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36 pages, 4826 KB  
Article
Deep Tech Ecosystems as Drivers of Sustainable Development: Entrepreneurship and Innovation Perspectives from Europe and Poland
by Dominik Kowal and Wojciech Przewoźnik
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 10195; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172210195 - 14 Nov 2025
Abstract
Deep tech is a broad concept encompassing scientifically and technologically advanced innovations, enterprises, and projects based on profound scientific and engineering knowledge. It addresses complex technological challenges while considering environmental, social, and economic sustainability. Ambitious R&D initiatives act as catalysts for innovative solutions [...] Read more.
Deep tech is a broad concept encompassing scientifically and technologically advanced innovations, enterprises, and projects based on profound scientific and engineering knowledge. It addresses complex technological challenges while considering environmental, social, and economic sustainability. Ambitious R&D initiatives act as catalysts for innovative solutions and for transforming companies and sectors toward sustainable development. The literature review highlights the multifaceted nature of deep tech, particularly from diverse stakeholder perspectives—both those directly and indirectly engaged in this field. Fully utilizing deep tech’s potential requires strong scientific, infrastructural, regulatory, and financial foundations. Europe, including dynamically developing EU countries such as Poland, increasingly recognizes the need to build an ecosystem that supports the development and commercialization of frontier technologies grounded in scientific progress. This article clarifies key deep tech concepts and outlines current conditions for technological innovation in Europe. Drawing on desk research, participatory observation, and a survey, it presents an initial analysis of Poland’s deep tech ecosystem. The exploratory pilot study serves as a basis for more focused future research on key sectoral challenges. The findings offer a preliminary assessment of the potential and barriers related to science-based innovation and provide a clearer picture of Poland’s emerging deep tech landscape. This enables more accurate interpretation of results and insights into the sector’s future development. For Europe and the EU, enhancing global competitiveness in deep tech will require coordinated actions and stronger connections among local ecosystems at different stages of maturity, such as those in Poland. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Entrepreneurship, Innovation and Sustainability in Digital Ecosystems)
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21 pages, 3037 KB  
Article
Water Security with Social Organization and Forest Care in the Megalopolis of Central Mexico
by Úrsula Oswald-Spring and Fernando Jaramillo-Monroy
Water 2025, 17(22), 3245; https://doi.org/10.3390/w17223245 - 13 Nov 2025
Abstract
This article examines the effects of climate change on the 32 million inhabitants of the Megalopolis of Central Mexico (MCM), which is threatened by chaotic urbanization, land-use changes, the deforestation of the Forest of Water by organized crime, unsustainable agriculture, and biodiversity loss. [...] Read more.
This article examines the effects of climate change on the 32 million inhabitants of the Megalopolis of Central Mexico (MCM), which is threatened by chaotic urbanization, land-use changes, the deforestation of the Forest of Water by organized crime, unsustainable agriculture, and biodiversity loss. Expensive hydraulic management extracting water from deep aquifers, long pipes exploiting water from neighboring states, and sewage discharged outside the endorheic basin result in expensive pumping costs and air pollution. This mismanagement has increased water scarcity. The overexploitation of aquifers and the pollution by toxic industrial and domestic sewage mixed with rainfall has increased the ground subsidence, damaging urban infrastructure and flooding marginal neighborhoods with toxic sewage. A system approach, satellite data, and participative research methodology were used to explore potential water scarcity and weakened water security for 32 million inhabitants. An alternative nature-based approach involves recovering the Forest of Water (FW) with IWRM, including the management of Natural Protected Areas, the rainfall recharge of aquifers, and cleaning domestic sewage inside the valley where the MCM is found. This involves recovering groundwater, reducing the overexploitation of aquifers, and limiting floods. Citizen participation in treating domestic wastewater with eco-techniques, rainfall collection, and purification filters improves water availability, while the greening of urban areas limits the risk of climate disasters. The government is repairing the broken drinking water supply and drainage systems affected by multiple earthquakes. Adaptation to water scarcity and climate risks requires the recognition of unpaid female domestic activities and the role of indigenous people in protecting the Forest of Water with the involvement of three state authorities. A digital platform for water security, urban planning, citizen audits against water authority corruption, and aquifer recharge through nature-based solutions provided by the System of Natural Protected Areas, Biological and Hydrological Corridors [SAMBA] are improving livelihoods for the MCM’s inhabitants and marginal neighborhoods, with greater equity and safety. Full article
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21 pages, 3088 KB  
Article
Art-Based Museum Programs for Teacher Wellbeing: A Delphi Study for a Socially Just and Sustainable Framework
by Carmen Basanta and Carmen Urpí
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(11), 1532; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15111532 - 13 Nov 2025
Abstract
Teacher wellbeing is a matter of social justice since burnout syndrome disproportionately affects those working in under-resourced and diverse educational contexts by limiting their ability to foster inclusive and equitable learning. To this situation, art museums respond as pedagogical spaces for wellbeing while [...] Read more.
Teacher wellbeing is a matter of social justice since burnout syndrome disproportionately affects those working in under-resourced and diverse educational contexts by limiting their ability to foster inclusive and equitable learning. To this situation, art museums respond as pedagogical spaces for wellbeing while contributing to socially just and sustainable arts education. School teachers are offered new opportunities for ongoing professional development tailored to their well-being needs, such as burnout prevention. A two-round international Delphi study with experts from universities, schools, museums, and arts-and-wellbeing organizations (n = 26 1st round, n = 17 2nd round)—rather than focusing on teachers’ personal accounts—develops consensus on a pedagogical framework for art-based programs designed to prevent teacher burnout and enhance wellbeing. The findings identify nine pedagogical guidelines highlighting participatory approaches—audience, objectives, content, methodology, scheduling, facilitators, activities, evaluation, and program adherence. By positioning art museums as democratic, inclusive, and relational spaces, the framework advances the role of the arts in addressing systemic challenges in education, such as supporting teachers’ wellbeing. This research contributes to the international debate on socially just arts education by demonstrating how teacher wellbeing can be fostered through innovative, evidence-based museum practices aligned with SDG 4. Full article
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26 pages, 3220 KB  
Systematic Review
Unplanned Land Use in a Planned City: A Systematic Review of Elite Capture, Informal Expansion, and Governance Reform in Islamabad
by Nafees Ahmad, Guoqiang Shen, Haoying Han and Junaid Ahmad
Land 2025, 14(11), 2248; https://doi.org/10.3390/land14112248 - 13 Nov 2025
Abstract
Planned capitals across the Global South frequently experience unplanned land use transitions that contradict their founding visions. Despite six decades of planning and academic inquiry, Islamabad’s research remains fragmented. Environmental studies have documented land use and land cover changes through remote sensing, while [...] Read more.
Planned capitals across the Global South frequently experience unplanned land use transitions that contradict their founding visions. Despite six decades of planning and academic inquiry, Islamabad’s research remains fragmented. Environmental studies have documented land use and land cover changes through remote sensing, while governance-oriented analyses have highlighted institutional weaknesses and policy failures. However, these domains rarely intersect, and few studies systematically link spatial transformations with the underlying governance structures and political–economic processes that drive them. Consequently, the existing literature provides valuable but partial explanations for why Islamabad’s planned order unraveled. This study examines Islamabad, conceived in 1960 as a model of order and green balance, where the built-up area expanded by 377 km2 (from 88 to 465 km2; +426%) and forest cover declined by 83 km2 (−40%) between 1979 and 2019. Using a PRISMA-guided systematic review integrating spatial, governance, and policy data, we synthesized 39 peer-reviewed and gray literature sources to explain why Islamabad’s planned order unraveled. The findings reveal that governance fragmentation between the Capital Development Authority (CDA) and Metropolitan Corporation Islamabad (MCI), combined with elite capture and weak enforcement of the 2020–2040 Master Plan, has produced enduring contradictions between policy intent and urban reality. These conditions mirror those of other planned capitals, such as Brasília and Abuja. Grounded in Pakistan’s institutional context, the study proposes four actionable reforms: (1) regularization frameworks for informal settlements, (2) cross-agency spatial and fiscal coordination, (3) ecological thresholds within zoning by-laws, and (4) participatory master-plan reviews. Islamabad’s experience illustrates how planned capitals can evolve toward inclusive and ecologically resilient futures through governance reform and adaptive planning. Full article
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44 pages, 2594 KB  
Review
Review and Assessment of Crop-Related Digital Tools for Agroecology
by Evangelos Anastasiou, Aikaterini Kasimati, George Papadopoulos, Anna Vatsanidou, Marilena Gemtou, Jochen Kantelhardt, Andreas Gabriel, Friederike Schwierz, Custodio Efraim Matavel, Andreas Meyer-Aurich, Elias Maritan, Karl Behrendt, Alma Moroder, Sonoko Dorothea Bellingrath-Kimura, Søren Marcus Pedersen, Andrea Landi, Liisa Pesonen, Junia Rojic, Minkyeong Kim, Heiner Denzer and Spyros Fountasadd Show full author list remove Hide full author list
Agronomy 2025, 15(11), 2600; https://doi.org/10.3390/agronomy15112600 - 12 Nov 2025
Abstract
The use of digital tools in agroecological crop production can help mitigate current farming challenges such as labour shortage and climate change. The aim of this study was to map digital tools used in crop production, assess their impacts across economic, environmental, and [...] Read more.
The use of digital tools in agroecological crop production can help mitigate current farming challenges such as labour shortage and climate change. The aim of this study was to map digital tools used in crop production, assess their impacts across economic, environmental, and social dimensions, and determine their potential as enablers of agroecology. A systematic search and screening process, following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic reviews and Meta-Analyses methodology, identified 453 relevant studies. The results showed that most digital tools are applied for crop monitoring (83.4%), with unmanned aerial vehicles (37.7%) and camera sensors (75.2% combined) being the most frequently used technologies. Farm Management Information Systems (57.6%) and Decision Support Systems (25.2%) dominated the tool categories, while platforms for market access, social networking, and collaborative learning were rare. Most tools addressed the first tier of agroecology, which refers to input reduction, highlighting a strong focus on efficiency improvements rather than systemic redesign. Although digital tools demonstrated positive contributions to social, environmental, and economic dimensions, studies concentrated mainly on economic benefits. Future research should investigate the potential role of digital technologies in advancing higher tiers of agroecology, emphasising participatory design, agroecosystem services, and broader coverage of the agricultural value chain. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Smart Farming: Advancing Techniques for High-Value Crops)
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36 pages, 3031 KB  
Systematic Review
Exploring Smart Furniture: A Systematic Review of Integrated Technologies, Functionalities, and Applications
by Inês Mimoso, Marcelo Brites-Pereira, Leovaldo Alcântara, Maria Inês Morgado, Gualter Morgado, Inês Saavedra, Francisco José Melero Muñoz, Juliana Louceiro and Elísio Costa
Sensors 2025, 25(22), 6900; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25226900 - 12 Nov 2025
Abstract
Smart furniture represents a growing field that integrates Internet of Things (IoT), embedded systems and assistive technologies, yet lacks a comprehensive synthesis of its components and applications. This PRISMA-guided systematic review analysed 35 studies published between 2014 and 2024, sourced from PubMed, Web [...] Read more.
Smart furniture represents a growing field that integrates Internet of Things (IoT), embedded systems and assistive technologies, yet lacks a comprehensive synthesis of its components and applications. This PRISMA-guided systematic review analysed 35 studies published between 2014 and 2024, sourced from PubMed, Web of Science and Scopus. The included studies presented prototypes of smart furniture that used IoT, sensors or automation. The focus was on extracting data related to technological configurations, functional uses, validation methods, maturity levels and commercialisation. Three technological pillars emerged, data collection (n = 31 studies), transmission/processing (n = 30), and actuation (n = 22), often combined into multifunctional systems (n = 14). Health monitoring was the dominant application (n = 15), followed by environmental control (n = 8) and assistive functions for older adults (n = 8). Validation methods varied; 37% relied solely on laboratory testing, while 20% only involved end-users. Only one solution surpassed Technology Readiness Level (TRL) 7 and is currently on the market. Current research remains pre-commercial, with gaps in AI integration, long-term validation, and participatory design. Smart furniture shows promise for healthcare and independent living, but requires standardised evaluation, ethical data practices, and co-creation to achieve market readiness. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Intelligent Sensors)
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22 pages, 4525 KB  
Article
Moving from Theory to Practice: Exploring How One Community-Based Organization Develops Youth Changemakers for Health Equity
by Zaida V. Pearson, Denise L. Jones, Deanna C. E. Sinex, Lyndsey Del Castillo, Kre’Shon Singleton, Nneka Obiekwu and Dennis F. Jones
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(11), 662; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14110662 - 12 Nov 2025
Abstract
Community-based organizations are recognized as key stakeholders for public health, as their community expertise positions them to create tailored interventions to comprehensively address community needs that large-scale public health interventions may not address. The current study describes one youth-serving community-based non-profit’s approach to [...] Read more.
Community-based organizations are recognized as key stakeholders for public health, as their community expertise positions them to create tailored interventions to comprehensively address community needs that large-scale public health interventions may not address. The current study describes one youth-serving community-based non-profit’s approach to public health, where youth civic engagement is oriented by social justice coursework and integrated within youth participatory action research (YPAR) to engage youth in health equity efforts. The Social Determinants of Health (SDOH) framework and the Socioecological Model (SEM) were applied to student research outputs to understand student conceptualization of social issues and the subsequent interventions they suggest. This work explores the feasibility and depth of student-created interventions within each SDOH domain, identifying common themes in students’ conceptualizations of social problems and interventions to promote health equity. Suggestions for integrating SDOH frameworks into the YPAR curriculum to scaffold youth projects, identifying root causes of health disparities, and developing practical community-based solutions are provided. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Public Health and Social Change)
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21 pages, 2371 KB  
Article
Return of Ancient Wheats, Emmer and Einkorn, a Pesticide-Free Alternative for a More Sustainable Agriculture—A Summary of a Comprehensive Analysis from Central Europe
by Szilvia Bencze, Ferenc Bakos, Péter Mikó, Mihály Földi, Magdaléna Lacko-Bartošová, Nuri Nurlaila Setiawan, Anna Katalin Fekete and Dóra Drexler
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 10088; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172210088 - 12 Nov 2025
Viewed by 134
Abstract
Conventional agriculture, focusing on productivity rather than sustainability, have long abandoned hulled wheats. With them not only striking genetic diversity but valuable, health-promoting food sources became lost. Although einkorn and emmer—two of the most ancient wheat species—are generally considered good candidates of sustainable [...] Read more.
Conventional agriculture, focusing on productivity rather than sustainability, have long abandoned hulled wheats. With them not only striking genetic diversity but valuable, health-promoting food sources became lost. Although einkorn and emmer—two of the most ancient wheat species—are generally considered good candidates of sustainable agriculture especially for pesticide-free cropping, they have remained largely unrecognized. To assess their agronomic potential in comparison with modern wheats grown under the same conditions, comprehensive research was conducted, combining multi-location participatory on-farm and small-plot trials. Our findings confirmed that most landraces of emmer and einkorn exhibited strong weed suppression ability, making them suitable for organic cultivation, and effective resistance against diseases—including Fusarium spp. and associated deoxynivalenol (DON) mycotoxin accumulation. Both species were entirely avoided by cereal leaf beetles (Oulema spp.) and had, on average, 2.6% more grain protein content than common wheat. Although they command significantly higher market prices, their (hulled) yields were comparable to modern wheat only in extreme years or at sites typically producing 3–5 t/ha of wheat. Nevertheless, the cultivation of emmer and einkorn presents a more sustainable "sow-and-harvest" alternative, free from pesticide and mycotoxin residue risks, while also enhances biodiversity from the field to the table. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainable Agriculture)
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21 pages, 933 KB  
Article
Integrating Sustainable City Branding and Transport Planning: From Framework to Roadmap for Urban Sustainability
by Cecília Vale and Leonor Vale
Future Transp. 2025, 5(4), 172; https://doi.org/10.3390/futuretransp5040172 - 10 Nov 2025
Viewed by 193
Abstract
As global urbanization accelerates, cities increasingly shape economic growth and environmental outcomes, making sustainable urban and transport planning critical. Sustainable city branding (SCB) is emerging as a strategic tool that not only enhances a city’s global competitiveness but actively drives urban sustainability by [...] Read more.
As global urbanization accelerates, cities increasingly shape economic growth and environmental outcomes, making sustainable urban and transport planning critical. Sustainable city branding (SCB) is emerging as a strategic tool that not only enhances a city’s global competitiveness but actively drives urban sustainability by integrating environmental, social, and economic dimensions aligned with the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). However, the direct link between SCB and transport planning remains largely unexplored, limiting actionable policy. This study introduces a novel conceptual framework connecting SCB with transport planning, positioning public transportation as a key lever for sustainable urban development. It identifies core interactions between city branding and sustainable mobility, proposes methodologies to evaluate SCB effectiveness, and addresses potential risks, challenges, and research gaps. A policy roadmap for decision-makers based on the framework is outlined. This roadmap is structured into three phases spanning a five-year program. In Phase 1, cities should lay the foundation by integrating SCB into municipal transport and sustainability plans and establishing measurable indicators aligned with the SDGs. Phase 2 focuses on engagement and experimentation, encouraging the creation of participatory branding platforms and the implementation of pilot projects, such as green mobility corridors or climate-resilient transit hubs. Finally, Phase 3 emphasizes monitoring and scaling, utilizing digital technologies for real-time tracking, evaluating pilot outcomes, and expanding successful initiatives based on key performance indicators, including ridership growth, carbon reduction, and citizen engagement. By linking SCB explicitly to transport planning and providing a concrete roadmap, this study offers a unique contribution to both urban sustainability research and practical policy-making, enabling cities to simultaneously strengthen their brand, enhance mobility, and achieve measurable sustainability outcomes. Full article
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34 pages, 2758 KB  
Article
Innovative Indicator-Based Support Tools for High-Quality Participation in Disaster Risk Management and Urban Resilience Building
by Fabrizio Bruno, Ilenia Spadaro and Francesca Pirlone
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 10031; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172210031 - 10 Nov 2025
Viewed by 165
Abstract
Despite broad consensus on the importance of participatory processes in disaster risk management and urban resilience building, substantial gaps persist, including scarce research on monitoring and evaluating participation, lack of comparative studies, underexplored policy and institutional roles. The paper provides methodological and empirical [...] Read more.
Despite broad consensus on the importance of participatory processes in disaster risk management and urban resilience building, substantial gaps persist, including scarce research on monitoring and evaluating participation, lack of comparative studies, underexplored policy and institutional roles. The paper provides methodological and empirical insights by developing and validating two indicator-based tools: one for ex ante assessment of institutional capacity and the other for supporting monitoring and ex post evaluation of participatory processes. The paper also tests them through a comparative study employing a standardizable and reproducible methodology and synthesizes findings from a systematic review of case studies and a semi-systematic review of grey literature to compile a comprehensive pool of criteria and indicators. These are screened, assigned a weight (either by Equal Weight or Best Worst Method) and are aggregated in the two innovative tools mentioned above. These are tested on four case studies: recent local-scale participatory processes aimed at reducing disaster risk and promoting urban resilience addressing multi-hazard scenarios. The research quali-quantitatively demonstrates how, in the four case studies, greater institutional capacity turns into a higher-quality participatory process. Furthermore, the paper improves practical knowledge on participatory processes in disaster risk management and urban resilience building and lays the foundation for evidence-based innovative guidelines for their planning a priori. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Urban Vulnerability and Resilience)
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12 pages, 239 KB  
Concept Paper
From Punishment to Purpose: Occupational Therapy and Ethical Challenges in the Spanish Prison System
by Daniel Emeric-Méaulle, Pablo A. Cantero-Garlito and Ana A. Laborda-Soriano
Societies 2025, 15(11), 310; https://doi.org/10.3390/soc15110310 - 10 Nov 2025
Viewed by 228
Abstract
Occupational therapy (OT) advocates for rehabilitation and social reintegration within prison systems, yet its integration must consider the ethical and institutional constraints of incarceration. This paper critically examines the Spanish penitentiary system to explore the tensions between the punitive logic of imprisonment and [...] Read more.
Occupational therapy (OT) advocates for rehabilitation and social reintegration within prison systems, yet its integration must consider the ethical and institutional constraints of incarceration. This paper critically examines the Spanish penitentiary system to explore the tensions between the punitive logic of imprisonment and the rehabilitative values of OT. The aim is to assess whether the current institutional structure enables socio-health professionals—particularly occupational therapists—to act coherently with their humanistic and ethical principles. A detailed documentary review was conducted using the Triangular Method of Ontologically Grounded Personalism (Sgreccia), which integrates biological/situational, anthropological, and ethical dimensions. Legislative documents, institutional reports, and academic literature were systematically analyzed to identify ethical challenges affecting professional practice within Spanish prisons. Findings reveal a paradoxical reality: Spain maintains one of the lowest crime rates in the EU yet exhibits a high incarceration rate, reflecting a punitive penal culture. The prison population, mostly adult males convicted of property and public health offenses, experiences significant occupational deprivation, mental illness, and social vulnerability. Ethical dilemmas include dual loyalty, loss of autonomy, and institutional priorities that undermine person-centered rehabilitation. The study underscores profound ethical tensions limiting OT practice in prisons. Addressing these challenges requires institutional and professional transformation toward more participatory and dignity-centered correctional models. Future research should incorporate empirical and qualitative approaches to design ethical frameworks that promote occupational justice and sustainable reintegration. Full article
24 pages, 636 KB  
Article
Participatory Governance in the Digitalization Process of a Smart City: The Case of the Municipality of Rome
by Alberto Romolini, Linda Meleo and Michele Sances
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 9995; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17229995 - 8 Nov 2025
Viewed by 344
Abstract
A smart city can be defined as an urban ecosystem that combines new technologies related to digitalization in infrastructure, governance models, and everyday life, as well as inclusivity and stakeholder participation for achieving effectiveness and long-term sustainability. Although many frameworks and co-creative governance [...] Read more.
A smart city can be defined as an urban ecosystem that combines new technologies related to digitalization in infrastructure, governance models, and everyday life, as well as inclusivity and stakeholder participation for achieving effectiveness and long-term sustainability. Although many frameworks and co-creative governance approaches emphasize the importance of integrating diverse perspectives in urban innovation, the practical implementation of stakeholder engagement remains a significant challenge in the development of digital strategies. This persistent difficulty often stems from factors such as varying levels of digital literacy, power asymmetries among stakeholders, and insufficient mechanisms for meaningful participation. As a result, there is a risk that smart city initiatives may fall short of their potential to deliver inclusive and sustainable outcomes, ultimately undermining both the legitimacy and the long-term effectiveness of urban digital transformation processes. This is especially relevant in the Italian context. Indeed, despite the relevant number of papers dedicated to stakeholder engagement in smart cities, few studies have explored how municipalities implement these innovative strategies, and even fewer have within the Italian context. This research aims to fill this gap by analyzing the stakeholder engagement in Rome’s smart city strategy and the effectiveness of participatory and co-creative approaches in transforming a city into an effective smart city. The research results reveal that the experience of the Rome Smart City Lab (RSCL) creates a model of participatory governance where the stakeholders can co-create the digital innovation strategies of a municipality and where the stakeholder techniques are fully implemented. The research results provide interesting results useful for both academics and policymakers involved in the digital transformation of a smart city, since the RSCL’s approach confirms that digitalization initiatives become more effective and efficient when they are shaped by the very individuals and groups responsible for their implementation. This participatory process seems to enhance the adaptability and sustainability of digital strategies over time, ultimately contributing to the realization of truly inclusive smart cities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
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22 pages, 1091 KB  
Article
Mathematics with|in Conocimientos: A Mathematical Embodiment and Conscious-Raising Experience
by Ricardo Martinez, Gabrielle Elizabeth Bernal and Larissa Peru
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(11), 1508; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15111508 - 8 Nov 2025
Viewed by 277
Abstract
Mathematics interwoven with Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) EntreMunods is an ontological playground for youth liberation, where mathematical learning helped to create an experience where youth empower themselves by engaging in critical social science research. In this study, seven stages of conocimientos are [...] Read more.
Mathematics interwoven with Youth Participatory Action Research (YPAR) EntreMunods is an ontological playground for youth liberation, where mathematical learning helped to create an experience where youth empower themselves by engaging in critical social science research. In this study, seven stages of conocimientos are expanded to help understand how consciousness shifts while engaged in mathematics. Thematic analysis of student reflections on the YPAR mathematics activities revealed how students developed a mathematical critical consciousness. This manuscript is a theatrical conceptualizing of the Math YPAR experience, leading to development of the Mathematics with|in Conocimientos framework; seven mathematical embodiments or stages that once experienced, represent a change in mathematical consciousness. In situating mathematics as a guiding epistemology, method, and pedagogy to the YPAR methodological design, this study highlights the transformative power of mathematics rooted in challenging systemic injustices. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Justice-Centered Mathematics Teaching)
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13 pages, 1229 KB  
Article
Systems Thinking for Degrowth: Archetypes, Equity, and Strategic Pathways for Global Sustainability
by Maseeha Ansermeah, Cecile Gerwel Proches and Shamim Bodhanya
Sustainability 2025, 17(22), 9945; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17229945 - 7 Nov 2025
Viewed by 301
Abstract
South Africa’s overlapping crises, namely ecological overshoot, energy insecurity, unemployment, and inequality, are not isolated challenges but systemic outcomes of a political economy dependent on growth. This article advances a degrowth by design framework that positions systems thinking as the primary driver of [...] Read more.
South Africa’s overlapping crises, namely ecological overshoot, energy insecurity, unemployment, and inequality, are not isolated challenges but systemic outcomes of a political economy dependent on growth. This article advances a degrowth by design framework that positions systems thinking as the primary driver of transformative change. By embedding Meadows’ leverage points within canonical archetypes such as Limits to Growth, Shifting the Burden, Success to the Successful, and Tragedy of the Commons the analysis demonstrates how reinforcing and balancing feedbacks perpetuate overshoot and social inequity and how targeted leverage strategies can reorient systems toward sufficiency, equity, and ecological repair. The framework integrates decolonial ethics, Ubuntu-informed relational dignity, pluriversal design perspectives, and legislative anchors such as South Africa’s Climate Change Act and Just Energy Transition. While the contribution is primarily conceptual, it is strengthened by illustrative vignettes, descriptive statistics, and the proposal of measurable indicators including material footprint per capita and energy intensity of wellbeing. Acknowledging the limitations of qualitative mapping and partial empirical application, the article outlines a research agenda centred on empirical validation, comparative municipal case studies, participatory action research, and open indicator repositories. The unique contribution lies in reframing degrowth as a diagnostic and prescriptive leverage strategy that is both contextually grounded and transferable. Rooted in South Africa yet relevant across the Global South, the degrowth compass functions as a normative and analytical benchmark to guide contested transitions toward just and ecologically restorative futures. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Air, Climate Change and Sustainability)
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18 pages, 1215 KB  
Article
Patients and Communities Shape Regional Health Research Priorities: A Participatory Study from South Tyrol, Italy
by Christian J. Wiedermann, Verena Barbieri, Angelika Mahlknecht, Carla Felderer, Giuliano Piccoliori, Doris Hager von Strobele-Prainsack and Adolf Engl
Healthcare 2025, 13(21), 2797; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare13212797 - 4 Nov 2025
Viewed by 288
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Engaging patients, caregivers, and community groups in health research priority-setting ensures that research agendas reflect genuine needs and enhance patient-centered care. Regions with cultural and linguistic diversity, such as South Tyrol in northern Italy, face challenges in achieving fair representation. This [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Engaging patients, caregivers, and community groups in health research priority-setting ensures that research agendas reflect genuine needs and enhance patient-centered care. Regions with cultural and linguistic diversity, such as South Tyrol in northern Italy, face challenges in achieving fair representation. This study aimed to identify health services research priorities in South Tyrol, a culturally and linguistically diverse region in Italy, through a bilingual participatory survey involving general practitioners (GPs) and patient and social interest organizations (PSIOs). Methods: A cross-sectional online survey (August–September 2025) was conducted among invited PSIOs (n = 64) and regional GPs (n = 290). A bilingual, self-developed questionnaire assessed organizational characteristics, priority ratings for predefined topics, experiences with research participation, and preferred participation modes. The data were analyzed descriptively. Group comparisons were performed using the Mann–Whitney U and chi-square tests with effect size calculation. Associations were examined using Spearman’s correlation. Free-text responses were thematically content-coded. Results: Ninety-five responses were analyzed, including nine general practitioners (9.5%) and 86 participants (90.5%) from patient and social interest organizations, of whom 27 (28.4%) held leadership or board positions. Across all groups, the highest-rated research priorities included children and adolescent mental health, palliative and end-of-life care, and continuity of primary care. Willingness to participate in future research was expressed by 38% of the respondents, with an additional 52% indicating conditional interest. Online surveys were the most preferred mode of participation, followed by workshops and board meetings. Conclusions: Participatory bilingual approaches are feasible in South Tyrol and highlight priorities that are highly relevant for patient-centered health services. Future initiatives should strengthen the structures for research participation, enhance GP engagement, and link identified priorities to research funding and policy action. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Patient Experience and the Quality of Health Care)
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