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21 pages, 525 KB  
Review
Care as a Central Concept: Dimensions, Inequalities and Challenges in Chronic Care in Contemporary Societies: A Narrative Review
by Dolores Torres-Enamorado and Rosa Casado-Mejía
Healthcare 2026, 14(3), 359; https://doi.org/10.3390/healthcare14030359 - 30 Jan 2026
Abstract
Background/Objective: Feminist theories and feminist economics have contributed to making visible the structural relevance of care work in sustaining capitalist societies and social reproduction, arguing that care must be addressed as a political phenomenon rather than a merely domestic issue. This perspective [...] Read more.
Background/Objective: Feminist theories and feminist economics have contributed to making visible the structural relevance of care work in sustaining capitalist societies and social reproduction, arguing that care must be addressed as a political phenomenon rather than a merely domestic issue. This perspective is particularly pertinent in contemporary healthcare, where chronic care represents one of the major public health challenges in a context of population ageing and increasing prevalence of chronic diseases. The aim is to contribute to a critical understanding that can support the development of public policies recognizing care as a fundamental pillar of socio-healthcare provision and as a matter of collective responsibility. Methods: A narrative literature review with a critical feminist approach was conducted using PubMed/MEDLINE, Scopus, and Web of Science. Results: A total of 299 records were identified, of which 30 studies were included following screening and eligibility assessment. Care is an essential element for sustaining life, although it has historically been rendered invisible, feminized, and relegated to the private sphere. Chronicity requires simultaneous consideration of the material dimension of care (as work), the subjective dimension (including emotional bonds and moral responsibility), and the political dimension (shaped by power relations). Global care chains reveal persistent inequalities related to gender, class, and race. Conclusions: Care is a structural, political, and transnational category that sustains life and healthcare systems. In the field of chronic care, the recognition, redistribution, and socialization of care are essential for achieving social justice and for safeguarding the dignity of both caregivers—predominantly women—and care recipients. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Chronic Care)
19 pages, 505 KB  
Review
From Mammals to Zebrafish, via Cichlids: Advantages and Some Limits of Fish Models for Human Behavioral Pathologies
by Arianna Racca, Francesco Ciabattoni, Enrico Alleva and Daniela Santucci
Int. J. Transl. Med. 2026, 6(1), 8; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijtm6010008 - 30 Jan 2026
Abstract
Zebrafish (ZF) have gained increasing attention in developmental neuroscience due to their experimental tractability, favorable ethical profile, and translational value. However, the expanding use of the ZF model has also highlighted the need to consider species-specific differences in relation to early social and [...] Read more.
Zebrafish (ZF) have gained increasing attention in developmental neuroscience due to their experimental tractability, favorable ethical profile, and translational value. However, the expanding use of the ZF model has also highlighted the need to consider species-specific differences in relation to early social and emotional development. This review adopts a comparative and ethological perspective to examine early social interactions in ZF and mammals, integrating evidence from non-altricial vertebrates and teleost species with parental care (cichlids). Selected illustrative ZF papers were discussed, while Cichlids fish were chosen as a complementary, translationally consistent subject for developmental behavioral studies. The analysis focuses on developmental stages that are relevant for behavioral phenotyping in models of neuropsychiatric conditions. Zebrafish offer multiple methodological advantages, including suitability for high-throughput experimentation and substantial genetic and neurobiological homologies with humans. Nevertheless, the absence of mother–offspring bonding limits the modeling of neurodevelopmental processes shaped by early caregiving, such as imprinting and reciprocal regulatory interactions, instead observed in cichlids. Accumulating evidence indicates that early interactions among age-matched ZF are measurable, developmentally regulated, and sensitive to environmental and experimental manipulations. Within a comparative approach, these early conspecific interactions could be analogs of early social bonding observed in altricial mammals. Rather than representing a critical limitation, such species-specific features can inform the investigation of fundamental mechanisms of social development and support the complementary use of ZF and mammalian models. A contextualized and integrative approach may therefore enhance the translational relevance of ZF-based research, particularly for the study of neurodevelopmental disorders involving early social dysfunction. Full article
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33 pages, 1745 KB  
Review
Breastfeeding in the Context of Trauma and Previous Psychological Experiences: A Narrative Review
by Aleksandra Purkiewicz, Kamila J. Regin and Renata Pietrzak-Fiećko
Nutrients 2026, 18(3), 455; https://doi.org/10.3390/nu18030455 - 30 Jan 2026
Abstract
Breastfeeding is a complex biopsychosocial process influenced not only by biological mechanisms but also by a woman’s previous psychological experiences and past traumas. The aim of this review was to analyze current research on the impact of early traumatic experiences, perinatal trauma, psychological [...] Read more.
Breastfeeding is a complex biopsychosocial process influenced not only by biological mechanisms but also by a woman’s previous psychological experiences and past traumas. The aim of this review was to analyze current research on the impact of early traumatic experiences, perinatal trauma, psychological difficulties, and previous interpersonal stressors on the initiation, continuation, and emotional course of breastfeeding. Women with a history of trauma are more likely to struggle with emotional regulation difficulties, increased stress, depressed mood, and problems bonding with their child. These factors translate into an increased risk of discontinuing lactation, discomfort during feeding, and reduced self-esteem regarding maternal competence. The literature also emphasizes the role of psychological and social support, which can help mothers cope with emotional tension and promote a positive breastfeeding experience. Consideration of the mother’s previous psychological and traumatic experiences is crucial for a more complete understanding of lactation difficulties and the development of effective forms of support for women in the perinatal period. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Pediatric Nutrition)
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22 pages, 630 KB  
Review
Disconnected Lives: Social Networks and Emotional Regulation in Domestic Dogs
by Agnieszka Grynkiewicz, Anna Reinholz and Kamil Imbir
Animals 2026, 16(3), 398; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16030398 - 27 Jan 2026
Viewed by 100
Abstract
Dogs are deeply social, built to stay in touch with others of their kind. In cities, though, most now live as single dogs. Housing rules, work schedules, and constant supervision have constrained their social environment. They still meet other dogs, but the meetings [...] Read more.
Dogs are deeply social, built to stay in touch with others of their kind. In cities, though, most now live as single dogs. Housing rules, work schedules, and constant supervision have constrained their social environment. They still meet other dogs, but the meetings are short, managed, and rarely turn into real bonds. This review tries to pull together what is known about how such limited contact affects canine welfare and emotional balance. The sources come mostly from ethology, psychology, and urban studies, published between 2010 and 2025, and include comparisons between urban pets and free-ranging dogs that still organise their own social lives. Across studies, the pattern is similar: when dogs lose steady companions, they also lose the kind of social buffering that once helped them recover from stress. Over time, this does not always look like distress—more often it shows up as quiet tension, watchfulness, or an overdependence on human cues. The evidence points to social deprivation as a slow, structural welfare issue rather than an occasional problem. Meaningful improvement may therefore require moving beyond control and training alone, toward conditions that allow dogs to form small, stable circles of familiar peers that support lower arousal and more reliable recovery. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Animal Welfare)
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19 pages, 611 KB  
Article
Beyond Where We Work: Daily Informal Communication, Knowledge Sharing, and Commitment in Hybrid Teams
by Dorothee Lütjens and Jörg Felfe
Adm. Sci. 2026, 16(2), 63; https://doi.org/10.3390/admsci16020063 - 27 Jan 2026
Viewed by 203
Abstract
Hybrid work not only redistributes where employees work; it also reshapes how they stay connected to their colleagues. Drawing on Communicate–Bond–Belong (CBB) theory, we examine how daily work location shapes employees’ team commitment in hybrid work environments through informal communication and knowledge sharing, [...] Read more.
Hybrid work not only redistributes where employees work; it also reshapes how they stay connected to their colleagues. Drawing on Communicate–Bond–Belong (CBB) theory, we examine how daily work location shapes employees’ team commitment in hybrid work environments through informal communication and knowledge sharing, and how these daily links depend on task interdependence. Using a daily diary study with 219 employees who work at least one day a week from home and one day a week in the office (1655 day-level observations), we applied multilevel structural equation modeling in Mplus 8.8 to capture within-person day-to-day fluctuations. Our findings show that on days when employees worked from home rather than in the office, they reported less informal communication and less knowledge sharing with colleagues, which in turn related to lower team commitment. These indirect effects suggest that it is not physical distance per se, but the loss of cue-rich, relationship-building and task-related exchanges that erodes commitment on remote days. We further show that task interdependence differentially qualifies these daily relationships: for informal communication, the positive association with commitment is stronger when task interdependence is low and weaker when interdependence is high. In contrast, the positive association between knowledge sharing and commitment becomes stronger at higher levels of task interdependence. Together, the results advance understanding of social dynamics in hybrid work environments and offer actionable guidance for leaders and organizations. Full article
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29 pages, 704 KB  
Hypothesis
Bonded Green Exercise: A One Health Framework for Shared Nature-Based Physical Activity in the Human–Dog Dyad
by Krista B. Halling, Mark Bowden, Jules Pretty and Jennifer Ogeer
Animals 2026, 16(2), 291; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16020291 - 16 Jan 2026
Viewed by 708
Abstract
Modern lifestyles are increasingly plagued by physical inactivity, social disconnection, digital addiction, and excessive time indoors—factors that negatively impact the health and well-being of both humans and their companion dogs (Canis familiaris). Evidence shows that nature exposure, physical activity, and human–animal [...] Read more.
Modern lifestyles are increasingly plagued by physical inactivity, social disconnection, digital addiction, and excessive time indoors—factors that negatively impact the health and well-being of both humans and their companion dogs (Canis familiaris). Evidence shows that nature exposure, physical activity, and human–animal bond (HAB) each enhance physical, mental, and social well-being, yet these domains have rarely been examined together as an integrated therapeutic triad. We introduce a new conceptual framework of bonded green exercise, defined as shared physical activity between a bonded human and dog in natural environments. Synthesizing existing evidence across human and canine sciences into a testable conceptual integration, we posit that bonded green exercise may plausibly activate evolutionarily conserved, synergistic mechanisms of physiological, behavioural, and affective co-regulation. Four testable hypotheses are proposed: (H1) triadic synergy: combined domains produce greater benefits than additive effects; (H2) heterospecific benefit: parallel health gains occur in both species; (H3) behavioural amplification: dogs acts as catalysts to drive human participation in nature-based activity; and (H4) scalable health promotion: bonded green exercise represents a low-cost, accessible, One Health approach with population-level potential. This framework highlights how intentional, shared physical activity in nature may potentially offer a novel low-cost and accessible model for enhancing health, lifespan, welfare, and ecological stewardship across species. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Second Edition: Research on the Human–Companion Animal Relationship)
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19 pages, 676 KB  
Article
Navigating Loss in Animal-Assisted Services: Volunteer Experiences and Implications for Programs Following Therapy Dog Death or Retirement
by Lori R. Kogan, Jennifer Currin-McCulloch, Wendy Packman and Cori Bussolari
Animals 2026, 16(2), 202; https://doi.org/10.3390/ani16020202 - 9 Jan 2026
Viewed by 257
Abstract
Animal-assisted services (AAS) depend on volunteer handler–dog teams, yet the emotional and relational impacts on volunteers when their therapy dog dies or retires remain largely unexplored. This study examines AAS volunteers’ experiences following the death or retirement of their therapy dog partner. An [...] Read more.
Animal-assisted services (AAS) depend on volunteer handler–dog teams, yet the emotional and relational impacts on volunteers when their therapy dog dies or retires remain largely unexplored. This study examines AAS volunteers’ experiences following the death or retirement of their therapy dog partner. An online, anonymous cross-sectional survey was administered between January and June 2025. A total of 247 individual responses were analyzed. Over half of survey participants (56%) had lost a therapy dog to death, and 36.6% had retired a dog. Although most volunteers who resumed AAS with a new dog reported excitement and renewed purpose, many experienced sadness linked to their previous partner. Retirement decisions were primarily driven by dog welfare concerns and were often experienced as an ambiguous loss. Social constraints were common; participants frequently perceived minimization or discomfort from others when attempting to discuss their grief. In conclusion, therapy dog death and retirement represent significant emotional and relational losses for AAS volunteers. Organizational practices, including anticipatory retirement planning, welfare-centered guidelines, recognition rituals, and structured support during successor-dog transitions may help mitigate distress and foster healthy adjustment. Findings are discussed in relation to theory-informed, practical implications for animal-assisted service practitioners and organizations. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Companion Animals)
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57 pages, 2086 KB  
Systematic Review
A Systematic Review of Pet Attachment and Health Outcomes in Older Adults
by Erika Friedmann, Nancy R. Gee, Mona Ramadan Abdelhamed Eltantawy and Sarah Cole
Pets 2026, 3(1), 2; https://doi.org/10.3390/pets3010002 - 7 Jan 2026
Viewed by 423
Abstract
Research suggests that older adults might obtain health benefits from pet ownership; however, results are mixed. Pet attachment is suggested as both a mechanism for the relationship and a reason for differences in the association of pet ownership with health outcomes. This systematic [...] Read more.
Research suggests that older adults might obtain health benefits from pet ownership; however, results are mixed. Pet attachment is suggested as both a mechanism for the relationship and a reason for differences in the association of pet ownership with health outcomes. This systematic review examines evidence for the relationship between pet attachment and health outcomes among older adults. The Open Science Foundation-registered review began with 20,795 candidate articles. We limited our review to the 58 articles that consisted of original research, published in peer-reviewed journals between 1965 and June 2025, written in English, included older adults (age ≥ 50 years) or were limited to only older adults, and examined the relationship between pet attachment and health outcomes. The articles included analyses of psychological (n = 53), social (n = 27), or physical (n = 2) health outcomes. Pet attachment was assessed with 19 tools; most frequently the Lexington Attachment to Pets Scale (n = 21) and the Pet Attachment Questionnaire (n = 8). The studies were not consistently of high quality according to OCEBM criteria. Except for grief, which was consistently related to pet attachment, the findings do not support a clear relationship between pet attachment and health outcomes in older adults. Findings suggest that the relationship between pet attachment and health outcomes may be more pronounced in younger than in older adults. Full article
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17 pages, 1561 KB  
Article
Contribution of Tennis Involvement to Successful Aging: The Case of Masters Tennis Players
by Elif Bozyiğit, Şeniz Karagöz, István Karsai and Gusztáv József Tornóczky
Sports 2026, 14(1), 17; https://doi.org/10.3390/sports14010017 - 4 Jan 2026
Viewed by 291
Abstract
One of the most prominent topics in contemporary research is how individuals can adopt behaviors and attitudes that support successful aging (SA) throughout their life course. Participation in sport is widely regarded as an important behavioral strategy that contributes to physical, psychological, and [...] Read more.
One of the most prominent topics in contemporary research is how individuals can adopt behaviors and attitudes that support successful aging (SA) throughout their life course. Participation in sport is widely regarded as an important behavioral strategy that contributes to physical, psychological, and social resources relevant to SA. This study examined the association between Tennis Involvement (TI) and orientations toward successful aging in a sample of 224 masters tennis players with a mean age of approximately 51 years. Data was collected using the Tennis Involvement Scale and the Successful Aging Scale, which was applied to assess strategies and predispositions related to successful aging rather than aging outcomes. A structural model was tested using descriptive statistics, reliability analysis, correlation analysis, Confirmatory Factor Analysis (CFA), and Structural Equation Modeling (SEM). The hypotheses assumed that all factors of tennis involvement would be positively correlated with SA, “tackling problems-TP”, and “healthy lifestyle-HL”. However, the SEM analysis results provided partial support for hypotheses H1a and H1c. Only the “social bonding” factor showed a significant and positive correlation. Remarkably, however, the “centrality” factor showed a negative trend, contrary to expectations, and statistically significant correlations were found. No significant correlations were identified between age, TI, and SA. However, there were positive and significant correlations between players’ weekly tennis playing time (both in days and hours) and SA, TP, and HL. In conclusion, the results indicate that, among middle-aged masters tennis players, tennis involvement is associated with both positive and negative aspects of successful aging, and longer tennis playing duration is associated with more favorable successful aging strategies. Full article
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12 pages, 385 KB  
Article
Knowledge and Expectations of Orthodontic Retention Among Individuals Seeking Orthodontic Treatment in Saudi Arabia: A Cross-Sectional Study
by Narmin M. Helal, Nujud O. Saber, Mohammed F. Almalki and Osama A. Basri
Dent. J. 2026, 14(1), 21; https://doi.org/10.3390/dj14010021 - 4 Jan 2026
Viewed by 357
Abstract
Background/Objectives: Orthodontic retention is a critical phase of treatment aimed at maintaining teeth in corrected positions and preventing relapse, which may occur in up to 70% of cases. Successful retention depends on both orthodontists’ application of effective strategies and patient compliance in retainer [...] Read more.
Background/Objectives: Orthodontic retention is a critical phase of treatment aimed at maintaining teeth in corrected positions and preventing relapse, which may occur in up to 70% of cases. Successful retention depends on both orthodontists’ application of effective strategies and patient compliance in retainer use and maintenance. While previous studies have focused on orthodontists’ retention protocols, less is known about patients’ knowledge and expectations. This study assessed knowledge and expectations of orthodontic retention among individuals seeking orthodontic treatment in Saudi Arabia. Methods: A cross-sectional survey was conducted at the orthodontic clinics of King Abdulaziz University, Faculty of Dentistry, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia. Patients on the waiting list who had not yet begun treatment were invited to participate; guardians completed surveys for minors. Data were collected using a validated, culturally adapted questionnaire and analyzed with descriptive statistics and multivariable logistic regression. Results: Of 243 patients contacted, 161 responded (66.3%). While 62.1% were aware of retention appliances, only 31.1% believed they were always required. Overall, 57.1% expected retention to last 1–3 years and were divided between bonded and removable retainers. Orthodontists were the most trusted information source, while social media was least trusted. Family history and higher education were associated with greater awareness and support for lifelong retention, though most associations were not significant after multiple-testing correction. Conclusions: Despite awareness of retention appliances, misconceptions persist. Family history, education, and age influenced perceptions, underscoring the need for tailored education and guidance toward reliable orthodontic information sources. Full article
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24 pages, 2371 KB  
Article
The Pathway from Environmental Perception to Community Resilience: Exploring the Mediating Roles of Cultural Identity and Place Attachment in Rural China
by Zirong Wan, Lei Zhang and Qiang Wen
Sustainability 2026, 18(1), 287; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18010287 - 26 Dec 2025
Viewed by 448
Abstract
Rural communities in China are currently confronting persistent socio-economic and demographic pressures, making the pursuit of long-term sustainability increasingly essential. Enhancing community resilience is widely recognized as a core pathway toward sustainable rural development, yet the socio-psychological mechanisms through which rural public spaces [...] Read more.
Rural communities in China are currently confronting persistent socio-economic and demographic pressures, making the pursuit of long-term sustainability increasingly essential. Enhancing community resilience is widely recognized as a core pathway toward sustainable rural development, yet the socio-psychological mechanisms through which rural public spaces contribute to this process remain underexplored. This study proposes an environmental perception → psychological identity → community resilience framework to clarify how public spaces support sustainable community development. Using survey data from 283 residents across five villages in Zhejiang Province and employing PLS-SEM for empirical analysis, we find that positive perceptions of public spaces significantly enhance community resilience both directly and indirectly through cultural identity and place attachment. A sequential mediation effect is also observed: environmental perception strengthens cultural identity, which subsequently deepens place attachment, jointly promoting resilience. These findings reveal that rural public spaces function as socio-cultural infrastructures that cultivate emotional bonds and collective identity, thereby generating key components of social sustainability. The study contributes to sustainable rural planning by demonstrating that improving public space quality and reinforcing place-based identity processes are vital strategies for fostering resilient and sustainable communities. Full article
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20 pages, 1405 KB  
Article
ESG Narrative Quality in Green Bond Disclosures: Implications for Risk Perception, Transparency, and Market Trust
by Parul Gaur, Mohammad Irfan, R Kanesaraj Ramasamy, Shakeeb Mohammad Mir and Parameswaran Subramanian
Risks 2026, 14(1), 1; https://doi.org/10.3390/risks14010001 - 22 Dec 2025
Viewed by 512
Abstract
This research evaluates the extent to which firms’ “green” bond disclosures create and convey a meaningful representation of their Environmental, Social, and Governance (“ESG”) commitments. Additionally, this research explores how investors distinguish between disclosures that represent genuine commitment to sustainability and those that [...] Read more.
This research evaluates the extent to which firms’ “green” bond disclosures create and convey a meaningful representation of their Environmental, Social, and Governance (“ESG”) commitments. Additionally, this research explores how investors distinguish between disclosures that represent genuine commitment to sustainability and those that may be indicative of “greenwashing,” and how such distinctions impact their assessment of an issuer’s credibility as well as the issuer’s performance subsequent to the issuance of a “green” bond. The methodology employed in this research employs a convergent mixed-methods approach that combines quantitative methods (Natural Language Processing (“NLP”), financial modeling, etc.) with qualitative methodologies (case studies, interviews). The NLP methodology employed in this research includes sentiment analysis, topic modeling, and ambiguity measurement in order to determine the tone, thematic content, and linguistic clarity of the disclosure texts. Subsequently, the results of the NLP methodologies are correlated with firm level outcomes using cross validated partial least squares regression (“PLS-R”), event study methodologies, and one way ANOVA to test for temporal and industrial variability. Finally, the results of the computational and financial methodologies are supplemented by qualitative case studies and interviews to provide context for the patterns identified in the computational and financial methodologies. In summary, the results of this research demonstrate that firms that communicate in a clear, balanced, and verifiable manner experience better market reaction and more favorable accounting results subsequent to the issuance of a “green” bond than do firms whose communications are vague, overly optimistic, or lacking in consistency. Conversely, the findings suggest that investors have become increasingly sensitive to potential “greenwashing” and therefore are less likely to respond favorably to communications characterized by the aforementioned characteristics. Full article
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14 pages, 917 KB  
Article
Is Economic Connectedness Likely to Raise the Environmental Footprint?
by Anna Auza and José Alberto Fuinhas
Biosphere 2025, 1(1), 7; https://doi.org/10.3390/biosphere1010007 - 18 Dec 2025
Viewed by 263
Abstract
Economic connectedness has been recently found to lower income inequality by rising intergenerational mobility, yet its environmental impacts are less well known. More well-known is the fact that the non-carbon footprint is easier to reach via regulations because its production is domestic. These [...] Read more.
Economic connectedness has been recently found to lower income inequality by rising intergenerational mobility, yet its environmental impacts are less well known. More well-known is the fact that the non-carbon footprint is easier to reach via regulations because its production is domestic. These two problems of income inequality and environmental pollution have echoed in public opinion polls as one of the major current problems in developed countries. We thereby look at the United States on the state level during the last two decades (2010–2020) with a Hausman–Taylor estimator for panel data. The choice of the estimator stems from its appropriateness for panel datasets with constant variables. We find that in the United States, economic connectedness between friends, whereby friendships were formed within the same group, may be blamed for the rising environmental (non-carbon) footprint. The non-carbon footprint is, therefore, explained by the bonding of social capital, which may restrict innovation. We document the case where social capital in the form of economic connectedness may be harmful to the public good, such as the environment, our main contribution. The negative effect of bonding social capital on environmental outcomes due to rigid social networks and particular network technology use is a novel addition to the prior research. The policy implications are discussed in more detail, and a call is made to distinguish social capital types and promote bridging social capital where bonding social capital is relatively strong. Full article
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20 pages, 439 KB  
Article
Corporate Environmental Responsibility and Employees’ Coworker Pro-Environmental Advocacy Among Chinese Energy Company Employees: A Sequential Mediation Model
by Xiaotian Liu, Mei Xie, Junpeng Chen and Marino Bonaiuto
Green Health 2025, 1(3), 24; https://doi.org/10.3390/greenhealth1030024 - 17 Dec 2025
Viewed by 353
Abstract
Despite growing attention to corporate environmental responsibility, there is limited understanding of the psychological and social mechanisms linking corporate environmental responsibility to employees’ coworker-focused pro-environmental behaviors in the workplace, such as advocacy directed at peers. This study examined the influence of corporate environmental [...] Read more.
Despite growing attention to corporate environmental responsibility, there is limited understanding of the psychological and social mechanisms linking corporate environmental responsibility to employees’ coworker-focused pro-environmental behaviors in the workplace, such as advocacy directed at peers. This study examined the influence of corporate environmental responsibility on employees’ coworker pro-environmental advocacy in the Chinese energy sector, with a sample of 1528 employees. Focusing on the mediating roles of long-term orientation, meaningful work, and sense of community, the research integrates insights from Social Exchange Theory, Self-determination Theory, and Affective Events Theory. The data were analyzed using structural equation modeling (SEM) to test the hypothesized relationships. The findings revealed that corporate environmental responsibility positively impacted employees’ advocacy for eco-friendly behaviors among coworkers through forward-thinking attitudes, intrinsic motivation, and strengthened social bonds. The study offers theoretical contributions by unpacking the interplay of individual and organizational factors and provides practical recommendations for cultivating an environmentally conscious culture through value alignment, meaningful work initiatives, and fostering a strong sense of community. Full article
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38 pages, 3730 KB  
Article
Mitigating Ethnic Violent Conflicts: A Sociotechnical Framework
by Festus Mukoya
Peace Stud. 2026, 1(1), 4; https://doi.org/10.3390/peacestud1010004 - 15 Dec 2025
Viewed by 554
Abstract
This study presents a sociotechnical framework for mitigating ethnic violent conflicts by integrating information and communication technologies (ICTs) with community-based social capital. Drawing on longitudinal case studies from three conflict-prone regions in Kenya, Mt. Elgon, Muhoroni, and the Turkana–West Pokot borderlands, the research [...] Read more.
This study presents a sociotechnical framework for mitigating ethnic violent conflicts by integrating information and communication technologies (ICTs) with community-based social capital. Drawing on longitudinal case studies from three conflict-prone regions in Kenya, Mt. Elgon, Muhoroni, and the Turkana–West Pokot borderlands, the research examines how ICT-enabled peace networks, particularly the Early Warning and Early Response System (EWERS), mobilize bonding, bridging, and linking social capital to reduce violence. The study employs a multi-phase qualitative design, combining retrospective analysis, key informant interviews, focus group discussions, action participation, and thematic coding of EWERS data collected between 2009 and 2021. This approach enabled the reconstruction of system evolution, stakeholder dynamics, and community responses across diverse socio-political contexts. Findings demonstrate that embedding ICTs within trusted social structures fosters inter-ethnic collaboration, inclusive decision-making, and trust-building. EWERS facilitated confidential reporting, timely alerts, and coordinated interventions, leading to reductions in livestock theft, improved leadership accountability, emergence of inter-ethnic business networks, and enhanced visibility and response to gender-based violence. The system’s effectiveness was amplified by faith-based legitimacy, local governance integration, and adaptive training strategies. The study argues that ICTs can become effective enablers of peace when sensitively contextualized within local norms, relationships, and community trust. Operationalizing social capital through digital infrastructure strengthens community resilience and supports inclusive, sustainale peacebuilding. These insights offer a scalable model for ICT-integrated violence mitigation in low- and middle-income countries. This is among the first studies to operationalize bonding, bridging, and linking social capital within ICT-enabled peace networks in rural African contexts. By embedding digital infrastructure into trusted community relationships, the framework offers an analytical approach that can inform inclusive violence mitigation strategies across low- and middle-income settings. While the framework demonstrates potential for scalability, its outcomes depend on contextual adaptation and cannot be assumed to replicate uniformly across all environments. Full article
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