Walton Wider

57193087794

Publications - 2

The influence of hybrid leadership in sustainable women entrepreneurial performance

Publication Name: Sustainable Futures

Publication Date: 2025-06-01

Volume: 9

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: Unknown

Description:

In the contemporary era, strategic leadership style plays significant role in entrepreneurial performance. The key purpose of this study is to examine the influence of hybrid (self, shared and opinion) leadership in women entrepreneurial performance towards sustainable growth. This mixed method study investigated data in two ways. First, the study analyzed the data and measured the hypotheses employing the partial least squares structured equation model (PLS-SEM) in SmartPLS software 4 packages. Second, fsQCA explores multiple causal relationships between the constructs. The fsQCA results claim that the multiple causal relationships among the shared, self and opinion leadership have strong significant impact on women entrepreneurial performance. In particular, it is addressed that different entrepreneurial performances are positively associated with the extent of self, shared and opinion leadership. Theoretically, this study contributes to the understanding of women leadership behavior in entrepreneurial performance with a mixed statistical analysis. The study has valuable insights for the women entrepreneurs and concerned

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1016/j.sftr.2025.100727

Rethinking sustainable growth: technological and supply chain drivers of the U.S. production-based ecological footprint

Publication Name: Resources Conservation and Recycling Advances

Publication Date: 2026-09-01

Volume: 31

Issue: Unknown

Page Range: Unknown

Description:

The United States (U.S.) has one of the highest production-based ecological footprints (EFP) in the world. Consequently, reducing EFP is essential for ensuring ecological balance, protecting the environment, and reducing ecological degradation. However, the comparative analysis on the long-run associations of AI innovation (AIN), high-tech trade capability (HTTC), supply chain efficiency (SCE), information and communication technology investment growth (ICTIG), and GDP growth (GDPG) with EFP regarding the U.S. remains poorly understood. Using the autoregressive distributed lag (ARDL) method, this study shows a comparative analysis of the EFP’s determinants relying on the U.S. national level data from 1990 to 2023. Based on the ARDL findings, while AIN, SCE, and HTTC show statistically significant association with EFP in the long run, ICTIG and GDPG do not exhibit significant empirical association. Among three significant associations, AIN and SCE are associated with reductions in ecological footprint in the long run, indicating that the country has secured technology-driven ecological benefits and operational efficiency enhancement within the production dynamics by emphasizing AI innovation and efficient inventory management. In contrast, HTTC’s positive association represents significant ecological pressure with the high tech-industries technology advancement, driven by scale and rebound effects. All the results remained stable in FMOLS, DOLS, and CCR robustness tests. Besides, Granger causality indicates mixed predictive patterns of these relationships. The comparative analysis among these determinants' long-run associations with EFP significantly contributes to the single country level production-based ecological footprint literature and depicts several valuable empirical insights for policy actions by the federal government.

Open Access: Yes

DOI: 10.1016/j.rcradv.2026.200358