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Search Results (655)

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15 pages, 930 KB  
Article
The Spatial Logic of Privacy: Uncovering Privacy Patterns in Shared Housing Environments
by Ana Moreira and Francisco Serdoura
Buildings 2025, 15(19), 3532; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15193532 - 1 Oct 2025
Abstract
In response to the growing relevance of shared housing models such as co-living and co-housing, this study investigates how spatial configuration affects the experience and negotiation of privacy in shared domestic environments. While privacy is often treated as a subjective or cultural concern, [...] Read more.
In response to the growing relevance of shared housing models such as co-living and co-housing, this study investigates how spatial configuration affects the experience and negotiation of privacy in shared domestic environments. While privacy is often treated as a subjective or cultural concern, this research adopts a spatial perspective to examine its morphological underpinnings. Using space syntax methods, the study analyses contemporary shared housing models, focusing on three shared housing developments in Barcelona. Through Visual Graph Analysis (VGA), spatial parameters, including integration, through vision, control, and controllability values, are applied to assess the degree of accessibility, visibility, and spatial separation within and between private and communal areas. The results reveal distinct configurational patterns that correlate with different privacy gradients, identifying how spatial arrangement enables or restricts autonomy and co-presence among residents. The study concludes that privacy in shared housing is not only a matter of design intention but is embedded in the spatial logic of dwelling morphology: exposed and controlled spaces provide less privacy but enhance sociability, while spatial elements such as boundaries and transitions play an important role in managing privacy gradation and degrees. These findings offer a framework for understanding and designing shared living environments that are better attuned to the complexities of everyday privacy needs. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Emerging Trends in Architecture, Urbanization, and Design)
19 pages, 1098 KB  
Article
Adapting to Climate Change in the United States: What and How Are We Learning from Each Other?
by Deborah A. Rudnick, Carey Schafer, Lara J. Hansen and Jennifer Brousseau
Sustainability 2025, 17(19), 8789; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17198789 - 30 Sep 2025
Abstract
Climate adaptation convenings have emerged in the last decade to share knowledge and accelerate learning in the field. Convenings provide a wealth of information for understanding what issues are being researched and addressed, for evaluating what practices and key components of convenings are [...] Read more.
Climate adaptation convenings have emerged in the last decade to share knowledge and accelerate learning in the field. Convenings provide a wealth of information for understanding what issues are being researched and addressed, for evaluating what practices and key components of convenings are considered particularly valuable to practitioners, and for understanding where there are gaps in our knowledge or trends in learning that should be supported. We analyzed survey and attendance data from online and in-person climate convenings in the U.S. to assess perceived outcomes and future intentions, as well as explored thematic changes in sessions at in-person conferences. We performed descriptive analyses on survey and attendance data and conducted thematic analysis of sessions at in-person conferences. Both online and in-person formats achieved high levels of learning and satisfaction reported by respondents, but with higher connectivity and relationship building at in-person events. Topics addressed in forums showed small but meaningful shifts, as some areas of interest increased (e.g., social justice, nature-based solutions) while others decreased (e.g., decision-making tools, infrastructure) or showed variable responses. These trends and feedback provide a foundation for continuing to grow effective practices to support climate adaptation practitioners with the knowledge and opportunities for connection needed to advance the adaptation field. Full article
26 pages, 7003 KB  
Article
Agentic Search Engine for Real-Time Internet of Things Data
by Abdelrahman Elewah, Khalid Elgazzar and Said Elnaffar
Sensors 2025, 25(19), 5995; https://doi.org/10.3390/s25195995 - 28 Sep 2025
Abstract
The Internet of Things (IoT) has enabled a vast network of devices to communicate over the Internet. However, the fragmentation of IoT systems continues to hinder seamless data sharing and coordinated management across platforms.However, there is currently no actual search engine for IoT [...] Read more.
The Internet of Things (IoT) has enabled a vast network of devices to communicate over the Internet. However, the fragmentation of IoT systems continues to hinder seamless data sharing and coordinated management across platforms.However, there is currently no actual search engine for IoT data. Existing IoT search engines are considered device discovery tools, providing only metadata about devices rather than enabling access to IoT application data. While efforts such as IoTCrawler have striven to support IoT application data, they have largely failed due to the fragmentation of IoT systems and the heterogeneity of IoT data.To address this, we recently introduced SensorsConnect—a unified framework designed to facilitate interoperable content and sensor data sharing among collaborative IoT systems, inspired by how the World Wide Web (WWW) enabled shared and accessible information spaces for humans. This paper presents the IoT Agentic Search Engine (IoTASE), a real-time semantic search engine tailored specifically for IoT environments. IoTASE leverages LLMs and Retrieval-Augmented Generation (RAG) techniques to address the challenges of navigating and searching vast, heterogeneous streams of real-time IoT data. This approach enables the system to process complex natural language queries and return accurate, contextually relevant results in real time. To evaluate its effectiveness, we implemented a hypothetical deployment in the Toronto region, simulating a realistic urban environment using a dataset composed of 500 services and over 37,000 IoT-like data entries. Our evaluation shows that IoT-ASE achieved 92% accuracy in retrieving intent-aligned services and consistently generated concise, relevant, and preference-aware responses, outperforming generalized outputs produced by systems such as Gemini. These results underscore the potential of IoT-ASE to make real-time IoT data both accessible and actionable, supporting intelligent decision-making across diverse application domains. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Recent Trends in AI-Based Intelligent Sensing Systems and IoTs)
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16 pages, 2357 KB  
Article
Applying Design Thinking for Co-Designed Health Solutions: A Case Study on Chronic Kidney Disease in Regional Australia
by Anita Stefoska-Needham, Jessica Nealon, Karen Charlton, Karen Fildes and Kelly Lambert
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22(10), 1475; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22101475 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 48
Abstract
(1) Background: This paper outlines key issues to consider when implementing Design Thinking methodology in health-based qualitative research to achieve a meaningful outcome. The purpose is to share our learnings with others. (2) Methods: Using the case study of an Australian region with [...] Read more.
(1) Background: This paper outlines key issues to consider when implementing Design Thinking methodology in health-based qualitative research to achieve a meaningful outcome. The purpose is to share our learnings with others. (2) Methods: Using the case study of an Australian region with high rates of chronic kidney disease, we describe a design-led methodological approach (co-design) that ensures end users remain central to research for the lifespan of the project; from conception of the research question and protocol design, through to solution generation and change implementation. (3) Results: Representation of the four Design Voices—people with lived experience, expertise, intent, and design knowledge—was imperative to minimise bias towards researchers as the main drivers of the project. A commitment to the five core elements of design thinking (empathising, defining, ideating, prototyping, and testing) was maintained throughout the research. Empathising through direct interaction with users was crucial to creating a meaningful understanding of their problems and challenges. Ideation ensured user-centred solution generation, with solutions aligned with addressing the ‘real’ problem and creating an improved future state. (4) Conclusions: Incorporation of Design Thinking principles in health research is a valuable adjunct to traditional qualitative methodologies, with the potential to facilitate meaningful outcomes for people in our community experiencing a wicked health problem. Full article
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30 pages, 12229 KB  
Article
Investigating the Spatial Generative Mechanism of the Prepaid Building Houses on Rented Land Model in Shanghai Concessions (1938–1941)
by Wen He, Chun Li and Longbin Zhu
Buildings 2025, 15(19), 3447; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings15193447 - 24 Sep 2025
Viewed by 186
Abstract
The Building Houses on Rented Land Model (BHRLM) was a pivotal land development model that drove Shanghai’s urbanization in the early modern era. This research examines the spatial generative mechanism of the Prepaid Building Houses on Rented Land Model (PBHRLM), prevalent during 1938–1941. [...] Read more.
The Building Houses on Rented Land Model (BHRLM) was a pivotal land development model that drove Shanghai’s urbanization in the early modern era. This research examines the spatial generative mechanism of the Prepaid Building Houses on Rented Land Model (PBHRLM), prevalent during 1938–1941. It reveals how the wartime economic environment enabled interest alliances constituted with developers, landowners, and tenants to stimulate urban spatial growth. Firstly, we aim to analyze the features of architectural types linked to the PBHRLM using data-driven methods. Secondly, we aim to apply financial capital theory to investigate the innovations of financing methods. Finally, we draw on speculation theory to establish connections between the features of architectural types and the innovations of financing methods. The results include the following: (1) The PBHRLM’s dominant architectural types—new-styled lane houses, semi-shikumen lane houses, and garden houses—shared low-rise, high-density spatial features. (2) The PBHRLM’s innovations of financing methods lie in its convergence of financing and profitability, reflecting developers’ speculative intent. The research concludes that the PBHRLM operated as a spatial actuarial practice. Through risk games, the developers utilized the model to liberate land development from the control of financial capital and achieved multi-stakeholder synergy, generating small-scale, dispersed land development patterns. At the same time, surging housing demand thus perpetuated architectural types catering to the middle class with low-rise, low-tech tectonics and independent dwelling styles that continued to densely populate Shanghai concessions. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Architectural Design, Urban Science, and Real Estate)
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15 pages, 1977 KB  
Article
Portuguese Military Spending in the NATO Context: A Short Illustrative Paper
by Ricardo Ferraz
Soc. Sci. 2025, 14(9), 566; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci14090566 - 19 Sep 2025
Viewed by 343
Abstract
In the context of strong geopolitical tensions worldwide, this paper aims to present a brief illustrative analysis of Portuguese military spending within the NATO context. It was concluded that over the past decades, this variable has consistently remained below 2% of the GDP, [...] Read more.
In the context of strong geopolitical tensions worldwide, this paper aims to present a brief illustrative analysis of Portuguese military spending within the NATO context. It was concluded that over the past decades, this variable has consistently remained below 2% of the GDP, with Portugal recording one of the lowest values in NATO in 2024. When broken down by component, personnel expenses represented the largest share of Portugal’s military spending and ranked among the highest in NATO. This seems to be mainly because other categories show very low levels of expenditure, possibly due to budgetary constraints. When assessed on a per capita basis or in relation to the size of the territory, personnel expenses were found to be close to the NATO average, despite Portugal having one of the lowest numbers of military personnel per 100,000 inhabitants. In contrast, equipment expenses were well below the NATO average. Thus, considering the Portuguese government’s intention to increase defense spending, it is expected that the coming years will bring greater investment in the production and/or acquisition of equipment, along with policy measures aimed at increasing the number of military personnel. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section International Politics and Relations)
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30 pages, 1238 KB  
Article
Reconstruction of Logistics Services in Cross-Border E-Commerce and Consumer Continuance Intention on Platforms: The Mediating Role of Digital Logistics Services
by Liu-Gao Fei, Xin Liu, Yu-Ci Jin and Miao Su
J. Theor. Appl. Electron. Commer. Res. 2025, 20(3), 251; https://doi.org/10.3390/jtaer20030251 - 18 Sep 2025
Viewed by 481
Abstract
Against the backdrop of accelerating global trade and rising consumer expectations, cross-border e-commerce must urgently increase consumers’ willingness to reuse them. This study uses social exchange theory (SET) and resource dependency theory (RDT) to look at how business process reengineering (BPR) in cross-border [...] Read more.
Against the backdrop of accelerating global trade and rising consumer expectations, cross-border e-commerce must urgently increase consumers’ willingness to reuse them. This study uses social exchange theory (SET) and resource dependency theory (RDT) to look at how business process reengineering (BPR) in cross-border e-commerce logistics services helps with digitalising the services, resulting in consumers being more likely to keep using the platform. The study also investigates information sharing and supply chain integration (SCI) as variables. This study used a sample of Chinese cross-border e-commerce enterprises and employed confirmatory factor analysis and structural equation modelling (SEM) as analytical methods. The findings indicate a positive relationship between logistics service BPR and logistics service digitisation. Our results also show that SCI positively moderates the relationship between BPR and logistics service digitalization by enhancing cross-organizational collaboration and information flow. We further find that greater information sharing cross-border e-commerce platforms and logistics service providers strengthens SCI’s moderating effect, indicating a secondary moderating role of information sharing. This study proposes an innovative interactive perspective and, drawing on SET, constructs three models to identify the boundary conditions influencing the relationship. It provides a theoretical foundation and practical reference for cross-border e-commerce platforms seeking to optimize digital logistics services and enhance consumers’ willingness to reuse the platform. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Digital Business Organization)
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17 pages, 933 KB  
Article
Towards Sustainable Mobility: Factors Influencing the Intention to Use Ride-Sharing in the Post-Pandemic Era
by Kun Wang, Linfeng Qi, Shuo Yang, Cheng Wang, Rensu Zhou and Jing Liu
Sustainability 2025, 17(18), 8343; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17188343 - 17 Sep 2025
Viewed by 291
Abstract
As a key element of the sharing economy, ride-sharing plays a vital role in promoting sustainable urban mobility by optimizing vehicle utilization rates, lowering carbon emissions, and alleviating traffic congestion. Despite its cost-efficiency and sustainability benefits, ride-sharing adoption remains limited in the post-pandemic [...] Read more.
As a key element of the sharing economy, ride-sharing plays a vital role in promoting sustainable urban mobility by optimizing vehicle utilization rates, lowering carbon emissions, and alleviating traffic congestion. Despite its cost-efficiency and sustainability benefits, ride-sharing adoption remains limited in the post-pandemic period due to behavioral changes and safety concerns. Accordingly, using survey data from 425 commuters in Hefei, concerns about COVID-19 and satisfaction with ride-sharing services were integrated into the theory of planned behavior framework. Structural equation modeling was applied to examine the relationship between ride-sharing intention and actual usage behaviors. The results indicated that ride-sharing intention was significantly positively affected by subjective norms (β = 0.428 ***), service satisfaction (β = 0.315 ***), and perceived behavioral control (β = 0.162 *), but significantly negatively affected by concerns about COVID-19 (β = −0.183 **). Concerns about COVID-19 significantly negatively affected travelers’ actual ride-sharing behaviors (β = −0.2 **). Furthermore, ride-sharing intention was identified as a significant positive predictor of travelers’ behaviors: specifically, their likelihood of accepting a ride-sharing order (β = 0.395 ***). These findings offer transport authorities evidence-based strategies for designing targeted interventions during health crises, particularly through reinforcing social norms, improving service quality, and implementing transparent health protocols to ensure both user safety and sustainability. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Transport and Land Use for a Sustainable Future)
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26 pages, 608 KB  
Article
The Influence of Digital Capabilities on Elderly Pedestrians’ Road-Sharing Acceptance with Autonomous Vehicles: A Case Study of Wuhan, China
by Zhiwei Liu, Wenli Ouyang and Jie Wu
Appl. Sci. 2025, 15(18), 10097; https://doi.org/10.3390/app151810097 - 16 Sep 2025
Viewed by 259
Abstract
While autonomous vehicles (AVs) are increasingly integrated into urban mobility, little is known about how digital capability shapes elderly pedestrians’ willingness to share roads with these technologies. This is especially true in the absence of explicit vehicle–pedestrian communication mechanisms. To address this gap, [...] Read more.
While autonomous vehicles (AVs) are increasingly integrated into urban mobility, little is known about how digital capability shapes elderly pedestrians’ willingness to share roads with these technologies. This is especially true in the absence of explicit vehicle–pedestrian communication mechanisms. To address this gap, we combine the Theory of Planned Behavior (TPB) with the Pedestrian Behavior Questionnaire (PBQ) and segment elderly pedestrians using Latent Class Analysis (LCA). A sample of 750 older adults in Wuhan, China, was divided into two latent groups: digitally disengaged (70.8%) and digitally engaged (29.2%). Classification was based on four indicators: smart device usage, online social interaction, online entertainment, and online economic behavior. We then applied ordered logit models to estimate group-specific determinants of AV road-sharing acceptance. Results reveal clear heterogeneity across digital capability levels. For digitally disengaged seniors, positive pedestrian behaviors significantly increased willingness (β = 0.316, p = 0.001). Prior accident experience reduced willingness (0 accident: β = 0.435, p = 0.021; 1–2 accidents: β = −0.518, p = 0.012). For digitally engaged seniors, perceived behavioral control showed a marginally positive effect (β = 0.353, p = 0.066). Errors had a significant positive effect (β = 0.540, p = 0.009). Positive behaviors had a significant negative effect (β = −0.414, p = 0.007). These patterns indicate that digital capability not only modulates the strength of TPB pathways but also reshapes behavior–intention linkages captured by PBQ dimensions. Methodologically, the study contributes an integrated TPB–PBQ–LCA–OLM framework. This framework identifies digital capability as a critical moderator of AV acceptance among elderly pedestrians. Practically, the findings suggest differentiated strategies. For digitally disengaged users, interventions should build digital literacy and reinforce safe walking norms. For digitally engaged users, strategies should prioritize transparent AV intent signaling and features that enhance perceived control. Full article
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19 pages, 589 KB  
Article
The Impact of the Expected Utility and Experienced Utility Gap on Electric Vehicle Repurchase Intention in Jiangsu, China
by Xiao Zheng, Jiaxin Huang, Mengzhe Wang and Wenbo Li
World Electr. Veh. J. 2025, 16(9), 517; https://doi.org/10.3390/wevj16090517 - 12 Sep 2025
Viewed by 379
Abstract
The global automotive industry’ s rapid transformation has led to electric vehicles (EVs) capturing a significant market share as a sustainable transportation option. To sustain this growth, it is crucial to not only attract new users but also retain existing ones through repurchases. [...] Read more.
The global automotive industry’ s rapid transformation has led to electric vehicles (EVs) capturing a significant market share as a sustainable transportation option. To sustain this growth, it is crucial to not only attract new users but also retain existing ones through repurchases. This decision is shaped by both vehicle attributes and users’ prior experiences. This study examines the impact of five dimensions of expected utility and experienced utility gap (including cost utility, functional utility, emotional utility, environmental utility, and social utility) on the repurchase intentions of 863 Chinese EV users. Discrete choice experiments were used to analyze these factors, considering both vehicle and personal attributes. The results show that when emotional utility exceeds expectations, users are more likely to repurchase pure electric and plug-in hybrid electric vehicles. However, if environmental and social utilities fall short of expectations, users may be discouraged from choosing these two vehicle types. In contrast, decisions regarding gasoline vehicles are primarily driven by economic and habitual factors, with minimal influence from emotional, environmental, or social utilities. Additionally, EV users show a preference for medium-sized models that offer shorter charging times and longer driving ranges. These findings offer insights for enhancing consumer acceptance, accelerating EV market penetration, and supporting the automotive industry’s sustainable development, thereby contributing to the achievement of environmental sustainability goals. Full article
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18 pages, 614 KB  
Article
Supporting Teacher Agency and Aesthetic Experience for Sustainable Professional Development
by Martin James Hoskin
Educ. Sci. 2025, 15(9), 1130; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci15091130 - 30 Aug 2025
Viewed by 433
Abstract
Significant time, money, and energy are invested in Continuing Professional Development (CPD) across Further Education (FE) colleges in England, with the aim of enhancing teaching strategies, sharing “best” practices, and improving educational quality. Despite these intentions, practitioner perceptions of CPD’s value remain mixed, [...] Read more.
Significant time, money, and energy are invested in Continuing Professional Development (CPD) across Further Education (FE) colleges in England, with the aim of enhancing teaching strategies, sharing “best” practices, and improving educational quality. Despite these intentions, practitioner perceptions of CPD’s value remain mixed, highlighting concerns about the effectiveness of current approaches. CPD managers often face competing financial and operational demands, alongside pressure to comply with external requirements, resulting in CPD that is frequently instrumental, mandatory, and delivered through one-off events. These practices reflect a data-driven, prescriptive management culture that prioritizes measurable outcomes over meaningful educational experiences. Consequently, teachers are compelled to demonstrate compliance within a system where accountability is unevenly distributed. This medium-scale, multi-method practitioner research study investigates how such compliance-driven CPD practices divert attention and resources from genuine educational improvement. This study explores an alternative model of CPD rooted in teacher agency and enriched through engagement with the arts and aesthetic experiences. Drawing on surveys, semi-structured interviews, critical incidents, and narrative accounts, the findings suggest that this approach fosters more democratic, creative, and impactful professional development. In promoting teacher agency and challenging dominant power structures, this study offers a vision of CPD that supports meaningful educational transformation, with practical examples and recommendations for broader implementation. Full article
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19 pages, 821 KB  
Article
Sustainable but Disgusting? A Psychological Model of Consumer Reactions to Human-Hair-Derived Textiles
by Sertaç Ercan, Burak Yaprak, Mehmet Zahid Ecevit and Orhan Duman
Sustainability 2025, 17(17), 7799; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17177799 - 29 Aug 2025
Viewed by 615
Abstract
This study investigates how perceptual and emotional factors—perceived naturalness, aesthetic pleasure, environmental concern, and disgust—shape consumer acceptance of a human-hair-derived bio-fabricated textile product (a unisex cardholder). In a scenario-based online survey, participants viewed an AI-generated image accompanied by a short vignette. A purposive [...] Read more.
This study investigates how perceptual and emotional factors—perceived naturalness, aesthetic pleasure, environmental concern, and disgust—shape consumer acceptance of a human-hair-derived bio-fabricated textile product (a unisex cardholder). In a scenario-based online survey, participants viewed an AI-generated image accompanied by a short vignette. A purposive sample of young adults in Istanbul with prior experience purchasing sustainable textile products was recruited and screened. All constructs were measured with standard Likert-type scales and translated into Turkish using a two-way back-translation procedure. Data were analyzed with PLS-SEM. Model fit was acceptable, and the model accounted for a substantial share of the variance in adoption intention. Aesthetic pleasure showed a clear positive influence on adoption intention, whereas perceived naturalness did not display a direct effect. Environmental concern modestly strengthened the link between naturalness and adoption. Disgust emerged as the dominant moderator, fully conditioning the naturalness pathway and reducing—but not eliminating—the effect of aesthetic pleasure. Together, these findings indicate that perceived naturalness, aesthetic pleasure, environmental concern, and disgust jointly shape adoption intention and that practical emphasis should be placed on reducing feelings of disgust while enhancing aesthetic appeal. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Sustainable Product Design, Manufacturing and Management)
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33 pages, 618 KB  
Article
“It Makes My Heart Smile When I Hear Them Say, ‘Hi Grandpa, We’re Home!’”: Relationality, Alaska Native Wellbeing and Self Determination in Tribal Child Protection
by Jessica Saniguq Ullrich, Jason C. Young, Rachel E. Wilbur, Tram Nguyen, Patricia Johnston, Lily Fawn White, Jadyn Bright, Annalise Contreras, Elizabeth Alowa and Lola Tobuk
Genealogy 2025, 9(3), 85; https://doi.org/10.3390/genealogy9030085 - 26 Aug 2025
Viewed by 879
Abstract
Before colonization, Indigenous child protection looked like an interdependent community. Indigenous knowledges and relational actions kept all within its fold safe and well. Colonial dispossession of land, degradation of subsistence rights, boarding schools, ongoing child removal, capitalism, and systems of oppression attempted to [...] Read more.
Before colonization, Indigenous child protection looked like an interdependent community. Indigenous knowledges and relational actions kept all within its fold safe and well. Colonial dispossession of land, degradation of subsistence rights, boarding schools, ongoing child removal, capitalism, and systems of oppression attempted to disconnect Indigenous peoples from their language, lands, ceremonial practices, stories, dances, songs, family, community, and themselves. However, Indigenous communities have held on, persevered, and have begun to turn the tide of intergenerational trauma through the revival of Indigenous wellness and self-determination. We believe local-based Indigenous relational knowledges can end colonial harm and promote wellbeing for all families and children. Our work builds off an Indigenous Connectedness Framework that recognizes the importance of the interrelated wellbeing of a person, family, community, ancestors/future generations, and the Earth. This framework was adapted based on community feedback to better fit the Nome Eskimo Community (NEC) and Bering Strait regional context. This paper shares results of community focus groups that led to the creation of a NEC Piaġiq (wellness) Framework, and shares intentions for pilot implementation of a wellness curriculum and pilot intervention. We will offer insights and lessons learned. We believe self-determined Indigenous wellbeing efforts can lead to improved outcomes for our sacred children and families for generations to come. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Self Determination in First Peoples Child Protection)
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20 pages, 344 KB  
Article
Church-Sponsored Promotornan di Salú/Community Health Worker-Led Health Fair Promoting Hypertension Awareness in Willemstad, Curaçao: A Pilot Study Assessing Participant Satisfaction and Experience
by Kenneth E. Christopher, Jenna R. Krall, Tiffany Arvizu, Alice Juliet, Sinead Mathilda-Fraaij, Elisette Rooi-Cannister and Lona D. Bryan
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2025, 22(9), 1318; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph22091318 - 25 Aug 2025
Viewed by 1395
Abstract
High blood pressure, or hypertension, remains a leading risk factor for cardiovascular disease, contributing significantly to global morbidity and mortality, particularly in Caribbean island nations like Curaçao. This pilot study assessed the impact of a health fair led by Community Health Workers (CHWs) [...] Read more.
High blood pressure, or hypertension, remains a leading risk factor for cardiovascular disease, contributing significantly to global morbidity and mortality, particularly in Caribbean island nations like Curaçao. This pilot study assessed the impact of a health fair led by Community Health Workers (CHWs) or Promotornan di Salú and organized in collaboration with local faith-based organizations to increase hypertension awareness and promote preventive behaviors. The study utilized a cross-sectional design, and data were gathered from attendees at a health fair held on 29 June 2024, at the Iglesia House of Worship in Willemstad, Curaçao. A structured questionnaire was used to collect demographics, event satisfaction, health behavior intentions, and qualitative feedback data from participants aged 12 years and older. Of the 145 participants, 78.6% rated the event as excellent, 83.4% expressed plans to change their health behaviors, 80.6% intended to share information with family and friends, and 59.7% intended to follow up with a general practitioner (GP)/doctor. These findings highlight the effectiveness of culturally tailored, community-based initiatives to raise hypertension awareness, improve health literacy, and promote preventive health behaviors. The success of this intervention emphasizes the potential of CHW-led health fairs as valuable public health strategies and practical training opportunities for reducing the burden of chronic conditions like hypertension. Full article
18 pages, 739 KB  
Article
How Power Distance Belief Shapes Ecotourism Intention: The Moderating Role of Conspicuous Versus Experiential Content on Social Media in Promoting Sustainable Travel
by Hao He, Jiayi Cheng, Xiang Zou and Shiqi Xing
Sustainability 2025, 17(17), 7645; https://doi.org/10.3390/su17177645 - 25 Aug 2025
Viewed by 737
Abstract
As environmental conservation and community development gain importance, ecotourism has emerged as a significant segment of the global tourism industry. However, the cultural factors that drive tourist behavior in this domain remain underexplored. This research examined how power distance belief (PDB), interacts with [...] Read more.
As environmental conservation and community development gain importance, ecotourism has emerged as a significant segment of the global tourism industry. However, the cultural factors that drive tourist behavior in this domain remain underexplored. This research examined how power distance belief (PDB), interacts with the type of tourism content shared on social media (conspicuous versus experiential) to influence travelers’ ecotourism intentions. To test our hypotheses, we conducted two experimental studies using a 2 (PDB: high vs. low) × 2 (tourism content type: conspicuous vs. experiential) between-subjects design. Participants for both experiments (N = 480) were recruited through an online survey platform. In the experiments, participants’ PDB was situationally primed, and tourism content type was manipulated using specifically created fictitious posts adapted from a real social media platform. Other key variables were measured using validated multi-item scales. Data were analyzed using analysis of variance (ANOVA) and moderated mediation analysis (PROCESS Model 15). The findings reveal that travelers with high PDB show higher ecotourism intentions when exposed to conspicuous content, whereas travelers with low PDB exhibit higher intentions when exposed to experiential content. This interactive effect is mediated by travelers’ social comparison motives. These findings offer novel insights into the motivations underlying ecotourism behavior by identifying distinct pathways through which social media can promote sustainable tourism behaviors, and provide practical guidance for eco-destination managers to design targeted marketing strategies that encourage sustainable tourism practices across different consumer segments. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Tourism, Culture, and Heritage)
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