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18 pages, 870 KB  
Article
Integrating Sustainability Dimensions and Stakeholder Engagement in Solid Waste Management in Developing Countries: Evidence from Pakistan Using Structural Equation Modeling
by Mansoor Ahmad Khan, Sikandar Bilal Khattak, Muhammad Abas and Qazi Muhammad Usman Jan
Sustainability 2026, 18(13), 6405; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18136405 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
Rapid urbanization and population growth have intensified solid waste management (SWM) challenges in developing countries, where institutional capacity and stakeholder participation remain limited. Existing studies, particularly in the context of Pakistan, largely examine isolated technical or environmental aspects, with limited integration of sustainability [...] Read more.
Rapid urbanization and population growth have intensified solid waste management (SWM) challenges in developing countries, where institutional capacity and stakeholder participation remain limited. Existing studies, particularly in the context of Pakistan, largely examine isolated technical or environmental aspects, with limited integration of sustainability dimensions and stakeholder dynamics. This study develops and empirically validates an integrated structural equation modeling (SEM) framework to examine the interrelationships among sustainable solid waste management systems (SSWM), stakeholder engagement (SE), and solid waste management strategies (SWMS). Primary data were collected from 420 stakeholders representing diverse groups. The measurement model demonstrated strong reliability and validity, while the structural model exhibited excellent fit indices. Results indicate that economic, social, technical and environmental and institutional dimensions significantly shape SSWM. Structural path analysis reveals that SSWM significantly influences SE and SWMS, while SE has a significant effect on SWMS. Mediation analysis confirms that SE partially mediates the relationship between SSWM and SWMS, highlighting the critical role of participatory governance. The findings demonstrate that achieving sustainable waste management requires the integration of system-level capacity, stakeholder engagement, and strategic implementation. This study contributes to the sustainability literature by providing a holistic framework and providing understanding for policymakers to promote circular economy practices and resource efficiency in developing countries. Full article
20 pages, 4194 KB  
Article
AI-Enabled Detection of Governance Dilemmas in Digital Transformation Projects: A Micro-Longitudinal Study of Corporate Innovation Incubation
by Ricardo Luvizotto Dória, Gustavo Abib, Ricardo José Dória and Yundi Zhang
Systems 2026, 14(7), 725; https://doi.org/10.3390/systems14070725 (registering DOI) - 23 Jun 2026
Abstract
Digital Transformation (DT) increasingly relies on project-based organizing to develop and deploy new capabilities, yet corporate innovation projects frequently stall not for lack of ideas but because of recurring governance and resource-commitment bottlenecks. This study presents a micro-longitudinal, AI-enabled, and human-reviewed analysis of [...] Read more.
Digital Transformation (DT) increasingly relies on project-based organizing to develop and deploy new capabilities, yet corporate innovation projects frequently stall not for lack of ideas but because of recurring governance and resource-commitment bottlenecks. This study presents a micro-longitudinal, AI-enabled, and human-reviewed analysis of 711 episodes drawn from 28 weekly project governance meetings across two corporate startup initiatives participating in the same internal incubation program, conducted between November 2024 and April 2025. Employing a six-stage analytical pipeline that combines episode-level segmentation, linguistic tension markers, and a large language model (LLM) classifier, we identify 28 decision-relevant governance tensions, which are then abductively grouped into 13 project governance dilemmas and mapped onto Teece’s dynamic capabilities framework (sensing, seizing, reconfiguring). The key finding is that 62% of dilemmas are structural in nature—reflecting persistent governance design tensions between autonomy and control, compliance and agility, and centralization and decentralization—and that 69% concentrate at the seizing stage, corresponding to resource-commitment and execution decisions. This pattern indicates a governance choke point in corporate DT projects that is structural and decisional rather than ideational. By shifting attention from lagging indicators (overruns) to governance tension leading indicators, the approach supports earlier interventions to reduce decision latency and protect project delivery performance. We further synthesize two incubation-specific meso-level governance dilemmas—stakeholder engagement and compliance vs. agility—that serve as transmission mechanisms between macro structural constraints and micro-level decision bottlenecks. The AI-enabled pipeline is proposed as a replicable early-warning system for project governance tensions in organizations pursuing digital transformation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advancing Project Management Through Digital Transformation)
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17 pages, 777 KB  
Article
Factors Affecting Conflict Resolution Capacity: An Organizational Perspective from Construction Firms
by Marcelo Villena Manzanares and Francisco Villena Manzanares
Buildings 2026, 16(12), 2471; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16122471 (registering DOI) - 22 Jun 2026
Viewed by 65
Abstract
Construction management, from the contractor’s perspective, is led by the Construction Manager (CM). The work motivation and leadership style of the CM are critical variables for the successful execution of construction projects. The scientific literature identifies participative leadership as the most effective style [...] Read more.
Construction management, from the contractor’s perspective, is led by the Construction Manager (CM). The work motivation and leadership style of the CM are critical variables for the successful execution of construction projects. The scientific literature identifies participative leadership as the most effective style for mitigating conflicts among various stakeholders. However, analyzing the specific variables that influence a CM’s conflict resolution capacity remains an underexplored area. Furthermore, while the CM must act as a leader for their team (subcontractors, suppliers, etc.), they remain accountable to the contractor’s senior management. Therefore, this study aims to analyze the mediating role of CM motivation in the relationship between leadership and conflict resolution capacity using Partial Least Squares Structural Equation Modeling (PLS-SEM). In the construction industry, conflict resolution is not merely a situational fix but a critical process of capturing and externalizing tacit knowledge. Knowledge management and the ability to resolve conflicts in the construction sector are directly linked, critical, and strategic in nature. Construction is an industry characterized by fragmentation, the temporary nature of its projects, diversity of stakeholders (developers, builders, subcontractors, engineering firms) and a high level of uncertainty. In this environment, conflict is virtually inevitable. However, the way in which a CM handles a conflict determines whether it becomes a destructive dispute or an opportunity for improvement. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Application of Digital Technology and AI in Construction Management)
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27 pages, 377 KB  
Article
Social Media Ban for Children and Its Influencing Factors: Evidence from an Opinion Cross-Sectional Study in Greece
by Petros Galanis, Aglaia Katsiroumpa and Ioannis Moisoglou
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(6), 404; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15060404 (registering DOI) - 22 Jun 2026
Viewed by 166
Abstract
Several countries have adopted a nationwide ban on social media access for children. Our aim was to investigate public opinion regarding the implementation of a social media ban for children, as well as the factors influencing these views. We measured agreement with the [...] Read more.
Several countries have adopted a nationwide ban on social media access for children. Our aim was to investigate public opinion regarding the implementation of a social media ban for children, as well as the factors influencing these views. We measured agreement with the ban, information regarding its implementation, perceived need for additional measures, confidence in the effectiveness of the ban, perceived impact of the ban, and parental familiarity with digital parental control tools. The study sample included 619 participants. In our sample, 69% agreed with the implementation of the ban, while 86.5% believed that additional measures should be implemented (i.e., digital literacy courses in schools, active parental involvement in digital literacy, prohibition of inappropriate content, reasonable parental limits on social media use, and restriction of addictive platform features). Females and higher-educated participants had more positive perceptions regarding the impact of the ban. We found a positive association between age, financial status, social media use, and impact of the ban. Reduced age was associated with increased parental familiarity with digital parental control tools. Social media use was associated with parental familiarity with digital parental control tools. There is a need for holistic and evidence-informed policy frameworks that integrate regulatory measures, educational initiatives, and shared accountability among stakeholders. Full article
28 pages, 4684 KB  
Article
A Mixed-Methods Study Using SEM and SD to Examine the Efficiency of Energy-Efficiency Renovations in Old Urban Residential Areas Driven by Organisational Resilience
by Yanping Yang, Yu Zhang, Jierui Cao and Bojun Wang
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6309; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126309 (registering DOI) - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 226
Abstract
Renovations aimed at improving energy conservation in older urban residential areas are essential for sustainable urban development; however, they encounter obstacles such as energy inefficiency and issues in sustaining long-term sustainability following renovation. Based on resource-based theory and collaborative governance theory, this study [...] Read more.
Renovations aimed at improving energy conservation in older urban residential areas are essential for sustainable urban development; however, they encounter obstacles such as energy inefficiency and issues in sustaining long-term sustainability following renovation. Based on resource-based theory and collaborative governance theory, this study investigates how organisational resilience affects the efficacy of energy-saving renovations and confirms the mediating role of resource allocation efficiency. A mixed-methods approach was used in this investigation. Grounded theory was first used to establish the components of organisational resilience. A questionnaire survey was then used to gather information from those participating in energy-efficient renovation of old urban residential complexes. System dynamics (SD) was applied for empirical validation and simulation analysis across many intervention scenarios after structural equation modelling (SEM) was used to develop and evaluate study hypotheses. The results show that rather than the support of any particular strategy, the crucial elements in improving the efficacy of energy-saving renovations are efficient interdepartmental coordination and rational budget allocation. Notably, all energy-saving renovation outcome measures in this study are based primarily on stakeholder perceptions and survey responses rather than objectively measured energy consumption data. Full article
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26 pages, 6221 KB  
Article
From Stakeholder Value Perceptions to Collaborative Interpretation in World Cultural Heritage Management: Evidence from the Longmen Grottoes (China)
by Wanqing Li, Hazrina Haja Bava Mohidin and Zuraini Md Ali
Heritage 2026, 9(6), 239; https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage9060239 - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 176
Abstract
UNESCO promotes multi-stakeholder collaborative planning in World Cultural Heritage management. However, while previous studies on heritage interpretation have identified differences in stakeholder values, they have rarely shown how such differences can be translated into decision-relevant evidence to support collaborative interpretation. Using the Longmen [...] Read more.
UNESCO promotes multi-stakeholder collaborative planning in World Cultural Heritage management. However, while previous studies on heritage interpretation have identified differences in stakeholder values, they have rarely shown how such differences can be translated into decision-relevant evidence to support collaborative interpretation. Using the Longmen Grottoes, a World Cultural Heritage site in China, as a case study, this study aims to transform stakeholders’ perceptions of value into evidence for collaborative interpretation within the context of World Cultural Heritage management. This study uses a mixed-methods design, integrating semi-structured interviews, questionnaire surveys, analytic hierarchy process (AHP) analysis, and semantic analysis of official policy discourse. This study compares the value perception of experts, the religious group, residents, tourism operators, and visitors, as well as the value priorities of experts and non-experts, and examines the alignment of these values with official management discourses. The findings indicate that divergences among stakeholder groups in value priorities and the official discourse system are structured primarily around expert-driven priorities, while the discourse of the religious group and the secular public are not fully reflected. This study integrates bottom-up stakeholder data with top-down policy discourse, demonstrating how value differences can be transformed into structured evidence to inform collaborative interpretation. These findings provide empirical support for management strategies in World Cultural Heritage. Full article
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25 pages, 1882 KB  
Study Protocol
Translating Knowledge into Practical Guidance for Sustainable Employment Across the Life Course of Individuals with Disabilities: Study Protocol and Cohort Profile of the Work–Life Study on Spinal Cord Injury
by Urban Schwegler, Mahesh Sarki, George Austin-Cliff, Albert Marti and Martin W. G. Brinkhof
Disabilities 2026, 6(3), 54; https://doi.org/10.3390/disabilities6030054 (registering DOI) - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 112
Abstract
Vocational integration (VI) services aim to support sustainable employment for persons with disabilities. However, in individuals with spinal cord injury, evidence on effective intervention targets and the evaluation of sustainable integration remains limited. The Work–Life Study aims to build an evidence base for [...] Read more.
Vocational integration (VI) services aim to support sustainable employment for persons with disabilities. However, in individuals with spinal cord injury, evidence on effective intervention targets and the evaluation of sustainable integration remains limited. The Work–Life Study aims to build an evidence base for supporting sustainable employment in Switzerland by (1) identifying typical work–life trajectories; (2) examining key work–life transitions and their predictors; (3) establishing a multi-state model for intervention targets; (4) exploring individual work–life narratives; and (5) developing guidelines for personalized VI practice. The study combines a mixed methods design with a collaborative Integrated Knowledge Translation approach, actively involving VI professionals and individuals with spinal cord injury. Participants are recruited from the Swiss Spinal Cord Injury Cohort Study (SwiSCI). Work–life history data are collected through a Biographical Survey and Biographical Interviews and analyzed alongside SwiSCI data. Guideline development includes a stakeholder meeting with representatives from the Swiss Paraplegic Group, spinal cord injury clinics, individuals with spinal cord injury, employers, and disability insurers. Of 2041 eligible SwiSCI participants, 478 (23.4%) completed the Biographical Survey (median age 57.5 years; median time since injury 19.1 years), with responders and non-responders showing comparable characteristics. Work–life data closely matched existing SwiSCI data (rho > 0.8), indicating good recall. The resulting guidelines will help VI providers coordinate rehabilitation services to optimally promote sustainable employment for individuals with spinal cord injury. Full article
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16 pages, 686 KB  
Article
Institutional Management of the Alumni Community and Quality Assurance in Higher Education: A Descriptive Case Study of a University Model
by Enrique Riquelme, Ámbar Millar, Evelyn Martínez and Stefany Bustamante
Educ. Sci. 2026, 16(6), 971; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16060971 - 18 Jun 2026
Viewed by 204
Abstract
Quality assurance in higher education increasingly depends on the capacity of institutions to transform stakeholder engagement into usable evidence for decision-making and continuous improvement. Among external stakeholders, alumni represent a potentially strategic but underutilized source of information on the relevance of training processes [...] Read more.
Quality assurance in higher education increasingly depends on the capacity of institutions to transform stakeholder engagement into usable evidence for decision-making and continuous improvement. Among external stakeholders, alumni represent a potentially strategic but underutilized source of information on the relevance of training processes and their alignment with professional trajectories. However, the existence of alumni engagement does not guarantee its integration into formal quality assurance systems. This study analyzes how an institutional alumni management model is designed to articulate graduate engagement with internal quality assurance processes. Adopting a qualitative case study approach based on documentary analysis, the research examines the organizational architecture of a Chilean university, focusing on the mechanisms through which alumni participation is expected to be translated into evidence for academic decision-making. The findings show that the model combines strong relational infrastructures with emerging mechanisms for data capture and circulation. However, the institutionalization of processes for interpreting and using evidence remains less developed, revealing an asymmetry between participation, data production, and decision-making. Based on these results, the study conceptualizes alumni integration into quality assurance as a multi-stage process involving participation, data capture, circulation, and use, highlighting the organizational conditions required for each stage. The study contributes by proposing a process model of institutional translation that identifies the organizational breakdowns through which alumni engagement may remain disconnected from formal quality assurance processes. In doing so, it shows that the effectiveness of quality assurance systems depends not on the availability of data alone, but on the governance arrangements that enable evidence to be interpreted, circulated, and used. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Quality Assessment of Higher Education Institutions)
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38 pages, 3399 KB  
Article
Stakeholder Interactions in Rural Industrial Green Transformation: A Four-Party Evolutionary Game Analysis
by Dingrui Liu, Huixia Xiao and Xiqiang Xia
Sustainability 2026, 18(12), 6250; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18126250 (registering DOI) - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 196
Abstract
Industrial prosperity provides an important foundation for rural revitalization. Rural industrial development should increase economic benefits while protecting the environment and improving farmers’ livelihoods. Rural industrial green transformation involves financial institutions, rural enterprises, local governments, and farmers. The roles of these stakeholders change [...] Read more.
Industrial prosperity provides an important foundation for rural revitalization. Rural industrial development should increase economic benefits while protecting the environment and improving farmers’ livelihoods. Rural industrial green transformation involves financial institutions, rural enterprises, local governments, and farmers. The roles of these stakeholders change across different stages of rural industrial development. This study analyzes stakeholder behavior across different stages of rural industrial development and constructs a four-party evolutionary game model to examine the evolutionarily stable strategies of the system. The results show that environmental regulation, green financial support, the relative profitability of green production, and farmer participation jointly shape rural industrial green transformation. Stronger initial environmental regulation can accelerate coordination, but regulation alone cannot ensure stable green transformation. Environmental penalties primarily affect enterprise production decisions. Under the baseline parameter setting, the approximate lower-bound threshold is F1.60. Green production also requires a minimum profitability advantage. Under the same baseline setting, the approximate threshold is ΔH0.20. Subsidy policies mainly accelerate strategic adjustment, but their additional effects weaken as support increases. Based on these findings, this paper proposes maintaining effective regulatory deterrence, improving the profitability of green production, optimizing subsidy design, and strengthening benefit-sharing and risk-sharing mechanisms. Full article
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38 pages, 2490 KB  
Article
Benefits and Drawbacks of Blockchain Technology for Traceability in Coffee Supply Chain
by Christian Gómez and Benoit Garbinato
Technologies 2026, 14(6), 369; https://doi.org/10.3390/technologies14060369 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 229
Abstract
This research examines stakeholders’ perspectives in Colombia and Switzerland on blockchain traceability systems in the coffee industry. Adopting the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) as an interpretive framework, the study analyzes these perceptions through the constructs of performance expectancy, [...] Read more.
This research examines stakeholders’ perspectives in Colombia and Switzerland on blockchain traceability systems in the coffee industry. Adopting the Unified Theory of Acceptance and Use of Technology (UTAUT) as an interpretive framework, the study analyzes these perceptions through the constructs of performance expectancy, effort expectancy, social influence, and facilitating conditions. Using a quantitative cross-sectional design with an exploratory scope, we survey 360 participants, comprising 60 coffee supply chain companies and 300 consumers. Results reveal that 78.3% of stakeholders consider traceability essential, yet only 46.7% are familiar with blockchain. Stakeholders identify three primary benefits: improved transparency (91.7%), fraud prevention (88.3%), and enhanced security (86.7%). However, significant barriers persist: high implementation costs (95%), limited expertise (91.7%), and lack of awareness (93.3%). Geographic differences emerge: Colombian stakeholders prioritize cost reduction and fraud prevention, while Swiss participants focus on data management and privacy protection. Among consumers, 62.7% express interest in provenance information, 56.7% are willing to pay for blockchain systems, and 59% are interested in tipping farmers. The study classifies benefits and drawbacks across nine dimensions, providing a comprehensive framework for understanding the multidimensional impacts of blockchain on the coffee supply chain. Full article
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16 pages, 1114 KB  
Article
Pakistan’s 2025 HPV Vaccine Phase I Rollout: Community Response, Implementation Challenges & Way Forward
by Wei Xia, Soofia Yunus, Atta Ur Rehman, Shah Nawaz Jiskani, Muhammad Imran Qureshi, Shawana Farooq, Inam Bhatti, Sunday Audu, Syed Natiq Abbas Kazmi and Rozina Khalid
Vaccines 2026, 14(6), 537; https://doi.org/10.3390/vaccines14060537 - 17 Jun 2026
Viewed by 241
Abstract
Background: The International Agency for Research on Cancer estimated around 3197 annual deaths along with 5008 newly diagnosed cases of cervical cancer in Pakistan. Worldwide, introduced in 164 WHO member states, the HPV vaccine provides over ninety percent (90%) protection from human papillomavirus [...] Read more.
Background: The International Agency for Research on Cancer estimated around 3197 annual deaths along with 5008 newly diagnosed cases of cervical cancer in Pakistan. Worldwide, introduced in 164 WHO member states, the HPV vaccine provides over ninety percent (90%) protection from human papillomavirus (16 & 18 types) infections. This article intended to document the vaccine (HPV) introduction in a low-middle-income country through the lens of EPI preparedness, vaccination coverage achieved, community acceptance, and implementation challenges during Phase I. Methodology: The research applied a qualitative and quantitative mix method to review the intricate procedure of new vaccine rollout within the national context. A qualitative participant observation approach assessed the planning, approval, and implementation phases of the HPV vaccine. Quantitative data statistics were evaluated for national & regional vaccination coverages, rapid convenience assessment findings, and adverse events reports. Results: The overall reported administrative HPV campaign coverage was 75%, with the maximum regional coverage of 81% by the Punjab, followed by 66% of the Sindh, 43% by the Azad Jammu & Kashmir, and 38% by the Islamabad. Rapid Convenience Assessment findings highlighted the main reasons for refusal (71%), with unavailable girls during the campaign (22%) for non-HPV vaccination. Community acceptance varied across the regions, with notable challenges in implementation being observed. Discussion & Way Forward: Initial phase campaign coverage (70.6%) was greater than the worldwide reported first dose mean coverage (61.6%) for the same multi-age cohort, indicative of an encouraging start in resource limited setting. Documented coverage was below the high-performing countries but comparable to multiple low and middle-income countries. Federal Directorate of Immunization, in collaboration with provincial EPI stakeholders, should prioritize including the newly introduced HPV vaccine in the routine immunization schedule of the Phase I regions and should also implement the lessons learned in the subsequent rollout phases in 2026 in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and 2027 in Balochistan & Gilgit Baltistan. Expanding fixed EPI sites for HPV vaccination, promoting school-centered vaccination, rationalizing outreach in marginalized areas, sustaining the cold chain system, implementing a culturally acceptable communication plan, and resolving internet connectivity challenges are the key strategies to address implementation challenges. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue HPV Vaccination and Primary HPV Screening)
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15 pages, 304 KB  
Article
Historic Belonging and Contemporary Displacement: Syrian Armenians Navigating “Status” in Armenia
by Setrag Hovsepian
Soc. Sci. 2026, 15(6), 394; https://doi.org/10.3390/socsci15060394 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 314
Abstract
Internal and civil wars affect the lives of religious and ethnic minorities the most. For Syrian citizens of Armenian origin, the Republic of Armenia represented one of the most accessible and meaningful destinations to relocate to, shaped by shared ethnicity, collective memory, and [...] Read more.
Internal and civil wars affect the lives of religious and ethnic minorities the most. For Syrian citizens of Armenian origin, the Republic of Armenia represented one of the most accessible and meaningful destinations to relocate to, shaped by shared ethnicity, collective memory, and historical ties. When the Syrian war erupted in 2011, thousands opted to resettle in Armenia, yet they and host institutions struggled to categorize them as immigrants, refugees, or repatriates. This ambiguous status has received little scholarly attention. To explore these complexities, the study employed a survey-based research design involving 124 participants, supplemented by an open-ended question intended to capture personal narratives and nuanced identity negotiations. The manuscript examines how the labels immigrant, refugee, and repatriate carry distinct legal, social, and emotional implications, especially against the backdrop of the 1915 Armenian Genocide’s enduring memory and the particularly negative connotations of “immigrant” and “refugee” in Western Armenian and Arabic languages. Within this contested semantic and policy terrain, repatriation appears not merely as a bureaucratic category but as a culturally resonant and sometimes preferred pathway for some Diaspora Armenians, informed by lifelong exposure to repatriation narratives through formal education (language textbooks) and informal communal practices. The case sheds light on the broader conception of stakeholders, including how they self-identify, how they understand their status in Armenia, and the factors shaping their choices, particularly in the context of contemporary geopolitics and the role of education in influencing external perceptions of them. Full article
20 pages, 18586 KB  
Article
A Community-Grounded Applied Approach to Strengthening Marine Protected Area Governance: Insights from the Juan Fernández Archipelago, Chile
by Ignacio J. Petit, Jaime Aburto, Catalina Sapag, Scheila Recabarren, Sofía Ramirez-Montero, Ana Cinti, Alejandro Correa-Rivera, Andrés Cádiz, Marisol Romero and Liesbeth Van der Meer
Water 2026, 18(12), 1481; https://doi.org/10.3390/w18121481 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 331
Abstract
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are key tools for mitigating the impacts of human activities on marine biodiversity and addressing climate change. Consequently, nations worldwide have committed to international targets to expand MPA coverage, leading to a rapid increase in protected areas and generating [...] Read more.
Marine Protected Areas (MPAs) are key tools for mitigating the impacts of human activities on marine biodiversity and addressing climate change. Consequently, nations worldwide have committed to international targets to expand MPA coverage, leading to a rapid increase in protected areas and generating significant challenges for financing and effective management, particularly in developing countries. Under this scenario, multiple stakeholders, including local communities, academia, governments, and national and international organizations, are joining efforts to reduce financial gaps and strengthen MPA governance and management. In this study, we present the case of the Juan Fernández Archipelago in Chile, where multiple organizations collaborated to develop a socially robust and locally grounded governance system for a network of MPAs through a comprehensive community engagement process conducted on Robinson Crusoe Island between 2022 and 2024. As a result, a Functional Community Organization was established to co-manage the MPAs with the Chilean government, and three MPA management plans encompassing ~580,000 km2 were approved. Among them, the management plan of the Multiple-Use MPA “Mar de Juan Fernández” was the first approved under the new Chilean Biodiversity and Protected Areas Service (Law 21,600), setting a national precedent for co-management. Our findings show that effective MPA governance depends not only on institutional design but also on the extent to which governance arrangements are socially embedded and locally legitimate. In this context, community-grounded and context-sensitive engagement processes facilitated high levels of participation, strengthened representation, and supported the co-production of knowledge, providing a strong foundation for the long-term implementation of conservation objectives. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Coastal and Marine Governance and Protection, 2nd Edition)
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16 pages, 293 KB  
Article
Qualitative Experience with an Adherence Promotion Intervention Among Individuals with Bipolar Disorder: What Is Helpful and Unhelpful?
by Erika L. Kelley, Martha Sajatovic, Amulya Mallu, Feyi Sayo Rufai, Celeste Weise, Jessica Black and Jennifer B. Levin
Medicina 2026, 62(6), 1166; https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina62061166 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 170
Abstract
Background and Objectives: Pharmacotherapy is a first-line treatment for bipolar disorder (BD), although half of individuals report suboptimal medication adherence. Medication adherence enhancement programs that are brief, person-specific, and remotely delivered may be an effective adjunct to treatment. The aim of this [...] Read more.
Background and Objectives: Pharmacotherapy is a first-line treatment for bipolar disorder (BD), although half of individuals report suboptimal medication adherence. Medication adherence enhancement programs that are brief, person-specific, and remotely delivered may be an effective adjunct to treatment. The aim of this study was to qualitatively assess what individuals with BD who participated in a Customized Adherence Enhancement (CAE) program found most helpful and unhelpful about this program, focusing on elements most generalizable to medication adherence promotion. Materials and Methods: n = 14 participants with BD from the intervention arm of a randomized effectiveness trial of CAE vs. enhanced treatment–as-usual participated in one-on-one virtual, semi-structured interviews. Interviews were recorded, transcribed, and summarized using thematic content analysis to identify themes reflecting what was helpful and unhelpful about the program. Results: Participants identified six main themes reflecting impactful aspects of the medication adherence promotion program: practical tools (e.g., worksheets), self-awareness (e.g., identification of triggers), psychoeducation/content (e.g., specific CAE modules), emotional distress (e.g., difficult emotions arose during sessions), format (e.g., pros/cons of virtual format), and interventionist factors (e.g., rapport). Conclusions: Results provide participant-identified useful aspects of a remotely delivered, adjunctive medication adherence promotion program for individuals in treatment for BD in public-sector settings. Strategies for improvement and scale-up of the program include ensuring sufficient technologic and emotional support throughout the program. Future studies may investigate the longer-term impact of such interventions with multiple stakeholder input and consideration of diverse populations, settings, and cultural contexts. Full article
26 pages, 1157 KB  
Article
Between Trust and Risk: Understanding the Conditional Acceptance of Artificial Intelligence
by Roxane Elias Mallouhy
Informatics 2026, 13(6), 91; https://doi.org/10.3390/informatics13060091 - 16 Jun 2026
Viewed by 283
Abstract
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is rapidly transitioning from a specialized technology to an everyday socio-technical infrastructure, yet public acceptance remains shaped by a trade-off between perceived benefits and risks. This study examines how individuals from varied demographic and professional backgrounds perceive, use, and evaluate [...] Read more.
Artificial Intelligence (AI) is rapidly transitioning from a specialized technology to an everyday socio-technical infrastructure, yet public acceptance remains shaped by a trade-off between perceived benefits and risks. This study examines how individuals from varied demographic and professional backgrounds perceive, use, and evaluate AI-enabled systems using a mixed-method research design. A bilingual (English/Arabic) online survey (N=115) captured demographics, awareness, usage patterns, perceived impact, self-assessed understanding, domain-specific trust, concerns, and attitudes toward regulation, complemented by open-ended reflections. In parallel, semi-structured face-to-face interviews provided deeper insight into AI conceptualization, lived experiences, trust boundaries, and conditions for acceptable use. Quantitative results show frequent AI engagement embedded in daily life, with strong domain dependence in trust: education is the most trusted domain, whereas healthcare and finance attract substantially lower trust. Prominent concerns include overreliance (“brain rot”), privacy and data misuse, job displacement, and misinformation. Support for stronger AI regulation is high, indicating that governance is viewed as a prerequisite for sustainable adoption rather than a constraint on innovation. Qualitative findings triangulate these results, revealing a pattern of conditional acceptanceunderstood as the simultaneous valuation of AI’s practical utility alongside the imposition of explicit trust prerequisites whereby participants value AI for productivity and learning support while emphasizing confidentiality, transparency, human oversight in high-stakes contexts, and clear boundaries to mitigate misuse and erosion of human judgment. The study offers empirically grounded insights for policymakers, educators, and industry stakeholders into how AI acceptance is negotiated through utility, literacy, perceived risk, and expectations of accountability. Full article
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