Multinational Research Society Publisher

Mission and Vision
Our Mission
At MRS Publisher, our mission is to advance the dissemination of high-quality, peer-reviewed research to a global audience, enabling unrestricted access to scholarly content. We strive to facilitate the free exchange of knowledge and foster academic collaboration, empowering researchers, educators, and practitioners across disciplines to contribute to the advancement of science and society. By providing open access to research outputs, we aim to enhance the visibility, impact, and accessibility of scholarly work while supporting a sustainable and equitable knowledge-sharing ecosystem.
Our Vision
Our vision is to become a leading force in the global open-access publishing landscape, promoting transparency, inclusivity, and collaboration within the scientific community. We envision a future where all academic research is freely accessible, enabling innovation, accelerating discovery, and supporting evidence-based decision-making in policy, education, and practice. Through our commitment to open access, MRS Publisher seeks to break down barriers to knowledge and empower a diverse range of voices and perspectives in the pursuit of knowledge and societal progress.
Open Access Policy
MRS Publisher is committed to promoting open access to all scholarly works published under our name. We firmly believe that providing open access to research articles, journals, and other scholarly materials increases the visibility and accessibility of research, maximizes the impact of scientific inquiry, and accelerates the exchange of knowledge across borders and disciplines.
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Latest Article
1. Prompting as a New Medium: Greenbergian Medium Specificity and the Ite...
0

Samantha Shapiro*, James Hutso...
Marlborough School, Los Angeles, USA
19-28
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20320824

This article argues that AI prompting should be understood not as a tool, technique, or accessory to image generation, but as a medium in its own right. Drawing on Clement Greenberg’s theory of medium specificity, it contends that a medium becomes legible through the operations peculiar to itself, namely, the constraints, affordances, and formal procedures that distinguish it from neighboring arts. Existing scholarship has asked whether prompting counts as art, whether prompt engineering constitutes a creative skill, and whether the prompt itself can be aesthetic; however, these accounts often stop short of a sustained theory of prompting as medium. This essay addresses that gap by identifying the medium-specific property of AI prompting as an iterative exchange structured by probabilistic unpredictability. Unlike painting, sculpture, or filmmaking, where resistance may be material, embodied, and progressively masterable, prompting confronts the artist with outputs generated through opaque statistical processes that cannot be fully anticipated or reasoned with. The prompter therefore works through recursive reformulation, selection, and response, shaping the work by negotiating deviation rather than executing intention in a linear fashion. This generative interface, rather than any single prompt or isolated output, constitutes the core artistic practice of the medium. The article further argues that objections concerning prompt shareability or the instability of AI authorship mistake the art object for the process.
2. IMPLICATIONS OF STOCK VOLATILITY, INVESTMENT EFFICIENCY ON ACCRUAL AND...
2

Osigwe Raphael Ndionyemma* & A...
Department of Accounting, Faculty of Management Sciences, University of Port Harcourt, Port Harcourt, Rivers State, Nigeria
35-49
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20320469

The separation of ownership from control creates an agency problem which continue to revebrate across the globe due to the perenial failure of firms soon after the publication of juicy profits. Management out of the desire to earn enhanced bonuses, avoid violation of debt covenants, massage taxes and influence market outcomes create information ambiguity through signaling, timing of financial reports and falsification of reported earnings. Exacerbating the problem is the weakness in institutional and poor enforcement of laws. This study therefore examines information asymmetry through the lens of stock volatility and investment efficiency effects on accrual and real earnings management using audited financial statements of manufacturing firms for the period 2004 to 2023. The study adopted Hausman test for selection of models and correlatrion analysis for determination of relationship. Causality test was carried out to determine direction of causality. Various diagnostic tests were conducted Findings revealed a positive association between stock returns volatility and real earnings management. Also noted is the positive connection between investment efficiency and discretionary accruals. A positive association between stock return volatility and discretionary accruals was indicated by the study. Strong positive association was indicated between investment efficiency and real earnings management. It is therefore recommended that Firms should be required to report their discretionary accruals and real earnings so that users can understand significant variances each year. Doing this helps make financial facts clearer and so investors can better judge the company’s earnings.To lessen the possibility of opportunistic manipulation, board audit committees should examine accrual-based accounting entries more closely, especially those that have a major impact on profits figures.Despite the weak direct association found in the study, investors and regulators should keep an eye on stock return volatility as an early warning indicator for potential manipulation, particularly in companies with erratic earnings patterns.
3. SOUTH AFRICA’S DEMOCRATIC JOURNEY: CHALLENGES, GOVERNANCE AND THE PATH...
2

Dr. John Motsamai Modise*
Tshwane University of Technology
21-34
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20306391

South Africa’s democratic transition in 1994 marked a historic shift toward constitutional democracy, human rights, accountability, and socio-economic transformation. Despite important democratic gains achieved over the past three decades, the country continues to face serious governance and socio-economic challenges, including corruption, unemployment, crime, weak governance, infrastructure decline, and poor service delivery. These challenges increasingly threaten democratic sustainability, institutional legitimacy, public trust, and national development. The purpose of this study was to critically examine the impact of governance failures and socio-economic instability on the sustainability of constitutional democracy in South Africa. The study was guided by the central problem that persistent corruption, unemployment, crime, institutional decline, and weak governance continue to undermine democratic accountability, socio-economic transformation, and public confidence in state institutions. The study sought to analyse how these interconnected challenges affect democratic governance, social stability, and public trust within the South African context. A qualitative methodological approach was adopted for the study. The research utilised a systematic literature review and document analysis approach to examine existing scholarly literature, government reports, institutional publications, policy documents, and statistical reports relating to governance, democracy, corruption, unemployment, crime, and service delivery in South Africa. Secondary data were obtained from credible national and international institutions, including Statistics South Africa, Auditor-General South Africa, South African Police Service, World Bank, International Monetary Fund, and Transparency International. The key findings of the study revealed that weak governance, corruption, institutional failures, unemployment, poverty, inequality, violent crime, and deteriorating infrastructure continue to undermine democratic accountability and socio-economic development in South Africa. The study further found that corruption and state capture significantly weakened institutional legitimacy and public trust, while unemployment and socio-economic inequality contributed to social instability, crime, and democratic dissatisfaction. In addition, poor service delivery, electricity shortages, failing municipalities, and infrastructure decline emerged as major indicators of governance failure and institutional inefficiency. The findings also demonstrated that democratic sustainability increasingly depends on ethical leadership, institutional reform, accountability, effective governance, and inclusive socio-economic development. The study concludes that although South Africa has achieved significant democratic progress since 1994, the country currently stands at a critical crossroads where governance failures, corruption, socio-economic instability, and institutional decline threaten the long-term sustainability of constitutional democracy. The study recommends strengthening accountability mechanisms, improving governance effectiveness, promoting ethical leadership, professionalising public institutions, combating corruption, enhancing service delivery, and promoting inclusive economic development in order to restore public trust and strengthen democratic stability.
4. Cultural Heritage and Childhood Adventure in Sudha Murty’s The Magic o...
1

S. Saikripa*, Dr. M. Sivaselvi...
Assistant Professor, Department of English, Vels Institute of Science, Technology & Advanced Studies (VISTAS), Chennai
17-18
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20302840

The Magic of the Lost Temple by Sudha Murty is a remarkable contribution to contemporary Indian children’s literature. The novel presents the story of Nooni, a young city girl who spends her vacation in her grandparents’ village in Karnataka. Through her experiences, the narrative explores themes of curiosity, cultural heritage, friendship, environmental awareness, and the importance of preserving history. The discovery of an ancient stepwell becomes symbolic of reconnecting with forgotten traditions and indigenous knowledge. Sudha Murty uses simple language and vivid storytelling to bridge the gap between urban and rural life while teaching moral and cultural values to young readers. This article examines the novel from cultural, social, and literary perspectives and highlights how the text promotes identity, community bonding, and appreciation of Indian traditions. The study also focuses on the representation of childhood adventure and the educational significance of storytelling in shaping ethical values among children. The novel ultimately emphasizes that true learning comes through observation, exploration, and human relationships.