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Search Results (565)

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21 pages, 1059 KB  
Article
How Does the Digital Village Construction Affect the Urban–Rural Income Gap: Empirical Evidence from China
by Jin Xu and Hui Liu
Agriculture 2026, 16(2), 278; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16020278 - 22 Jan 2026
Viewed by 73
Abstract
Digital rural construction (DRC), as a crucial intersection of the rural revitalization strategy and the construction of Digital China, is a key path to addressing the imbalance and inadequacy in the urban–rural income gap (URIG). Based on provincial panel data from 2011 to [...] Read more.
Digital rural construction (DRC), as a crucial intersection of the rural revitalization strategy and the construction of Digital China, is a key path to addressing the imbalance and inadequacy in the urban–rural income gap (URIG). Based on provincial panel data from 2011 to 2023, this paper systematically examines the relationship and mechanism of action between the two using an econometric model. This study finds that DRC significantly reduces the URIG overall, and this effect is achieved through increasing urbanization levels, accelerating employment, and promoting social consumption. Spatial effect tests indicate that DRC has a spatial spillover effect; construction in one province reduces the URIG in neighboring provinces. Further research shows that, against the backdrop of human capital level acting as a threshold variable, the effect of DRC on the URIG exhibits an inverted “U”-shaped characteristic, first increasing and then decreasing. Therefore, this paper proposes countermeasures and suggestions, including constructing a digital-enabled urban–rural integration mechanism, promoting cross-regional coordinated development of DRC, and implementing a tiered and categorized digital literacy improvement project. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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24 pages, 3150 KB  
Article
Can Digital Literacy Alleviate the Multi-Dimensional Inequalities Among Rural Residents? Evidence from China
by Shanqing Liu, Yanhua Li, Huwei Wen and Ying Wang
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 1069; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18021069 - 21 Jan 2026
Viewed by 94
Abstract
Multi-dimensional inequality among rural residents has become a major obstacle hindering the achievement of global poverty alleviation goals. This study utilized household sample data from the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS) over four periods from 2014 to 2020 and applied them to a [...] Read more.
Multi-dimensional inequality among rural residents has become a major obstacle hindering the achievement of global poverty alleviation goals. This study utilized household sample data from the China Family Panel Studies (CFPS) over four periods from 2014 to 2020 and applied them to a high-dimensional fixed effects model to estimate the impact of digital literacy on multi-dimensional inequality among rural residents. The results show that digital literacy can effectively alleviate the multi-dimensional inequality of rural residents. From the perspective of a mediating effect, digital literacy alleviates the multi-dimensional inequality of rural residents by improving the level of social capital and promoting social harmony. Moreover, the alleviation of multi-dimensional inequality among rural residents by digital literacy varies among different groups. The impact of digital literacy on the multi-dimensional inequality of agricultural workers and rural residents in western regions is relatively greater than that of non-agricultural workers and rural residents in other regions. Information processing literacy in digital literacy has the most significant impact on the multi-dimensional inequality of rural residents. This paper enriches the mechanism paths of digital literacy in alleviating the multi-dimensional inequality among rural residents in terms of both material and spiritual aspects, and provides a certain reference value for achieving the all-round development of rural residents and contributing to rural production practices. Full article
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28 pages, 322 KB  
Article
Capital Factor Market Integration and Corporate ESG Performance: Evidence from China
by Hao Liu and Zhanyu Ying
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 906; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020906 - 15 Jan 2026
Viewed by 143
Abstract
This study investigates the impact of city-level capital factor market integration on corporate ESG performance, using a sample of Chinese A-share listed companies from 2010 to 2024. We find that greater capital factor market integration significantly improves firms’ overall ESG performance. Mechanism analysis [...] Read more.
This study investigates the impact of city-level capital factor market integration on corporate ESG performance, using a sample of Chinese A-share listed companies from 2010 to 2024. We find that greater capital factor market integration significantly improves firms’ overall ESG performance. Mechanism analysis reveals that capital factor market integration operates through three channels: market competition, technological advancement, and attention reconstruction, enhancing both firms’ capabilities and incentives to engage in ESG activities. The positive effect is stronger for state-owned enterprises, firms in less polluting industries, and those in regions with high government environmental attention. Further analysis indicates that capital factor market integration suppresses corporate greenwashing behavior and reduces discrepancies across ESG rating agencies. Moreover, capital factor market integration exhibits asymmetric effects across ESG sub-dimensions, significantly improving environmental and governance performance while weakening social responsibility performance. This reflects firms’ preference, under competitive pressure, for environmental and governance domains characterized by shorter payback periods and more readily quantifiable outcomes, as well as their cautious stance toward the social responsibility domain where effects take considerably longer to materialize. This study contributes to understanding the micro-level mechanisms through which capital factor market integration influences corporate sustainable development, providing empirical evidence for China’s construction of a unified national market and the advancement of sustainable development strategies. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
20 pages, 1996 KB  
Article
Seizing New Opportunities Amid Crisis: Industrial Structure Upgrading and Resilience of Artificial Intelligence Industry Chain
by Ligang Wang and Ruimin Lin
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 858; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020858 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 178
Abstract
As a key strategic sector underpinning China’s future development, the artificial intelligence (AI) industry is essential to enhancing national competitiveness and advancing sustainable economic and social development. Based on Chinese provincial panel data from 2012 to 2022, we explore how industrial structure upgrading [...] Read more.
As a key strategic sector underpinning China’s future development, the artificial intelligence (AI) industry is essential to enhancing national competitiveness and advancing sustainable economic and social development. Based on Chinese provincial panel data from 2012 to 2022, we explore how industrial structure upgrading (ISU) affects the resilience of China’s AI industry chain (RAIIC) and empirically test the underlying transmission mechanism using a mediation effect model. The results indicate that (1) ISU significantly enhances the RAIIC, thereby providing a solid structural foundation for its long-term stability and sustainable evolution; (2) the impact of ISU on the RAIIC can be realized by enhancing regional financial agglomeration and human capital levels; (3) the positive impact of ISU on the RAIIC is significantly stronger in regions with larger population sizes, higher levels of economic development, higher technological sophistication, and more advanced digital inclusive finance. These findings imply that policy design should emphasize regional coordination and dynamic adaptability so as to support the balanced and sustainable nationwide development of the AI industry. According to these findings, we propose corresponding policy recommendations aimed at providing theoretical support and practical guidance for the sustainable and high-quality development of China’s AI industry. Full article
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24 pages, 8070 KB  
Article
Research on Ecological Compensation in the Yangtze River Economic Belt Based on Water-Energy-Food Service Flows and XGBoost-SHAP Analysis
by Hao Wang, Jianshen Qu, Weidong Zhang, Peizhen Zhu, Ruoqing Zhu, Yuexia Han, Yong Cao and Bin Dong
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 839; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020839 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 130
Abstract
Under the combined influence of global climate change and intensified human activities, quantifying ecological compensation (EC) amounts between regions and formulating scientifically sound and rational policies have become critical strategies for addressing the imbalance between economic development and ecological conservation. This study focuses [...] Read more.
Under the combined influence of global climate change and intensified human activities, quantifying ecological compensation (EC) amounts between regions and formulating scientifically sound and rational policies have become critical strategies for addressing the imbalance between economic development and ecological conservation. This study focuses on the Yangtze River Economic Belt (YREB) as the research subject, assesses ecosystem service supply and demand (ESSD) in the years 2000, 2010, and 2020 from the perspective of the water-energy-food nexus (WEF-Nexus), identifies ecosystem service flows (ESF) between supply and demand areas, develops an integrated EC model incorporating ecological, economic, and social dimensions to estimate EC amounts, and ultimately employs the XGBoost-SHAP model to analyze the underlying driving mechanisms. The results indicate the following: (1) From 2000 to 2020, the spatio-temporal variations in the three ESSDs in the YREB were substantial. Additionally, imbalances in ESSDs were observed, predominantly in economically advanced regions. (2) A total of 183 ESFs were identified among cities within the YREB, reflecting relatively active exchanges of ecosystem services (ESs). (3) Over the past two decades, the average annual total EC of the YREB amounted to 46,866.35 million yuan, with EC capital flows occurring in 117 cities. The proportion of water area in each city constitutes the primary driver of the EC amount. The EC model based on the “water-energy-food” ecosystem service flow (WEF-ESF) proposed in this study provides a valuable reference and scientific basis for formulating EC policies among YREB cities. Full article
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33 pages, 2248 KB  
Review
Human Capital and Economic Growth in Colombia: Review
by María Valentina Rondón-Castillo, Hugo Alexander Rondón-Quintana and Juan Gabriel Bastidas-Martínez
Economies 2026, 14(1), 23; https://doi.org/10.3390/economies14010023 - 14 Jan 2026
Viewed by 213
Abstract
Globally, human capital is recognized as a structural determinant of economic growth, with evidence of a positive, bidirectional, and significant relationship between both variables. However, in Colombia, few studies have directly measured the influence of human capital on national economic growth. To date, [...] Read more.
Globally, human capital is recognized as a structural determinant of economic growth, with evidence of a positive, bidirectional, and significant relationship between both variables. However, in Colombia, few studies have directly measured the influence of human capital on national economic growth. To date, there is no academic review that integrates and analyzes the available evidence on this link, even though such studies are fundamental for understanding the drivers of development, reducing structural inequalities, and guiding policies that promote productivity and social inclusion. This study conducted a literature review across major international and Colombian academic databases, with a specific focus on Colombia and a minimum 25-year observation window, to identify research gaps and establish conceptual foundations for future research. In total, 140 articles were reviewed. In general terms, the findings show that, although human capital is an essential driver of Colombia’s economic growth, its full impact is constrained by structural and regional inequalities, corruption, violence, labor informality, institutional fragmentation, and mismatches between education and labor market demands. These results underscore the need to expand empirical research to better measure its effects and to inform more inclusive and sustainable development policies. Full article
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26 pages, 460 KB  
Article
Rapid Minimum Wage Increases and Societal Sustainability: Evidence from Labor Productivity in China
by Yixuan Gao, Yongping Ruan and Zhiqiang Ye
Sustainability 2026, 18(2), 651; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18020651 - 8 Jan 2026
Viewed by 249
Abstract
Minimum wage is an important tool for reducing income inequality and supporting social welfare. Consequently, governments around the world have established minimum wage systems. As such, minimum wage policies connect distributive justice with the economy’s capacity to sustain broad-based welfare over time, placing [...] Read more.
Minimum wage is an important tool for reducing income inequality and supporting social welfare. Consequently, governments around the world have established minimum wage systems. As such, minimum wage policies connect distributive justice with the economy’s capacity to sustain broad-based welfare over time, placing the equity–efficiency trade-off at the center of societal sustainability. However, the micro-level impact of the minimum wage system on firms has always been an important topic for scholars. This study uses panel data from listed Chinese manufacturing firms over a period from 2005 to 2021 to construct an indicator of the minimum wage standards implemented in the firm locations. Employing the multiple linear regression model, this paper empirically examines the effects of minimum wage on labor productivity. The empirical findings demonstrate that minimum wage significantly reduced the sample firms’ labor productivity. Moreover, the negative impact of the minimum wage was primarily concentrated among non-state-owned firms, labor-intensive firms, firms operating in industries characterized by intense product market competition, firms situated in regions with strong legal protections, firms with comparatively low average employee wages, and export-oriented firms. Subsequently, this study delves into the mechanism through which minimum wage negatively affects labor productivity. We find that implementation of minimum wage leads to a reduction in corporate investment, indicating that there is no significant substitution relationship between capital and labor. These adjustment margins provide microfoundations through which statutory wage floors can influence the resilience and inclusiveness of development, indicating that the pace and design of wage increases should balance income protection with the preservation of productive capacity to support sustainable human development—grounded in steady productivity growth, equitable income distribution, and stable firm investment. Our findings contribute to a better understanding of the mechanism through which minimum wage affects labor productivity in theory, while concurrently furnishing policy insights for the optimization of the minimum wage system and maintaining sustainable societal development in practice. Full article
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30 pages, 2017 KB  
Article
Financial Risk Management and Resilience of Small Enterprises Amid the Wartime Crisis
by Valeriia Shcherbak, Oleksandr Dorokhov, Liudmyla Dorokhova, Kseniia Vzhytynska, Valentyna Yatsenko and Oleksii Yermolenko
J. Risk Financial Manag. 2026, 19(1), 37; https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm19010037 - 5 Jan 2026
Viewed by 464
Abstract
This study examines the financial resilience of small enterprises in Ukraine during the wartime crisis, addressing the lack of quantitative evidence on how regional military risks and adaptive strategies jointly shape SME stability. The analysis is based on a sample of 30 small [...] Read more.
This study examines the financial resilience of small enterprises in Ukraine during the wartime crisis, addressing the lack of quantitative evidence on how regional military risks and adaptive strategies jointly shape SME stability. The analysis is based on a sample of 30 small agricultural enterprises from the eastern, central, and western regions of Ukraine using annual data for 2022–2024. To capture multidimensional resilience patterns, the study applies factor analysis, cluster analysis, and taxonomic assessment methods to evaluate financial performance, operational adaptability, and access to external resources. The findings show that resilience variation across the sample is strongly associated with enterprises’ ability to sustain revenue flows, control operating costs, and maintain a balanced capital structure. Three distinct resilience profiles were identified: high resilience in western regions (KT = 0.89), moderate resilience in central regions (KT = 0.81), and low resilience in eastern frontline regions (KT = 0.49). These results indicate substantial regional asymmetry linked to differentiated exposure to military threats. Building on these empirical insights, the study proposes a hybrid risk-management approach that integrates digitalization of financial operations, diversification of funding sources, and enhanced social engagement as mechanisms supporting adaptation under prolonged instability. The novelty of the research lies in combining regional risk exposure with multidimensional financial indicators to develop an evidence-based framework for assessing SME resilience in wartime conditions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue The Role of Digitization in Corporate Finance)
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19 pages, 1234 KB  
Article
Rice–Fish Integration as a Pathway to Sustainable Livelihoods Among Smallholder Farmers: Evidence from DPSIR-Informed Analysis in Sub-Saharan Africa
by Oluwafemi Ajayi, Arkar Myo, Yongxu Cheng and Jiayao Li
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 498; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010498 - 4 Jan 2026
Viewed by 356
Abstract
Smallholder rice farmers in sub-Saharan Africa face persistent livelihood challenges due to declining returns from monocropping, limited diversification opportunities, and vulnerability to climate and market shocks. This study integrated the Drivers–Pressures–State–Impact–Response (DPSIR) framework with the sustainable livelihood approach to evaluate how the transition [...] Read more.
Smallholder rice farmers in sub-Saharan Africa face persistent livelihood challenges due to declining returns from monocropping, limited diversification opportunities, and vulnerability to climate and market shocks. This study integrated the Drivers–Pressures–State–Impact–Response (DPSIR) framework with the sustainable livelihood approach to evaluate how the transition from rice monocropping to integrated rice–fish farming influences productivity, profitability, and household welfare in Nigeria’s leading rice-producing region. Using a mixed-methods, three-year panel (2021–2023) of 228 households across three communities in Kebbi State, descriptive statistics, regression models, and thematic analyses were combined to assess changes in livelihood capitals, system pressures, and response mechanisms. Adoption of rice–fish systems was associated with substantial improvements: 96.1% of farmers reported increased income, 56.3% improved food security, and 30.6% greater dietary diversity. Regression analyses confirmed that access to more land (p < 0.001 for healthcare and education; p = 0.011 for social status), labor affordability (p < 0.001), and farm size (p < 0.05) were consistent predictors of gains in healthcare, education, and social status, while pesticide and herbicide use negatively affected food access and wellbeing (p < 0.05). The DPSIR assessment revealed that rice–fish integration altered the state of rice production systems through reductions in input-related pressures and generated positive livelihood impacts. The results align with Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) related to poverty reduction, food and nutrition security, sustainable production, and biodiversity conservation, and provide the first large-scale, longitudinal evidence from West Africa that integrated rice–fish systems support food security, income diversification, and sustainable resource management. Full article
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22 pages, 976 KB  
Article
Anti-Poverty Programmes and Livelihood Sustainability: Comparative Evidence from Herder Households in Northern Tibet, China
by Huixia Zou, Chunsheng Wu, Shaowei Li, Wei Sun and Chengqun Yu
Agriculture 2026, 16(1), 110; https://doi.org/10.3390/agriculture16010110 - 31 Dec 2025
Viewed by 282
Abstract
Anti-Poverty Programmes (APPs) are closely linked to rural livelihoods, yet comparative evidence on how participants and non-participants differ in livelihood-capital composition and income-generation patterns remains limited in ecologically fragile pastoral regions. This study draws on a cross-sectional household survey conducted in Northern Tibet [...] Read more.
Anti-Poverty Programmes (APPs) are closely linked to rural livelihoods, yet comparative evidence on how participants and non-participants differ in livelihood-capital composition and income-generation patterns remains limited in ecologically fragile pastoral regions. This study draws on a cross-sectional household survey conducted in Northern Tibet in July 2020, covering 696 households—including 225 APP participants and 471 non-participants. Using the Sustainable Livelihoods Framework and the entropy weight method, we construct multidimensional livelihood-capital indices (human, social, natural, physical, and financial capital) and compare the two groups. We further apply Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) regressions to examine factors associated with per capita net income. The results reveal substantial heterogeneity in livelihood capital and income across both groups. APP participants exhibit higher human-capital scores, largely driven by a higher share of skills training, whereas they show disadvantages in physical and financial capital relative to non-participants. Natural capital shows no statistically significant difference between the two groups under the local grassland contracting regime. Significant differences are observed and identified in certain dimensions of social capital. Regression results suggest that income is positively associated with skills training, contracted grassland endowment, and fixed assets, with skills training showing the strongest association. For participants, herd size and labour capacity are not statistically significant correlates of income; for non-participants, larger herds and greater labour capacity are associated with lower income. Taken together, the findings indicate that APP participation is associated with stronger capability-related capital (notably training) alongside persistent constraints in productive assets and financial capacity. Policy implications include improving the relevance and quality of training, strengthening cooperative governance and market linkages, and designing complementary packages that connect skills, inclusive finance, and productive asset accumulation. Given the cross-sectional design and administratively targeted certification of programme participation, the results should be interpreted as context-specific associations rather than strict causal effects. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Agricultural Economics, Policies and Rural Management)
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24 pages, 303 KB  
Article
Is There Room for New Mosques in Belgian Cities? An Actor–Network Theory Approach
by Mohamed El Boujjoufi, Corinne Torrekens and Jacques Teller
Land 2026, 15(1), 70; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15010070 - 30 Dec 2025
Viewed by 519
Abstract
This article examines whether, and under what conditions, there is room for new mosques in Belgian cities by analyzing how media controversies around mosque projects are assembled. We study a corpus of press articles (2014–2024) using a two-step approach: First, keyword mapping identifies [...] Read more.
This article examines whether, and under what conditions, there is room for new mosques in Belgian cities by analyzing how media controversies around mosque projects are assembled. We study a corpus of press articles (2014–2024) using a two-step approach: First, keyword mapping identifies dominant discursive patterns across six themes (mobility, legality, size and visibility, social cohesion and integration, security and extremism, financing). Second, argument coding links lexical signals to public modes of judgment through actor–network theory (ANT) and controversy registers. Applied to five case studies across Flanders, Wallonia, and the Brussels-Capital Region, this framework offers comparative depth. The results show that identity and security controversies frequently outweigh strict urban planning controversies; neutral planning criteria (e.g., traffic congestion, permit compliance) are often recoded as symbolic markers of alterity. Regional contrasts provide nuance to this pattern: in Flanders, politicization through security/identity is salient; in Wallonia, debates emphasize size, form, and spatial integration; in Brussels-Capital, technico-legal compliance intertwines with aesthetic visibility. Media operate as boundary objects that hierarchize registers and amplify controversies. We conclude that mosques are treated less as ordinary urban infrastructure than as contested symbols of belonging and visibility. Moving toward negotiated pluralism requires institutional mechanisms that ensure transparency, equal treatment, local anchoring, and symbolic requalification. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Spatial Justice in Urban Planning (Second Edition))
28 pages, 2220 KB  
Article
Impact of Forest Ecological Compensation Policy on Farmers’ Livelihood: A Case Study of Wuyi Mountain National Park
by Chuyuan Pan, Hongbin Huang, Xiaoxia Sun and Shipeng Su
Forests 2026, 17(1), 53; https://doi.org/10.3390/f17010053 - 30 Dec 2025
Viewed by 219
Abstract
Forest ecological compensation policies (FECPs) are a key institutional arrangement for balancing ecological conservation and farmers’ development needs in national parks. Existing research has often treated such policies as a homogeneous whole, failing to clearly reveal the mechanisms through which different policy types [...] Read more.
Forest ecological compensation policies (FECPs) are a key institutional arrangement for balancing ecological conservation and farmers’ development needs in national parks. Existing research has often treated such policies as a homogeneous whole, failing to clearly reveal the mechanisms through which different policy types affect farmers’ livelihoods, while also paying insufficient attention to complex property-rights settings. This study takes Wuyi Mountain National Park—a typical representative of collective forest regions in southern China—as a case study. Based on 239 micro-survey datasets from farming households and employing the mprobit model and moderating effect models, it investigates the influence, mechanisms, and heterogeneity of farmers’ livelihood capital in terms of their livelihood strategy choices under the moderating roles of “blood-transfusion” and “blood-making” FECPs. The results show the following: (1) Among the sample farmers, livelihood strategies are distributed as follows: pure agricultural type (31.8%), out-migration for work type (20.5%), and commercial operation type (47.7%). (2) Farmers’ livelihood capital has a significant impact on their livelihood strategy choice, with different dimensions of capital playing distinct roles. (3) FECPs follow differentiated moderating pathways. “Blood-transfusion” policies emphasize compensation and buffering functions, reducing farmers’ livelihood transition pressure through direct cash transfers; “blood-making” policies reflect empowerment and restructuring characteristics, activating physical assets and reshaping the role of social capital through productive investment. Together, they constitute a complementary system of protective security and transformative empowerment. Accordingly, this study proposes policy insights such as building a targeted ecological compensation system that is categorized, dynamically linked, and precise; innovating compensation fund allocation mechanisms that integrate collective coordination with household-level benefits; optimizing policy design oriented toward enhancing productive capital; and establishing robust monitoring, evaluation, and adaptive management mechanisms for dynamic FECPs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Forest Economics, Policy, and Social Science)
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19 pages, 4349 KB  
Article
Digital Tourism Empowers the Dynamic Transformation of Destination Spatial Forms: A Case Study of Mountain Villages in Eastern China
by Jun Qi and Xiaolei Ding
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 105; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010105 - 22 Dec 2025
Viewed by 451
Abstract
With the deep integration of digital technology and the tourism industry, the transformation of the spatial form of smart tourism destinations and the research on their system structure have become the focus. This study adopts a mixed research approach, taking villages in the [...] Read more.
With the deep integration of digital technology and the tourism industry, the transformation of the spatial form of smart tourism destinations and the research on their system structure have become the focus. This study adopts a mixed research approach, taking villages in the mountainous areas of southeastern China as examples, and collects empirical data through semi-structured interviews, participant observation and literature collection. This study draws on structuralist location theory to construct a four-dimensional spatial analysis model of natural environment, production economy, social norms and cultural values and incorporates a historical perspective to make up for the limitations of this theory in explaining regional dynamic changes caused by the lack of a time dimension. This study finds that digital tourism provides external resources such as the consumer market, tourism capital and information technology prompting the reconfiguration of the rural internal system. By absorbing external resources and upgrading traditional industries, rural areas have formed a more diversified, inclusive, and dynamically balanced spatial form. Furthermore, phenomena such as villagers’ relocation, e-commerce employment and local tea-growing knowledge indicate that certain predicaments still exist in the construction of digital tourism. This research can provide practical references for the development and spatial optimization of rural digital tourism. Full article
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22 pages, 2682 KB  
Article
Low-Carbon Pathways for Ski Tourism: Integrated Carbon Accounting and Driving Factors in a City Hosting the Winter Olympics
by Junjie Li, Yu Li, Bing Xia and Chang Liu
Sustainability 2025, 17(24), 11379; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172411379 - 18 Dec 2025
Viewed by 647
Abstract
As global climate change intensifies, research on low-carbon practices has become a critical component of sustainable tourism development. The carbon emission profile of ski tourism differs significantly from other tourism sectors. Ski resorts have a mountainous terrain and typically maintain relatively high levels [...] Read more.
As global climate change intensifies, research on low-carbon practices has become a critical component of sustainable tourism development. The carbon emission profile of ski tourism differs significantly from other tourism sectors. Ski resorts have a mountainous terrain and typically maintain relatively high levels of vegetation, endowing them with inherent advantages for pioneering low-carbon and sustainable tourism practices. However, the substantial energy demands associated with artificial snowmaking systems and advanced infrastructure pose significant challenges to reducing carbon emissions in ski resort operations. This study gathers first-hand data on sustainable tourism development in the Chongli ski resort—the region that hosted the 2022 Winter Olympics—through field investigations and interviews with key industry stakeholders. It develops a comprehensive framework accounting for carbon emissions in ski resorts by integrating input–output analysis with enterprise-level data, focusing on four core operational sectors: catering, skiing, wholesale and retail, and leasing and business services. Furthermore, this study examines the coupling relationship between carbon emissions and operating revenue. Using correlation and regression analyses, this study identifies the key drivers of carbon emissions across these operational departments within the ski tourism sector. The results indicate that carbon emissions from these four sectors in the Chongli ski resort exhibit periodic fluctuations with an overall upward trend year by year. Nevertheless, progress in low-carbon development is evident, suggesting that the resort is on a trajectory toward achieving peak carbon emissions and eventual carbon neutrality. The inclusion of natural endowments, market-scale effects, festival and special events, and capital investment in ski tourism collectively serve as crucial drivers for low-carbon sustainability in Chongli. Based on these findings, this study proposes targeted recommendations to support low-carbon sustainable development, offering scientific insights for similar Winter Olympics host cities. This study integrates top-down input–output analysis with bottom-up enterprise data, taking Chongli, the host city of the Winter Olympics, as a timely case study. It constructs a four-dimensional low-carbon development model based on the identification of key natural, social, and economic driving factors, and strengthens the reliability of the conclusion by relying on first-hand field research and operator interview data. Our study provides an analysis of methodological innovation, framework integrity, and solid empirical evidence that accounts for micro-scale carbon emissions in ski resorts. Full article
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17 pages, 329 KB  
Article
Sustainability and Competitiveness of Mexican Rose Production for Export: A Policy Analysis Matrix Approach Assessing Economic and Social Dimensions
by Ana Luisa Velázquez-Torres, Francisco Ernesto Martínez-Castañeda, Nicolás Callejas-Juárez, Nathaniel Alec Rogers-Montoya, Francisco Herrera-Tapia, Elein Hernandez and Humberto Thomé-Ortiz
Sustainability 2025, 17(24), 11289; https://doi.org/10.3390/su172411289 - 16 Dec 2025
Viewed by 319
Abstract
The agricultural economic policy in Mexico has inadequately addressed the integrated sustainability needs of the rural sector. This study adopts a sustainability perspective to examine economic policy distortions and market failures in the export-oriented rose cultivation sector, and evaluates their effects on the [...] Read more.
The agricultural economic policy in Mexico has inadequately addressed the integrated sustainability needs of the rural sector. This study adopts a sustainability perspective to examine economic policy distortions and market failures in the export-oriented rose cultivation sector, and evaluates their effects on the economic and social sustainability of producers in Tenancingo and Villa Guerrero, Mexico. A Policy Analysis Matrix (PAM) and CONEVAL poverty line metrics were used to evaluate private and social profitability as indicators of financial viability and resource use efficiency. Findings indicate that, despite being supported by distortionary policies, the rose export sector remains competitive and financially viable, constituting a key pillar of economic sustainability. Moreover, the social profitability of rose production exceeded its private profitability, suggesting a net positive socioeconomic benefit and a sustainable allocation of resources from a societal perspective. Furthermore, per capita income in the rose production unit (RPU) exceeded the poverty line established by CONEVAL, directly supporting social sustainability and strengthening livelihood resilience. The study concludes that current resource allocation mechanisms are inefficient for sustainability over the long term. It emphasizes the need for policy shifts toward greater innovation, more effective technology transfer, improved market access, and stronger human capital to strengthen the sustainability of the sector as a whole. Rose cultivation exhibited a significant positive multiplier effect on the regional economy, reinforcing its contribution to sustainable rural development. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Economic and Business Aspects of Sustainability)
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