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Search Results (167)

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Keywords = participatory analytics

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25 pages, 2122 KB  
Review
Historic Buildings as Urban Sensors: Multi-Scale Diagnostics for Climate-Resilient Cities
by Joana Guedes, Esequiel Mesquita and Tiago Miguel Ferreira
Heritage 2026, 9(4), 152; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9040152 - 11 Apr 2026
Viewed by 392
Abstract
Built heritage is increasingly affected by climate-driven processes, yet its capacity to inform broader understandings of urban environmental change remains insufficiently explored. Here, we synthesize the recent literature (2020–2024) on the application of the Historic Urban Landscape (HUL) approach to the integrated management [...] Read more.
Built heritage is increasingly affected by climate-driven processes, yet its capacity to inform broader understandings of urban environmental change remains insufficiently explored. Here, we synthesize the recent literature (2020–2024) on the application of the Historic Urban Landscape (HUL) approach to the integrated management of cultural heritage under climate risk, reframing the historic built environment as a multi-scale diagnostic medium for climate–urban interactions. We analyze the steps and tools employed to support decision-making across territorial planning, risk assessment, and heritage governance in the papers selected from Web of Science, Science Direct, and Scopus databases. Results show that the approach is a flexible analytical framework that allows the integration of heterogeneous data, multi-criteria evaluations, and diverse stakeholder perspectives across spatial and temporal scales. Information modeling tools are shown to play a central role in structuring territorial knowledge, identifying patterns of vulnerability, and supporting comparative analyses across urban contexts. Nonetheless, significant challenges persist, including limited quantification of climate-induced degradation mechanisms, uncertainties in linking vulnerability assessments to predictive models, structural constraints on participatory implementation, and a tendency to apply the approach as a checklist due to inadequate understanding of its holistic dimensions. Overall, the HUL approach emerges as a scalable and transferable framework for embedding cultural heritage within climate research, advancing the conceptual integration of built heritage into resilience science and sustainability-oriented urban systems. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Heritage)
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36 pages, 36653 KB  
Article
Soundscape-Informed Urban Planning and Architecture in Historic Centers: A Multi-Layer Method for Soundscape Characterization Applied to Bilbao Old Town
by Zigor Iturbe-Martin, Alexander Martín-Garín and Amaia Casado-Rezola
Appl. Sci. 2026, 16(8), 3630; https://doi.org/10.3390/app16083630 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 303
Abstract
Urban soundscape management is a central challenge to the livability and sustainability of cities and requires approaches that complement level indicators with frameworks capable of integrating context, use and experience. In this framework, the present work applies a multilayer methodology to the Old [...] Read more.
Urban soundscape management is a central challenge to the livability and sustainability of cities and requires approaches that complement level indicators with frameworks capable of integrating context, use and experience. In this framework, the present work applies a multilayer methodology to the Old Town of Bilbao, understood as a useful case study to explore the applicability of soundscape reading in historic centers with intense coexistence of commercial, hospitality and catering uses, pedestrian, logistical and cultural uses. The methodology is organized into two phases. The first focuses on the recording and documentation of control points and routes through sound fieldwork, perceptual descriptions and homogeneous systematization of information. From this corpus, a qualified sound map and a first visual characterization of the sound identity are elaborated. The second phase presented in this article, consists of the interpretative synthesis of the corpus through five analytical dimensions and the preparation of fragments and sound sequences conceived for future application through reactivated listening. The results are presented at three levels: (1) a traceable documentary corpus of records, files and synthetic representations; (2) a comparative reading by dimensions that identifies spatial contrasts between interior, exterior and perimeter, as well as relationships between urban form, uses, persistence, masking and salience; and (3) a set of operational audio materials prepared for subsequent comparison with inhabitants and users. In a transversal way, type–token reading distinguishes between the diversity of sounds and dominance by repetition. The article does not yet carry out participatory validation of these materials; its contribution consists of proposing and applying a traceable analytical protocol as a basis for future phases of social contrast and applied discussion. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Soundscapes in Architecture and Urban Planning)
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25 pages, 1851 KB  
Article
Where to Start? Participatory Systems Mapping for Place-Based Service Integration in the City of Casey
by Matt Healey, Joseph Lea and Vanessa Hammond
Systems 2026, 14(4), 407; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14040407 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 448
Abstract
Place-based approaches have gained significant attention as a means of addressing entrenched disadvantage through collaborative, locally responsive service delivery, yet implementation has yielded mixed results and the systemic factors that facilitate or impede inter-organisational collaboration remain inadequately understood. This study applied participatory systems [...] Read more.
Place-based approaches have gained significant attention as a means of addressing entrenched disadvantage through collaborative, locally responsive service delivery, yet implementation has yielded mixed results and the systemic factors that facilitate or impede inter-organisational collaboration remain inadequately understood. This study applied participatory systems mapping as part of a systemic inquiry to identify leverage points for place-based integrated service delivery in the City of Casey, an outer-metropolitan municipality in Melbourne, Australia. Twenty-one representatives from the Casey Futures Partnership engaged in group model building workshops, co-producing a causal loop diagram containing 33 factors and 104 directional connections. The resulting map was analysed using a blended analytical approach combining network metrics with the Action Scales Model. Funding availability and criteria emerged as the most central factor within the system, while belief-level factors, including territorial behaviour and resource and collaboration mindset, were found to be substantially shaped by upstream structural conditions. Factors combining network influence with deeper system positioning and amenability to local action included awareness of community needs and priorities, trust and willingness to collaborate from funders, inter-organisational communication, and advocacy effectiveness. The findings support multi-level place-based approaches that address underlying beliefs and structural conditions alongside operational improvements. Full article
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26 pages, 3673 KB  
Article
Integrating Multi-Source Stakeholder Data in a Participatory Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis Framework for Sustainable Sewage Sludge Management in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace (Greece)
by Aikaterini Eleftheriadou, Athanasios P. Vavatsikos, Christos S. Akratos and Maria Evridiki Gratziou
Waste 2026, 4(2), 11; https://doi.org/10.3390/waste4020011 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 185
Abstract
Sewage sludge management remains a critical challenge in Greece, where increasing regulatory pressure, environmental constraints, and limited stakeholder participation complicate regional decision-making. In particular, the revision of regional Waste Management Plans requires decision-support approaches that are both technically robust and socially legitimate. This [...] Read more.
Sewage sludge management remains a critical challenge in Greece, where increasing regulatory pressure, environmental constraints, and limited stakeholder participation complicate regional decision-making. In particular, the revision of regional Waste Management Plans requires decision-support approaches that are both technically robust and socially legitimate. This study develops and applies a participatory, data-driven multi-criteria decision analysis framework to evaluate sustainable sewage sludge management strategies in the Region of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace. The framework combines structured stakeholder participation with quantitative performance assessment, enabling transparent, reproducible, and systematic comparison of alternative sewage sludge management options. Four realistic sludge management alternatives—composting fr agriculture, forestry use, land restoration, and thermal drying with energy recovery were assessed against fifteen economic, environmental, and social sub-criteria. Data were collected through structured questionnaires administered to forty-four representatives from five stakeholder groups: utilities (water and sewerage service providers), local authorities, scientists/experts, end-users, and citizens. Group preferences were aggregated using equal group weighting to ensure balanced representation. The results show that environmental and economic criteria outweigh social aspects. The highest mean weights were assigned to compliance with environmental requirements for products derived from the disposal method (0.105) and compliance with stricter national environmental legislation (0.104), followed by energy intensity (0.097), installation cost (0.065), and operation and maintenance (O&M) cost (0.061). Overall rankings identified composting and thermal drying as the most preferred options, followed by land restoration and forestry use; sensitivity analysis (±10% variation in sub-criterion weights) confirmed ranking stability. The proposed framework enhances decision transparency by embedding measurable criteria and stakeholder inputs within a structured analytical process. From a policy perspective, it addresses participation gaps in Greek waste planning and offers a transferable decision-support tool for future regional planning. Further extensions may include integration with life cycle assessment and cost–benefit analysis to support adaptive updates under circular economy objectives. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Converting and Recycling of Waste Materials)
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21 pages, 2178 KB  
Review
GeoAI and Multimodal Geospatial Data Fusion for Inclusive Urban Mobility: Methods, Applications, and Future Directions
by Atakilti Kiros, Yuri Ribakov, Israel Klein and Achituv Cohen
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(4), 193; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10040193 - 2 Apr 2026
Viewed by 564
Abstract
Urban mobility is a central challenge for sustainable and inclusive cities, as climate change, congestion, and spatial inequality increasingly reveal mobility patterns as expressions of deeper social and spatial structures. Inclusive urban mobility examines whether transport systems equitably support the everyday movements and [...] Read more.
Urban mobility is a central challenge for sustainable and inclusive cities, as climate change, congestion, and spatial inequality increasingly reveal mobility patterns as expressions of deeper social and spatial structures. Inclusive urban mobility examines whether transport systems equitably support the everyday movements and accessibility needs of historically marginalized and underserved populations. The integration of artificial intelligence with geographic information science, combined with multimodal geospatial data fusion, provides powerful tools to diagnose and address these disparities by integrating heterogeneous data sources such as satellite imagery, GPS trajectories, transit records, volunteered geographic information, and social sensing data into scalable, high-resolution urban mobility analytics. This paper presents a systematic survey of recent GeoAI studies that fuse multiple geospatial data modalities for key urban mobility tasks, including accessibility mapping, demand forecasting, and origin–destination flow prediction, with particular emphasis on inclusive and equity-oriented applications. The review examines 18 multimodal GeoAI studies identified through a PRISMA-ScR screening process from 57 candidate publications between 2019 and 2025. The survey synthesizes methodological trends across data-, feature-, and decision-level fusion strategies, highlights the growing use of deep learning architectures, and examines emerging techniques such as knowledge graphs, federated learning, and explainable AI that support equity-relevant insights across diverse urban contexts. Building on this synthesis, the review identifies persistent gaps in population coverage, multimodal integration, equity optimization, explainability, validation, and governance, which currently constrain the inclusiveness and robustness of GeoAI applications in urban mobility research. To address these challenges, the paper proposes a structured research roadmap linking these gaps to concrete methodological and governance directions including equity-aware loss functions, adaptive multimodal fusion pipelines, participatory and human-in-the-loop workflows, and urban data trusts to better align multimodal GeoAI with the goals of inclusive, just, and sustainable urban mobility systems. Full article
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26 pages, 2649 KB  
Article
Boundary Objects for Transdisciplinary Research: Conceptual Advances from Pesticide-Free Territories in Ecuador
by Tania I. González-Rivadeneira, Mayra Coro, Claire Nicklin and Olivier Dangles
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3415; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073415 - 1 Apr 2026
Viewed by 362
Abstract
Transdisciplinary Research (TDR) leverages shared concepts to foster mutual learning among diverse stakeholders, relying on “boundary objects” to shape collective identities and visions. However, the existing literature often overlooks the critical roles of subjectivity and conflict in this process. This paper introduces an [...] Read more.
Transdisciplinary Research (TDR) leverages shared concepts to foster mutual learning among diverse stakeholders, relying on “boundary objects” to shape collective identities and visions. However, the existing literature often overlooks the critical roles of subjectivity and conflict in this process. This paper introduces an analytical framework to examine the construction of these objects, using the “Oasis Project” in the Ecuadorian Andes as a central case study. A research-action project on pesticide-free territories in Ecuador unearthed a question during its implementation on how to achieve collective action when key actors are in conflict with each other. Using TDR to find boundary objects where different viewpoints can find shared meaning, it was determined that there is not enough conceptual clarity in the literature around how conflict can actually help achieve coordination. Using a variety of qualitative methods, such as interviews, participatory observation, and analysis of WhatsApp group message texts, this study shows how the novel concepts of boundary entanglements and conflicts can help other researchers and practitioners facilitate impactful TDR. This study emphasizes three transformative lessons for sustainability science: first, boundary objects are inherently dynamic, evolving through continuous social negotiation rather than static definition; second, their successful consolidation requires deep integration into local knowledge systems, cultural norms, and governance structures; and third, and perhaps most critically, conflict and operational breakdowns are not indicators of failure; rather, they serve as vital diagnostic tools that unveil hidden power relations and epistemic boundaries, providing essential moments for critical reflection and the recalibration of collaborative sustainability strategies. Full article
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37 pages, 4724 KB  
Article
Evaluating the Sustainable Adaptive Reuse Alternative for Architectural Heritage Through the Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) Method—A Study of a National Monument of Nigeria
by Obafemi A. P. Olukoya
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 3070; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18063070 - 20 Mar 2026
Viewed by 324
Abstract
Adaptive reuse has emerged to become a tool for implementing the understanding of sustainability in the domain of architectural conservation, as it encourages the continued usage of old buildings as means of reducing environmental impact, as well as preserving socio-cultural capital while generating [...] Read more.
Adaptive reuse has emerged to become a tool for implementing the understanding of sustainability in the domain of architectural conservation, as it encourages the continued usage of old buildings as means of reducing environmental impact, as well as preserving socio-cultural capital while generating economic income. However, in its practice, the decisions regarding granting meanings, interpretation, and preserving memories within adaptation processes are dominated by expert-driven approaches that inadequately incorporate stakeholder values or intangible heritage dimensions. To this end, this study aims to contribute to the current debate by adopting a participatory co-evaluation framework that integrates both authenticity perspectives and sustainability dimensions using Multi-Criteria Decision Analysis (MCDA) for evaluating adaptive reuse alternatives for an abandoned prefabricated wooden heritage building. Stakeholder priorities were drawn through a workshop and transformed into normalized weights using the Simos technique. Four design alternative typologies—namely, Continuity, Cultivation, Differential, and Optimization—were assessed and compared against 20 performance indicators across heritage, social, ecological, and economic criteria using the Technique for Order of Preference by Similarity to Ideal Solution (TOPSIS). Indicator-level analyses and sensitivity tests (±10% and ±20% weight variations) were applied to confirm the robustness of rankings. The results from the best-performing alternative demonstrated the trade-offs between heritage authenticity and sustainability objectives, as well as demonstrating how combining participatory methods with quantitative evaluation can support evidence-based decision-making for adaptive reuse. The applied integrated framework helps bridge the gap between heritage theory and practice by combining authenticity, participation, and sustainability in one analytical approach, supporting evidence-based decisions for adaptive reuse. Full article
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23 pages, 2213 KB  
Article
Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR)-Supported Participatory Playground Regeneration: Social Value Creation Through Child Participation in Seoul, Korea
by Younsun Heo
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 3000; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18063000 - 18 Mar 2026
Viewed by 275
Abstract
Urban playgrounds are vital public spaces that support children’s play, social interaction, and well-being. However, many playgrounds in socially disadvantaged or aging urban areas experience physical deterioration, limited play diversity, and declining use. Although corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives have increasingly supported playground [...] Read more.
Urban playgrounds are vital public spaces that support children’s play, social interaction, and well-being. However, many playgrounds in socially disadvantaged or aging urban areas experience physical deterioration, limited play diversity, and declining use. Although corporate social responsibility (CSR) initiatives have increasingly supported playground regeneration, many projects continue to emphasize short-term physical improvements rather than participatory processes and social value creation. This study conceptualizes CSR-supported, child-participatory playground regeneration as a social value creation process and examines how CSR enables process continuity through a structured six-stage participatory approach spanning planning, design, construction, and post-opening use. Two cases were selected from the “Save the Playground” program in Seoul, Korea: Saerok Children’s Park in a stable residential neighborhood and Mukjeong Children’s Park in a high-mobility, multicultural commercial district. Using a qualitative multiple-case study design, the study triangulates workshop outputs, observational records, facilitator field notes, and official program documents through thematic and cross-case analyses. The findings indicate that CSR support primarily ensured process continuity and facilitated multi-actor coordination across project stages. By securing implementation continuity and stabilizing governance arrangements, CSR support allowed participatory outputs to be iteratively translated into design development and post-opening evaluation. Post-opening outcomes differed by urban context; nevertheless, both cases showed social value creation through strengthened place attachment, responsibility-oriented use, and inclusive mixed-group play. This study advances a cross-case analytical framework linking urban context, participatory mechanisms, and post-opening social value outcomes, contributing to a more context-sensitive understanding of CSR-supported participatory design processes and their implications for sustainable urban public space development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Urban and Rural Development)
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27 pages, 1083 KB  
Article
Al-Enabled Participatory Urban Planning for Sustainable Smart Cities: Evidence from the Dammam Metropolitan Area, Saudi Arabia
by Abdulkarim K. Alhowaish
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(3), 158; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10030158 - 16 Mar 2026
Viewed by 349
Abstract
Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly embedded in smart city strategies, yet its role in advancing participatory urban planning remains underexamined, particularly in rapidly urbanizing metropolitan contexts of the Global South. This exploratory, governance-centered study investigates how AI can support participatory urban planning for [...] Read more.
Artificial intelligence (AI) is increasingly embedded in smart city strategies, yet its role in advancing participatory urban planning remains underexamined, particularly in rapidly urbanizing metropolitan contexts of the Global South. This exploratory, governance-centered study investigates how AI can support participatory urban planning for sustainable smart cities, emphasizing institutional mediation and trust dynamics. Using a convergent mixed-methods design, the research combines a purposive stakeholder survey (n = 260) with qualitative thematic analysis to assess AI awareness and use, participation quality, institutional and technical readiness, and public trust in the Dammam Metropolitan Area, Saudi Arabia. The findings reveal a participation paradox: relatively high AI awareness and digital readiness coexist with low perceived influence and limited confidence in participatory outcomes. Institutional coordination gaps, skill constraints, and regulatory ambiguity mediate the translation of AI adoption into meaningful engagement. Stakeholders favor AI applications, such as interactive mapping, predictive analytics, and digital twin visualization, that enhance transparency and deliberation over automated decision systems. Qualitative evidence further indicates that AI is perceived not as a standalone solution, but as a catalyst for institutional reform, capacity development, and sustainability-oriented governance. The study contributes to urban science by empirically validating a socio-technical framework that positions AI as a facilitative governance instrument embedded within institutional and trust-building processes. The findings offer policy-relevant insights for cities seeking to align AI-driven innovation with inclusive, accountable, and sustainable urban development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Smart Cities—Urban Planning, Technology and Future Infrastructures)
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21 pages, 1075 KB  
Article
A Contextualized Needs Analysis of Rural Foreign Language Teachers in Southern Spain: Linguistic Competence as a Primary Professional Demand
by Juan Jose Magana-Redondo, Elena Bárcena Madera and Timothy Read
Educ. Sci. 2026, 16(3), 425; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16030425 - 11 Mar 2026
Viewed by 255
Abstract
This article analyses the professional needs of foreign language teachers in rural territories, with a primary analytical focus on teachers’ linguistic competence and how it is sustained over time. Using a mixed-methods needs analysis informed by Participatory Action Research, data were obtained from [...] Read more.
This article analyses the professional needs of foreign language teachers in rural territories, with a primary analytical focus on teachers’ linguistic competence and how it is sustained over time. Using a mixed-methods needs analysis informed by Participatory Action Research, data were obtained from questionnaires, interviews, and classroom observations in rural Andalusia (southern Spain). The results foreground persistent challenges in maintaining a high level of command of the target language—especially oral fluency and pronunciation—within linguistically isolated professional environments. Methodological and technological issues are reported as contextual conditions that shape (and sometimes constrain) teachers’ opportunities to develop and enact linguistic competence, including multi-grade and multicultural classrooms, limited time for peer collaboration, and uneven student access to devices and connectivity at home. Overall, the findings point to the need for localized, flexible, and participatory professional development that prioritizes teachers’ ongoing linguistic development while addressing contextual barriers in rural schools. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Digital Tools and Technology-Enhanced Language Learning)
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25 pages, 4319 KB  
Article
Spaces of Culture, Places of Belonging—An Analytical Perspective on Participatory Governance and Placemaking in European Capitals of Culture
by Mădălina Glonți and Nicolae Popa
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(3), 146; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10030146 - 10 Mar 2026
Viewed by 755
Abstract
This article explores the extent of ECoCs (European Capitals of Culture) as placemaking laboratories. Methodologically, this study employed a mixed-methods approach. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with public and private stakeholders involved in the ECoC programming, and questionnaires were applied to capture personal insights [...] Read more.
This article explores the extent of ECoCs (European Capitals of Culture) as placemaking laboratories. Methodologically, this study employed a mixed-methods approach. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with public and private stakeholders involved in the ECoC programming, and questionnaires were applied to capture personal insights of citizens. Data were correlated within spatial contexts using ArcGIS spatial analyses. The findings show that placemaking within ECoCs is more effective when embedded in transparent governance structures. Local narratives anchor placemaking in the everyday life of citizens. This placemaking legacy depends less on tangible inputs and more on the cultivation of processes and policies that empower communities to articulate and negotiate their sense of belonging within an inclusive and understanding governance structure. Also, we highlight that the latest ECoC included an ecological dimension within placemaking processes. Ultimately, this study illustrates that ECoCs become critical lenses to understand how culture-driven placemaking adds value to places, changes perceptions and behaviours of residents, and contributes to a stronger feeling of collective belonging. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Urban Planning and Design)
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22 pages, 342 KB  
Article
Strength and Vulnerability: A Qualitative Study of Mental Health and Unmitigated Communion Among Female Migrants in Southeast England
by Patrick Nyikavaranda, Christina J. Jones, Marija Pantelic, Esohe Linda Abumwenre, Juliet Batista, Lijuan Wang, Mebrak Ghebreweldi, Tacye Turner, Priyamvada Paudyal, Dafni Katsampa and Carrie D. Llewellyn
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2026, 23(3), 330; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph23030330 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 688
Abstract
Unmitigated communion (UC), the prioritisation of others’ needs over one’s own well-being, is a critical lens for understanding the mental health of female migrants. This qualitative study explores how UC intersects with constructions of strength and vulnerability within this population, particularly amid challenges [...] Read more.
Unmitigated communion (UC), the prioritisation of others’ needs over one’s own well-being, is a critical lens for understanding the mental health of female migrants. This qualitative study explores how UC intersects with constructions of strength and vulnerability within this population, particularly amid challenges such as adaptation, discrimination, and gendered roles. Using a feminist participatory methodology, the study was co-produced with 10 migrant women and three professionals. Semi-structured interviews were conducted with 18 female migrants from 13 countries, representing diverse languages, cultures, and lengths of stay in the UK. Data were thematically analysed using the Engaging Marginalised Communities by Building Relationships and Knowledge (EMBaRK) framework, which centres lived experience and equitable collaboration. Through this analytic process, three key themes were generated: (1) perceived strength and resilience shaped by societal pressures and internalised self-reliance; (2) gender roles and self-sacrifice, including traditional caregiving expectations and neglect of personal health; and (3) isolation and reluctance to seek support, marked by concealed mental health struggles and stigma. Participants’ narratives revealed shared tensions between resilience and vulnerability. The findings highlight the central role of unmitigated communion in shaping migrant women’s mental health and underscore the need for gender-responsive, culturally informed interventions that support women to balance caregiving with self-care. Full article
25 pages, 624 KB  
Article
Current Experiences and Practices of Surveilling and Managing Ebola Virus Disease Outbreaks in the Democratic Republic of Congo by Involving the Community in a “One Health” Approach
by Dieudonné K. Mwamba, Pierre Z. Akilimali, Célestin Manianga, Serge Kapanga, Nadège K. Ngombe, Jean Shonganye, Karl B. Angendu, Gregory Moullec and Christina Zarowsky
Pandemics 2026, 1(1), 3; https://doi.org/10.3390/pandemics1010003 - 6 Mar 2026
Viewed by 509
Abstract
This study examines the community integration and One Health strategies employed to combat Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of Congo from 2007 to 2022. We synthesized 12 outbreak reports, conducted qualitative interviews with 36 managers, organized three focus groups, and adapted [...] Read more.
This study examines the community integration and One Health strategies employed to combat Ebola virus disease in the Democratic Republic of Congo from 2007 to 2022. We synthesized 12 outbreak reports, conducted qualitative interviews with 36 managers, organized three focus groups, and adapted an analytical framework (MATCH) to evaluate three essential dimensions: the integration of the One Health approach, community involvement, and bottom-up approaches. This study evidences progressive improvement in all domains. The first outbreaks (2007–2009) were marked by moderate community engagement and a One Health approach that was largely limited to the human health sector, deemed suboptimal. The 10th outbreak represented an era of transformation, when the Incident Management System (IMS) was adopted to better manage the response to the virus. The latest outbreaks (13th to 15th) demonstrate an “optimal” implementation of the “One Health” approach through effective collaboration between those in charge of ensuring human, animal, and environmental health and that of the community. This study demonstrates that success is largely dependent on bottom-up initiatives in which local populations, their leaders (both traditional and religious), community liaisons, and specific groups (women and youth) are involved in the design and implementation of such measures. The inclusion of anthropologists and psychologists in addressing the psychosocial dimensions—fear, stigma, and distress—has been critical in ensuring the success of these initiatives and the degree to which the public trusts and accepts them. However, many issues still need to be addressed, including poor coordination among sectoral ministries and the partial implementation of IMS at the grassroots level. In summary, the authors of this study propose that these integrated and participatory models are sustainable and imperative to building the resilience of the Congolese health system to future outbreaks. Full article
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29 pages, 2466 KB  
Article
Living Labs as Cultural Infrastructures: Performing and Normalising Circular Fashion Practices
by Alessandra Spagnoli and Valeria M. Iannilli
Sustainability 2026, 18(5), 2471; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18052471 - 3 Mar 2026
Viewed by 446
Abstract
The transition to circular models in fashion and textiles requires changes that go beyond technical innovation. The literature recognises that systemic change depends on the transformation of shared meanings around consumption and production, and that spaces for co-design and collaborative learning are crucial [...] Read more.
The transition to circular models in fashion and textiles requires changes that go beyond technical innovation. The literature recognises that systemic change depends on the transformation of shared meanings around consumption and production, and that spaces for co-design and collaborative learning are crucial to generating this transformation. This article documents how Living Labs operate in this capacity, analysing the Madeback Circular Fashion Festival (May–November 2025), a pilot project of the Fashion & Textile Living Lab at the Politecnico di Milano. The study employs the Living Lab Integrative Process (LLIP) as both a design framework and an analytical lens. Adopting a qualitative and participatory method, the study documents how the three spaces of the LLIP—Problem Space, Solution Space and Implementation Space—simultaneously structured both design innovation and empirical analysis. The results point to three main contributions: (i) Living Labs can function as cultural infrastructures in which performative and narrative dimensions may contribute to the gradual normalisation of alternative practices; (ii) the Quadruple Helix operates as a living process characterised by distributed intentionality and emerging trust; and (iii) transformative learning appears through the co-production of knowledge in embodied and relational practices. The article identifies contextual factors that enabled the project—from its location in a design university to its multi-year funding—and the related constraints on transferability, concluding that Living Labs are promising infrastructures for sustainable transitions when they consciously integrate performative, cultural and relational dimensions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Products and Services)
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19 pages, 695 KB  
Article
Generative AI in Participatory Urban Planning: Synthetic Inhabitants and Experts
by Jussi S. Jauhiainen, Sanni Hakanpää, Heikki-Pekka Honkasaari, Niilas Kivilompolo, Matias Kurri, Luukas Lehtiranta and Mirva Nurminen
Land 2026, 15(3), 407; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15030407 - 2 Mar 2026
Viewed by 1094
Abstract
Generative AI (GenAI) is increasingly applied in urban planning for text production, visualization, analytics, stakeholder communication, and participatory engagement. Large language models (LLMs) enable the creation of synthetic participants to support the early-stage design, analysis, and testing of participatory tools. This article demonstrates [...] Read more.
Generative AI (GenAI) is increasingly applied in urban planning for text production, visualization, analytics, stakeholder communication, and participatory engagement. Large language models (LLMs) enable the creation of synthetic participants to support the early-stage design, analysis, and testing of participatory tools. This article demonstrates an innovative use of GenAI through synthetic inhabitants and experts in an immersive digital urban planning environment. DigitalTurku serves as a proof-of-concept for an immersive planning tool within an urban digital twin. The case relies on synthetic personas—residents and expert stakeholders—to evaluate how a GenAI-assisted urban platform may shape participation experiences and trust in local urban planning. The findings indicate that synthetic experts expressed a reduced bureaucratic distance, enhanced transparency, and more meaningful participation. However, assessments of tools and digital environment usability varied according to digital skills and demographic characteristics embedded in the personas. The use of synthetic personas helps identify opportunities and challenges in immersive urban planning environments and supports the design of digital tools in smart cities to strengthen human residents’ spatial understanding and experiential engagement in planning processes. The creation of synthetic data and participants is convenient with LLMs. Despite these tools’ limitations, they can play a valuable role in piloting participatory planning processes to support and complement human-based participation. Full article
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