have achieved elimination status. National coverage in Australia is measured at static timepoints, so it is unclear at what age children received their vaccines. This may permit the emergence of immunity gaps, leaving children susceptible to measles between those reporting timepoints. Methods: A cross-sectional retrospective analysis was conducted using routinely collected data from the Australian Immunisation Register for children residing in Hunter New England Local Health District (HNELHD), New South Wales, born from 1 January 2015 to 1 June 2019 as a quality improvement initiative. Coverage, age at immunisation, and on-time immunisation were described by demographic, local geographic and age variables. Reverse survival analysis was conducted to determine the timing of achieving 95% MCV2 coverage. To ensure the cultural integrity of the research, an Aboriginal researcher co-led the design, analysis and interpretation of results. Results: The analysis included 53,390 children. Measles coverage exceeded the national and international target of 95% MCV2 coverage, with coverage in Aboriginal children surpassing national rates for all children. Pockets of low coverage were identified in several smaller geographic areas and subpopulations. Median age of MCV1 receipt was 375 days (IQR: 369–390 days), and MCV2 was 560 days (IQR: 551–583 days). More recent birth cohorts had earlier immunisation. On-time immunisation rates were high, and most children receiving measles immunisation late were still immunised within six months of the schedule date. The 95% MCV2 coverage threshold was achieved at 1582 days of age. Conclusions: Robust measles immunisation coverage and timeliness were found in HNELHD, Australia. Timeliness data analysis is a useful adjunct to static coverage data in understanding immunisation protection. Improving immunisation data availability, accessibility, and timeliness offers potential to better inform targeted public health activity. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Vaccines and Immunization: Measles, Mumps, and Rubella)
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30 pages, 10878 KB  
Article
Development and Application of Urban Social Sustainability Index to Assess the Phnom Penh Capital of Cambodia
by Puthearath Chan
World 2025, 6(4), 167; https://doi.org/10.3390/world6040167 - 16 Dec 2025
Viewed by 605
Abstract
Our world is rapidly urbanizing, while 2.5 billion people are projected to shift from rural to urban areas by 2050, with close to 90% occurring in Asia and Africa. In Southeast Asia, particularly, the Phnom Penh capital city of Cambodia is experiencing this [...] Read more.
Our world is rapidly urbanizing, while 2.5 billion people are projected to shift from rural to urban areas by 2050, with close to 90% occurring in Asia and Africa. In Southeast Asia, particularly, the Phnom Penh capital city of Cambodia is experiencing this rapid urbanization, facing significant challenges in improving the quality of urban life and achieving social sustainability. Hence, this research aims to assess this capital on social sustainability dimensions to find out the strong and weak points of its 14 districts in order to reveal the improvement potential. The research developed and applied an urban social sustainability index based on national development priorities, SDG11, the New Urban Agenda, and other SDGs that related to human wellbeing and social inclusiveness. The AHP was used to prioritize indicators to develop a priority index, while the standard score was used to apply the index to assess the 14 districts of Phnom Penh. The data for this index application were sourced from Phnom Penh’s commune database. The results showed that the highest-scoring district for urban social sustainability was Chamkarmon, followed by Boeng Keng Kang and Doun Penh. The findings revealed that Prek Pnov was weak in income generation and welfare, while Kamboul was weak in gender inclusion compared to other districts. Prampir Makara was strong, and Sen Sok was weak in resilience to vulnerability. Boeng Keng Kang was strong in welfare and sanitation, while Kamboul was weak in sanitation. Doun Penh was strong, and Mean Chey was weak in water supply. Full article
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34 pages, 1898 KB  
Article
New Reports of Orchidaceae Family in Southern Calabria (Italy): Distribution and Conservation
by Valentina Lucia Astrid Laface and Luigi Torino
Conservation 2025, 5(4), 85; https://doi.org/10.3390/conservation5040085 - 16 Dec 2025
Viewed by 815
Abstract
The Orchidaceae family in Calabria has been scarcely investigated during the 21st century, and available knowledge remains fragmentary, particularly for the rarer taxa. The last comprehensive study dates back to 2002, whereas subsequent checklists, limited to restricted areas of the region, provide incomplete [...] Read more.
The Orchidaceae family in Calabria has been scarcely investigated during the 21st century, and available knowledge remains fragmentary, particularly for the rarer taxa. The last comprehensive study dates back to 2002, whereas subsequent checklists, limited to restricted areas of the region, provide incomplete or taxonomically uncertain data. Considering that the family is protected at global (CITES, Bern Convention, IUCN) and national (Italian Red List) levels, broader and more systematic attention is required. In this work, focused on the southern sector of the Metropolitan City of Reggio Calabria, with special reference to the mountain and foothill areas of the Aspromonte massif and in the adjacent districts, we describe four new hybrids for science, each assessed as Critically Endangered (CR), and report four previously unrecorded taxa for the region, evaluated as VU/CR. In addition, two hybrids, newly recorded for the Calabrian flora, were likewise assigned a CR conservation status. The study also provides confirmation of historical records of Ophrys speculum and identifies the southernmost stations in continental Italy for both O. speculum and Orchis branciforti Standardized floral and labellar morphometric traits were measured on representative individuals from each population, including the parental species in the case of hybrids. Conservation status was evaluated following IUCN criteria and GeoCAT-derived AOO values, complemented by field observations on population size, habitat conditions, and site-specific threats. Hybrid names comply with ICN provisions. These findings enhance understanding of orchid biodiversity in Southern Italy and provide new insights for regional conservation efforts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Plant Species Diversity and Conservation)
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23 pages, 8815 KB  
Article
Enhancing Livability Through Walkability: The Transformation of Al-Saad Plaza, Lusail City, Doha
by Alaa Alrababaa, Raffaello Furlan, Hatem Ibrahim and Reem Awwaad
Urban Sci. 2025, 9(12), 506; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci9120506 - 29 Nov 2025
Viewed by 520
Abstract
Walkability is a vital component that can significantly enhance the livability of public spaces. By prioritizing walkable environments, cities can develop vibrant areas that promote social interaction, cultural engagement, and community cohesion. The influx of diverse populations in Qatar, driven by the national [...] Read more.
Walkability is a vital component that can significantly enhance the livability of public spaces. By prioritizing walkable environments, cities can develop vibrant areas that promote social interaction, cultural engagement, and community cohesion. The influx of diverse populations in Qatar, driven by the national need to manage recent rapid urban development, has resulted in the creation of new public realms designed to accommodate a wider range of residents. However, the authors argue that the role of walkability in enhancing the livability of these spaces, especially in fostering social interaction, has not been sufficiently explored. This research study aims to explore the impact of walkability on the livability of Al-Saad Plaza in the Boulevard District of Lusail City, a prominent public space within one of Doha’s major urban developments. Quantitative and qualitative data, collected through site visits, photographs, planimetry, structured interviews, observations, and a survey study, will be analyzed to assess the current urban setting and identify its strengths and weaknesses. The findings will contribute to developing a framework to improve the livability of Al-Saad Plaza on Lusail Boulevard by enhancing its walkability. While this research study focuses on a specific case, the exploratory insights serve to guide future studies in other GCC contexts. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Transportation and Urban Environments-Public Health)
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43 pages, 2705 KB  
Article
Climate- and Region-Based Risk Assessment of Protected Trees in South Korea and Strategies for Their Conservation
by Seok Kim and Younghee Noh
Sustainability 2025, 17(21), 9589; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17219589 - 28 Oct 2025
Viewed by 805
Abstract
(1) Background: Climate change has intensified extreme heat and localized rainfall, exposing South Korea’s protected trees to new risks. Despite their ecological and cultural value, prior research has been largely local or qualitative, leaving little basis for nationwide prioritization. (2) Methods: We developed [...] Read more.
(1) Background: Climate change has intensified extreme heat and localized rainfall, exposing South Korea’s protected trees to new risks. Despite their ecological and cultural value, prior research has been largely local or qualitative, leaving little basis for nationwide prioritization. (2) Methods: We developed a composite risk index that integrates heat and rainfall exposure with species sensitivities, covering nearly the entire national inventory (≈10,000 individuals). Risks were calculated at the tree level, aggregated to district, provincial, and national scales, and tested for robustness across weighting and normalization choices. Spatial clustering was assessed with Moran’s I and LISA. (3) Results: High-risk clusters were consistently identified in southern and southwestern regions. Mean and tail indicators showed that average-based approaches obscure extreme vulnerabilities, while LISA confirmed significant High–High clusters. Rankings proved robust across scenarios, indicating that results reflect structural signals rather than parameter settings. Priority areas defined by the presence of extreme-risk individuals emerged as stable candidates for intervention. (4) Conclusions: The study establishes a transparent, operational rule for prioritization and offers tailored strategies—such as drainage infrastructure, shading, and root-zone management—while informing medium-term planning. It provides the first nationwide, empirically grounded framework for conserving protected trees under climate transition. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Tourism, Culture, and Heritage)
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36 pages, 8124 KB  
Article
Declaration-Ready Climate-Neutral PEDs: Budget-Based, Hourly LCA Including Mobility and Flexibility
by Simon Schneider, Thomas Zelger, Raphael Drexel, Manfred Schindler, Paul Krainer and José Baptista
Designs 2025, 9(6), 123; https://doi.org/10.3390/designs9060123 - 27 Oct 2025
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 823
Abstract
In recent years, Positive Energy Districts (PEDs) have been interpreted in many—and often conflicting—ways. We recast PEDs as a vehicle for verifiable climate neutrality and present a declaration-ready assessment that integrates (i) a cumulative, science-based GHG budget per m2 gross floor area [...] Read more.
In recent years, Positive Energy Districts (PEDs) have been interpreted in many—and often conflicting—ways. We recast PEDs as a vehicle for verifiable climate neutrality and present a declaration-ready assessment that integrates (i) a cumulative, science-based GHG budget per m2 gross floor area (GFA), (ii) full life-cycle accounting, and (iii) time-resolved conversion factors that include everyday motorized individual mobility and quantify flexibility. Two KPIs anchor the framework: the cumulative GHG LCA balance (2025–2075) against a maximum compliant budget of 320 kgCO2e·m−2GFA and the annual primary energy balance used to declare PED status with or without mobility. We follow EN 15978 and apply time-resolved emission factors that decline to zero by 2050. Its applicability is demonstrated on six Austrian districts spanning new builds and renovations, diverse energy systems, densities, and mobility contexts. The baseline scenarios show heterogeneous outcomes—only two out of six meet both the cumulative GHG budget and the positive primary energy balance—but design iterations indicate that all six districts can reach the targets with realistic, ambitious packages (e.g., high energy efficiency and flexibility, local renewables, ecological building materials, BESS/V2G, and mobility electrification). Hourly emission factors and flexibility signals can lower import-weighted emission intensity versus monthly or annual factors by up to 15% and reveal seasonal import–export asymmetries. Built on transparent, auditable rules and open tooling, this framework both diagnoses performance gaps and maps credible pathways to compliance—steering PED design away from project-specific targets toward verifiable climate neutrality. It now serves as the basis for the national labeling/declaration scheme klimaaktiv “Climate-Neutral Positive Energy Districts”. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Design and Applications of Positive Energy Districts)
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24 pages, 5191 KB  
Article
Incremental Urbanism and the Circular City: Analyzing Spatial Patterns in Permits, Land Use, and Heritage Regulations
by Shriya Rangarajan, Jennifer Minner, Yu Wang and Felix Korbinian Heisel
Sustainability 2025, 17(20), 9348; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17209348 - 21 Oct 2025
Viewed by 1013
Abstract
The construction industry is a major contributor to global resource consumption and waste. This sector extracts over two billion tons of raw materials each year and contributes over 30% of all solid waste generated annually through construction and demolition debris. The movement toward [...] Read more.
The construction industry is a major contributor to global resource consumption and waste. This sector extracts over two billion tons of raw materials each year and contributes over 30% of all solid waste generated annually through construction and demolition debris. The movement toward circularity in the built environment aims to replace linear processes of extraction and disposal by promoting policies favoring building preservation and adaptive reuse, as well as the salvage and reuse of building materials. Few North American cities have implemented explicit policies that incentivize circularity to decouple urban growth from resource consumption, and there remain substantial hurdles to adoption. Nonetheless, existing regulatory and planning tools, such as zoning codes and historic preservation policies, may already influence redevelopment in ways that could align with circularity. This article examines spatial patterns in these indirect pathways through a case study of a college town in New York State, assessing how commonly used local planning tools shape urban redevelopment trajectories. Using a three-stage spatial analysis protocol, including exploratory analysis, Geographically Weighted Regressions (GWRs), and Geographic Random Forest (GRF) modeling, the study evaluates the impact of zoning regulations and historic preservation designations on patterns of demolition, reinvestment, and incremental change in the building stock. National historic districts were strongly associated with more building adaptation permits indicating reinvestment in existing buildings. Mixed-use zoning was positively correlated with new construction, while special overlay districts and low-density zoning were mostly negatively correlated with concentrations of building adaptation permits. A key contribution of this paper is a replicable protocol for urban building stock analysis and insights into how land use policies can support or hinder incremental urban change in moves toward the circular city. Further, we provide recommendations for data management strategies in small cities that could help strengthen analysis-driven policies. Full article
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19 pages, 5655 KB  
Article
Educational Accessibility as an Element of Sustainable Urban Transformation: The Case of Poland in the Context of Legislative Reform
by Konrad Podawca, Agata Pawłat-Zawrzykraj and Marek Ogryzek
Land 2025, 14(9), 1924; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14091924 - 21 Sep 2025
Viewed by 1048
Abstract
Access to schools is crucial in determining an area’s functioning and development, especially regarding housing development. This article presents an analysis of the spatial accessibility of educational services in the city. In Poland, municipalities applied standards for the accessibility of schools in the [...] Read more.
Access to schools is crucial in determining an area’s functioning and development, especially regarding housing development. This article presents an analysis of the spatial accessibility of educational services in the city. In Poland, municipalities applied standards for the accessibility of schools in the 1980s and 1990s. In 2023, amendments to the Law on Planning and Spatial Development (The Act of 7 July 2023 amending the Act on Spatial Planning and Development and certain other Acts) reintroduced the obligation to consider the accessibility of education services in the planning documents of municipalities and established the applicable distances. This article presents a method for assessing the level of accessibility of primary schools using spatial–statistical indicators, with the city of Płock as an example. The analysis allowed us to present the spatial differentiation of the level of fulfilment and the level of fulfilment of needs according to the new planning guidelines. We deepened the analysis grounded in the 15-Min City concept to validate the findings, benchmarking the results against international frameworks and recognised good practices. Similar analysis can support local authorities of other municipalities in the spatial planning decision-making process. The authors formulated the following research questions: What criteria can be applied to evaluate the performance of existing educational facilities and determine optimal locations for new schools in planning educational services? Do time-based (15 min) benchmarks reveal different patterns than distance-only thresholds? The example of Płock shows the weaknesses of applying unified urban standards in areas with diverse types of spatial development and the need to modify them. To deepen the verification of the observed discrepancies, the study was extended to include an analysis based on the concept of the 15-Min City. The results revealed even greater disparities in accessibility, highlighting a strong contrast between central and peripheral districts. These findings remain consistent with the conclusions of international studies. Meanwhile, the applicable regulations in Poland provide relatively liberal accessibility thresholds. It may lead to an increase in the distance between residential development and educational facilities and other key elements of urban social infrastructure, thereby distancing national urban planning practices from the European principles of compact, 15 min, and sustainable cities. Full article
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54 pages, 5238 KB  
Article
Leveraging Sentinel-2 Data and Machine Learning for Drought Detection in India: The Process of Ground Truth Construction and a Case Study
by Shubham Subhankar Sharma, Jit Mukherjee and Fabio Dell’Acqua
Remote Sens. 2025, 17(18), 3159; https://doi.org/10.3390/rs17183159 - 11 Sep 2025
Cited by 3 | Viewed by 1877
Abstract
Droughts significantly impact agriculture, water resources, and ecosystems. Their timely detection is essential for implementing effective mitigation strategies. This study explores the use of multispectral Sentinel-2 remote sensing indices and machine learning techniques to detect drought conditions in three distinct regions of India, [...] Read more.
Droughts significantly impact agriculture, water resources, and ecosystems. Their timely detection is essential for implementing effective mitigation strategies. This study explores the use of multispectral Sentinel-2 remote sensing indices and machine learning techniques to detect drought conditions in three distinct regions of India, such as Jodhpur, Amravati, and Thanjavur, during the Rabi season (October–April). Twelve remote sensing indices were studied to assess different aspects of vegetation health, soil moisture, and water stress, and their possible joint use and influence as indicators of regional drought events. Reference data used to define drought conditions in each region were primarily sourced from official government drought declarations and regional and national news publications, which provide seasonal maps of drought conditions across the country. Based on this information, a district vs. year (3 × 10) ground truth is created, indicating the presence or absence of drought (Drought/No Drought) for each region across the ten-year period. Using this ground truth table, we extended the remote sensing dataset by adding a binary drought label for each observation: 1 for “Drought” and 0 for “No Drought”. The dataset is organized by year (2016–2025) in a two-dimensional format, with indices as columns and observations as rows. Each observation represents a single measurement of the remote sensing indices. This enriched dataset serves as the foundation for training and evaluating machine learning models aimed at classifying drought conditions based on spectral information. The resultant remote sensing dataset was used to predict drought events through various machine learning models, including Random Forest, XGBoost, Bagging Classifier, and Gradient Boosting. Among the models, XGBoost achieved the highest accuracy (84.80%), followed closely by the Bagging Classifier (83.98%) and Random Forest (82.98%). In terms of precision, Bagging Classifier and Random Forest performed comparably (82.31% and 81.45%, respectively), while XGBoost achieved a precision of 81.28%. We applied a seasonal majority voting strategy, assigning a final drought label for each region and Rabi season based on the majority of predicted monthly labels. Using this method, XGBoost and Bagging Classifier achieved 96.67% accuracy, precision, and recall, while Random Forest and Gradient Boosting reached 90% and 83.33%, respectively, across all metrics. Shapley Additive Explanation (SHAP) analysis revealed that Normalized Multi-band Drought Index (NMDI) and Day of Season (DOS) consistently emerged as the most influential features in determining model predictions. This finding is supported by the Borda Count and Weighted Sum analysis, which ranked NMDI, and DOS as the top feature across all models. Additionally, Red-edge Chlorophyll Index (RECI), Normalized Difference Water Index (NDWI), Normalized Difference Moisture Index (NDMI), and Ratio Drought Index (RDI) were identified as important features contributing to model performance. These features help reveal the underlying spatiotemporal dynamics of drought indicators, offering interpretable insights into model decisions. To evaluate the impact of feature selection, we further conducted a feature ablation study. We trained each model using different combinations of top features: Top 1, Top 2, Top 3, Top 4, and Top 5. The performance of each model was assessed based on accuracy, precision, and recall. XGBoost demonstrated the best overall performance, especially when using the Top 5 features. Full article
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22 pages, 2811 KB  
Article
Profiling HIV Risk and Determined, Resilient, Empowered AIDS-Free, Mentored, and Safe (DREAMS) Program Reach Among Adolescent Girls and Young Women (AGYW) in Namibia: Secondary Analysis of Population and Program Data
by Enos Moyo, Endalkachew Melese, Hadrian Mangwana, Simon Takawira, Rosalia Indongo, Bernadette Harases, Perseverance Moyo, Ntombizodwa Makurira Nyoni, Kopano Robert and Tafadzwa Dzinamarira
Trop. Med. Infect. Dis. 2025, 10(9), 240; https://doi.org/10.3390/tropicalmed10090240 - 27 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1386
Abstract
Background: Namibia is experiencing a generalized HIV epidemic, with 7.5% of the population living with HIV. Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) aged 15–24 account for 28.6% of new infections annually. Various factors increase AGYW’s vulnerability to HIV. To address this, Project HOPE [...] Read more.
Background: Namibia is experiencing a generalized HIV epidemic, with 7.5% of the population living with HIV. Adolescent girls and young women (AGYW) aged 15–24 account for 28.6% of new infections annually. Various factors increase AGYW’s vulnerability to HIV. To address this, Project HOPE Namibia (PHN)-led consortium implemented the PEPFAR/USAID-funded DREAMS project in Khomas, Oshikoto, and Zambezi regions from 2018 to 2023. This study estimated the AGYW population most in need of HIV prevention and assessed geographic and age-specific gaps to improve program effectiveness and efficiency. Methods: This secondary data analysis utilized the Namibia Population-Based HIV Impact Assessment (NamPHIA) 2017, the Namibia census, and service data from the DREAMS project, which includes entry points for recruitment, screening, and enrolment. We used Python to conduct unadjusted and adjusted Poisson regression and UpSet plots for data visualization. Results: Analysis of NamPHIA data revealed low HIV prevalence in 10–14-year-olds, with only Oshikoto showing a detectable rate of 2.76%, mostly attributed to perinatal HIV transmission. Of the 12 DREAMS eligibility criteria, three could be mapped to 10–14-year-olds, while all except sexually transmitted infections could be mapped for 15–19 and 20–24-year-olds. Nationally, 17.3% of 10–14-year-old AGYW, 48.0% of 15–19-year-olds, and 50% of 20–24-year-olds met at least one DREAMS eligibility criterion. Among 15–19-year-olds, a history of pregnancy, no/irregular condom use, and out-of-school status were positively associated with HIV status. For 20–24-year-olds, transactional sex was positively associated with HIV status. Overall, 62% of screened individuals were eligible, and 62% of eligible individuals enrolled. PHN screened 134% of the estimated 37,965 10–14-year-olds, 95% of the estimated 35,585 15–19-year-olds, and 57% of the 24,011 20–24-year-olds residing in the five districts where DREAMS was implemented. Conclusions: We recommend the refinement of the DREAMS eligibility criteria, particularly for AGYW 10–14, to better identify and engage those at risk of HIV acquisition through sexual transmission. For 15–19-year-olds, PHN efforts should interrogate geographic variability in entry points for recruitment and screening practices. PHN should enhance the recruitment and engagement of AGYW 20–24, with a particular focus on those engaged in transactional sex. Full article
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21 pages, 1441 KB  
Article
An Analysis of Alignments of District Housing Targets in England
by David Gray
Land 2025, 14(9), 1710; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14091710 - 23 Aug 2025
Viewed by 780
Abstract
Context: It has been claimed that recently, in England, the places with the greatest amount of housing built were the places that least needed them. This is an accusation that has echoes in a number of countries around the globe. The lack of [...] Read more.
Context: It has been claimed that recently, in England, the places with the greatest amount of housing built were the places that least needed them. This is an accusation that has echoes in a number of countries around the globe. The lack of construction leads to greater unaffordability and a lower level of economic activity than could have been achieved if labour, particularly those with high human capital, was not so constrained as to where they could afford to live. The recent National Planning Policy Framework for England imposes mandatory targets on housing planning authorities. As such, the following question is raised: will the targets result in additional residential homes being located in places of greater need than the prevailing pattern? Research Questions: The paper sets out to consider the spatial mismatch between housing additions and national benefit in terms of unaffordability and productivity. Specifically, do the concentrations of high and/or low rates of the prevailing rates of additional dwellings and the target rates of adding dwellings correspond with the clusters of high and/or low unaffordability and productivity? A further question considered is: does the spatial distribution of additional dwellings match the clusters of population growth? Method: The values of the variables are transformed at the first stage into Anselin’s LISA categories. LISA maps can reveal unusually high spatial concentrations of values, or clusters. The second stage entails comparing sets of the transformed data for agreement of the classifications. An agreement coefficient is provided by Fleiss’s kappa. Data: The data used is of additional dwellings, the total number of dwellings, population estimates, gross value added per hour worked (productivity data), and house price–earnings ratios. The period of study covers the eight years prior to 2020 and the two years after, omitting 2020 itself due to the unusual impact on economic activity. All the data is at local authority district level. Findings: The hot and cold spots of additional dwellings do not correspond those of house price–earnings ratios or productivity. However, population growth hot spots show moderate agreement with those of where additional dwellings are concentrated. This is in line with findings from elsewhere, suggesting that population follows housing supply. Concentrations of districts with relatively high targets per unit of existing stocks are found correspond (agree strongly) with clusters of house price–earnings ratios. Links between productivity and housing are much weaker. Conclusions: The strong link between targets and affordability suggests that if the targets are met, the claim that the places that build the most housing are the places that least need them can be challenged. That said, house-price–earnings ratios present a view of unaffordability that will favour greater building in the countryside rather than cities outside of London, which runs against concentrating new housing in urban areas consistent with fostering clusters/agglomerations implicit in the new modern industrial strategy. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Land Planning and Landscape Architecture)
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23 pages, 1472 KB  
Article
A Spatial Analysis of the Components of Change of the Housing Stock in England: Will Alternative Means of Adding Dwellings Make a Difference?
by David Paul Gray
Sustainability 2025, 17(16), 7431; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17167431 - 17 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1040
Abstract
Whether on greenfield or brownfield sites, new buildings need land. The locations of additional dwellings in England, whether provided through a standard planning process or a light-touch approach, have recently been criticised for not impacting affordability and for being in the wrong places. [...] Read more.
Whether on greenfield or brownfield sites, new buildings need land. The locations of additional dwellings in England, whether provided through a standard planning process or a light-touch approach, have recently been criticised for not impacting affordability and for being in the wrong places. More sustainable means of raising the stock of abodes in England, including repurposing dilapidated or underused property, land, or infrastructure; reducing the demolition rate; and reducing the time an existing dwelling is left idle, do not consume additional land for building. Although the National Planning Policy Framework for additional dwellings places a duty on each district planning authority to find more land for housing, alternatives to new builds are included in the count. This paper examines the spatial concentrations of the components that can add to the habitable stock of real estate. It examines their take-up over recent years. This is important for land-use planning and the preservation of green spaces in the face of increasing housing pressures. Using a simple, innovative approach to assessing collocation, the paper considers whether there are similarities in spatial concentrations. The approach is used to infer whether builders converting existing property add units in areas where new builds are in more modest supply. Although alternative means of adding to the housing stock may be more sustainable, and more likely to be found in areas of greater need, the numbers are too low to be anything other than a supplement to new builds. Full article
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15 pages, 268 KB  
Article
Reviewing the Complexity of Ecumenism and the Missio-Cultural Factors Promoting Church Cooperation in Mberengwa, Zimbabwe, and Beyond
by Rabson Hove
Religions 2025, 16(8), 1021; https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16081021 - 7 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1079
Abstract
Regionally, nationally, and globally, new churches are formed. This continues to divide the church due to traditions, theological, doctrinal matters, and denominational practices. In Africa—and Zimbabwe in particular—the formation of neo-Pentecostal denominations and prophetic movements exacerbates antagonism and division among Christians, posing a [...] Read more.
Regionally, nationally, and globally, new churches are formed. This continues to divide the church due to traditions, theological, doctrinal matters, and denominational practices. In Africa—and Zimbabwe in particular—the formation of neo-Pentecostal denominations and prophetic movements exacerbates antagonism and division among Christians, posing a threat to the unity of the Body of Christ. Consequently, it is necessary to explore ways in which churches can find one another to promote unity among Christians, and this raises the need for local ecumenism. Christianity and the church are always found in specific cultural settings. Church life is guided by both its understanding of mission and the cultural context it operates. As churches need to be united, there is a need to explore ways in which the church can navigate its mission and cultural dynamics to promote unity. This article investigates the challenges and the missio-cultural factors that facilitate ecumenism among the Karanga people in Mberengwa, Zimbabwe. Mberengwa, a rural district in Zimbabwe, predominantly Karanga, presents a unique context where diverse Christian traditions coexist, often with varying degrees of tension and cooperation. This article examines the extent to which the complexity of ecumenism affects church cooperation in Mberengwa, Zimbabwe, and beyond, thereby exploring the cultural and missional factors that can promote church cooperation. Full article
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