Autonomous driving paper index
Artificial Intelligence, Social Capital, and Sustainable Employment in Peripheral SMEs: A Biocultural Reading from Eastern Macedonia and Thrace, Greece
One-line summary
The accelerating diffusion of artificial intelligence (AI) in Europe raises pressing distributional questions about employment, social cohesion, and sustainable development in disadvantaged regions.
Engineering notes
Key topics: autonomous driving. See the paper for implementation details and experimental results.
Chinese explanation / 中文解读
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Original abstract
The accelerating diffusion of artificial intelligence (AI) in Europe raises pressing distributional questions about employment, social cohesion, and sustainable development in disadvantaged regions. Research has concentrated on advanced urban economies, leaving the implications of AI for peripheral small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) operating under weak human capital, thin digital infrastructure, and constrained social capital, underexplored. We examine the interplay between AI adoption, social capital formation, workforce dynamics, and sustainable development in Eastern Macedonia and Thrace (EMT), one of the EU’s least developed regions. Regional unemployment and educational-attainment data from Eurostat and ELSTAT are incorporated as contextual evidence anchoring the qualitative findings. Drawing on Bitsani’s Biocultural City framework which treats human, social, and cultural capital as interdependent dimensions of regional sustainability, we thematically analysed twelve semi-structured interviews with SME owners and managers conducted in early 2025 using Atlas.ti, yielding 19 codes grouped into six categories. Knowledge deficits and financial constraints emerge as primary barriers, while external technology partnerships, targeted education, and economic incentives operate as enablers, all mediated by social and human capital availability. Read through this framework, AI adoption in peripheral economies emerges less as a purely technological or financial challenge than as a social and human capital one, embedded in a biocultural environment shaped by brain drain, institutional thinness, and weak civic intermediation. Without parallel investment in digital literacy, organizational culture, and inter-firm networks, AI risks reproducing rather than reducing employment inequalities. The study draws policy implications for EU Cohesion programming and Sustainable Development Goals 4, 8, 9, 10, and 17.
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