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    Sanzioni per crediti inesistenti, non spettanti, dichiarazione errata, dichiarazione infedele

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    Sommario: 1. Sanzione per infedeltà della dichiarazione. – 2. Crediti di imposta inesistenti e crediti di imposta non spettanti. – 3. Conclusion

    NAVIGATING CO-PRODUCTION CHALLENGES IN HEALTHCARE PPPs: INSIGHTS FROM MULTIPLE CASE STUDIES

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    This paper investigates the transformative potential of public-private partnerships (PPPs) in the healthcare sector, using the dual lenses of co-production and collaborative governance. Grounded in the New Public Service paradigm (Denhardt & Denhardt, 2000) and key theories of collaborative governance (Ansell & Gash, 2008; Emerson & Nabatchi, 2015), the study positions PPPs as instruments for fostering more participatory, inclusive, and sustainable models of public service delivery. Within this framework, co-production plays a central role envisioned as a process where public institutions, private entities, and citizens collectively design and deliver services (Loeffler & Loeffler, 2021; Scupola & Mergel, 2022). The study is guided by two core questions: How is co- production implemented in healthcare PPPs? And what are the main stages and challenges involved in the process? Using a qualitative multiple-case study methodology (Stake, 2013), the research analyzes two healthcare PPPs through semi-structured interviews and secondary data (Saldaña, 2021; Gioia et al., 2013). The findings point to diverse governance models and a relatively advanced level of co-production maturity despite the presence of notable obstacles. The results suggest that effective co-production within PPPs leads to more patient-centered care and enhances service quality. It also encourages broader stakeholder participation, moving away from traditional hierarchical roles toward shared decision-making and more responsive service design

    Social Surrogacy: Market Design and Implications for Fertility

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    We investigate theoretically the introduction of a market for commercial surrogacy for social motives. Agents have heterogeneous incomes and preferences for parenthood, and face pregnancy-related income reductions. In equilibrium, lowincome agents provide surrogacy for high-income agents who seek “insurance” against income loss and would not become parents without surrogacy. Surrogacy has an ambiguous effect on fertility: it increases fertility only if the latter is low without surrogacy. Otherwise, its impact on fertility is negative

    Un inedito San Francesco riceve le stimmate sostenuto da un angelo di Melchiorre Galluzzi

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    An unpublished painting of Saint Francis receiving the stigmata supported by an angel by Melchi-orre Galluzzi The catalogue of works attributed to the painter Melchiorre Galluzzi, originally from Cologna Ve-neta, is currently very limited. An unpublished painting of his, Saint Francis Receiving the Stigmata Supported by an Angel, held in a private collection, is presented and contextualized here. The signed painting is an example of his artistic maturity, created during his Cremona period, perhaps related to the establishment of the Company of the Stigmata of Saint Francis in the church of Sant’Angelo in 1602

    Introduction to "Networks and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology and Art History: Essays from the Venice Symposium (5-6 December 2024)"

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    Introduction to "Networks and Quantitative Methods in Archaeology and Art History: Essays from the Venice Symposium (5-6 December 2024)

    Retracing Their Steps: The Onward Migration of Italian-Bangladeshi Families to the UK and Their Return to Italy

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    According to the Bangladeshi embassy in Italy, in 2015, there were approximately 6,000 Italian households of Bangladeshi origin (approximately 25,000 persons) who left the Italian peninsula and moved to London. (Della Puppa and King, 2019) The Italian National Institute of Statistics reports that, in 2016 alone, among the 29,000 Italians with a non-European country background who left Italy, over 2,500 were of Bangladeshi origin and that 92% of Italians of Asian origin moved to the UK (Istat 2016). In the context of migration studies, a growing body of literature has dealt with this phenomenon, which can be defined in terms of “onward migration” (Ahrens et al., 2016; Della Puppa et al. 2021; Haandrikman and Hassanen, 2014; Kelly, 2013; King and Della Puppa, 2020; King and Newbold, 2007; King and Karamoschou, 2019; Mas Giralt, 2017; McIlwaine and Bunge, 2019; Ramos, 2018; Stewart, 2012; van Liempt, 2011), that is, for example, migrants originating from non-EU countries, who, once they have acquired EU citizenship in one EU country, move to another (Della Puppa et al. 2021; Della Puppa and Sredanovic, 2017). This has been analysed for different nationalities of migrants in Europe (Ahrens et al., 2016; Della Puppa et al. 2021; Haandrikman and Hassanen, 2014; Kelly, 2013; King and Newbold, 2007; King and Karamoschou, 2019; Mas Giralt, 2017; McIlwaine and Bunge, 2019; Ramos, 2018; Stewart, 2012; van Liempt, 2011) and many contributions have been produced on the specific case of the intense onward migration of Italian-Bangladeshi to the UK (Della Puppa, 2021; Della Puppa and King, 2019; King and Della Puppa, 2020; Morad and Sacchetto, 2020). Thus, many dimensions of this specific “new migration” have been analysed: the reasons behind it, its modalities, the gap between expectations and real conditions of social and work integration in the British context (Ibidem), the role of emotions and the gender gap in expectations towards this new mobility (Della Puppa, 2019), and even the coping strategies for the Brexit scenario (Sredanovic and Della Puppa, 2020). However, little or nothing has been written about those who decided to give up their new migration and life project in the UK, retraced their steps and returned permanently to Italy, although it is a growing phenomenon. Therefore, this contribution will focus precisely on the Italian-Bangladeshi families who, after having relocated from Italy to the UK, have returned to Italy. Specifically, it will investigate the reasons for return migration and its modalities. The chapter is based on two multi-site qualitative pieces of research, carried out in both poles of onward migration. Empirical data consist of 76 in-depth interviews conducted between 2015 and 2019. Specifically, 35 Bangladeshis with Italian citizenship who were planning to move to the UK were interviewed in Vicenza, Venice, Bologna, and Padova. The remaining 41 interviews were conducted in London, Bradford, and Birmingham with Italian-Bangladeshis who had already relocated to the UK. The respondents report their frustration because of the social downgrading and professional deskilling suffered during their relocation to the UK; the burden of job insecurity and the excessive flexibility of work shifts which resulted in antisocial hours, a reduction in the possibilities of socializing and time to spend with friends and family outside of work, and a general deterioration in the quality of life; the higher cost of living in the UK for a lower salary, compared to Italy; the dependence on welfare, which they had to rely on to face the high cost of living in the UK, and the consequent biopolitical and social control by the State; their disillusionment with the housing conditions they had access to in England compared to those left in Italy; their children’s dissatisfaction with the new national and life context

    Investigating contaminants of emerging concern (CECs) in the Venice Lagoon: A suspect screening approach for the analysis of water and sediment contamination

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    The presence of Contaminants of Emerging Concern (CECs) in the environment poses significant concern, yet their occurrence, sources, and fate remain not fully understood. This study provides the first investigation of a broad range of CECs, including active pharmaceutical ingredients (APIs), plant protection products (PPPs), and personal care products (PCPs), across raw and treated wastewater, surface water, and sediment in the Venice Lagoon and selected tributaries. Using a suspect screening analysis methodology based on high-resolution mass spectrometry (HRMS), 14 sampling stations were selected to identify contamination patterns and potential emission sources. APIs were the most frequently detected class of compounds (150 compounds), with flecainide, harman, carbamazepine, and venlafaxine found in more than 80 % of sampling stations. Analgesics were the dominant therapeutic class, followed by antidepressants and cardiovascular drugs. Among PCPs (17 compounds), icaridin, and climbazole were the most prevalent, detected at 11 and 9 sampling stations, respectively. PPPs (26 compounds) were also detected, with diuron being the most widespread as it was found at 10 sampling stations. To the best of the authors' knowledge, 92 compounds (68 APIs, 17 PCPs, and 7 PPPs) were qualitatively identified for the first time in the Venice Lagoon, although many of them are known to occur in natural waters worldwide. The results highlight rivers and treated wastewater as major contributors to CEC emissions in the lagoon. These findings offer valuable insights for future research and targeted monitoring strategies, advancing the understanding of unmonitored contaminants in vulnerable aquatic environments

    EVMLiSA: Sound Static Control-Flow Graph Construction for EVM Bytecode

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    Ethereum enables the creation and execution of decentralized applications through smart contracts, that are compiled to Ethereum Virtual Machine (EVM) bytecode. Once deployed in the blockchain, the bytecode is immutable; hence, ensuring that smart contracts are bug-free before their deployment is of utmost importance. A crucial preliminary step for any effective static analysis of EVM bytecode is the extraction of the control-flow graph (CFG): this presents significant challenges due to potentially statically unknown jump destinations. In this paper we present a novel approach, based on Abstract Interpretation, aiming to build a sound CFG from EVM bytecode smart contracts. Our analysis, which is implemented in our static analyzer EVMLiSA, is based on a parametric abstract domain that approximates concrete execution stacks at each program point as an l-sized set of abstract stacks of maximal height h; the results of the analysis are then used to resolve the jump destinations at jump nodes. Furthermore, EVMLiSA includes a checker for reentrancy detection, working on the constructed CFG. Our experiments show that, by fine-tuning the analysis parameters, EVMLiSA is able to build sound CFGs for all real-world smart contracts in the considered benchmark suite. Moreover, EVMLiSA successfully detects all reentrancy vulnerabilities in EVM bytecode smart contracts, while producing a small number of false positives

    Edizione diplomatico-interpretativa con facsimile digitale dell’Edictum Rothari, Città del Vaticano, Biblioteca Apostolica Vaticana, Vaticano Latino 5359

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    Il progetto editoriale delle Leges Langobardorum nasce da una collaborazione tra l’Università di Ca’ Foscari Venezia e l’Università degli Studi di Torino, sedi delle due unità di ricerca nell’ambito di un Programma di Rilevante Interesse Nazionale (PRIN 2022 PNRR) in cui operano congiuntamente gli autori dell’edizione. Il progetto si suddivide in due fasi. La prima fase è volta a fornire una edizione diplomatico-interpretativa dei testimoni principali delle Leges. Nel presente volume viene proposta l’edizione diplomatico-interpretativa dell’Edictum Rothari trasmesso dal manoscritto Vaticano Latino 5359. La seconda fase, più a lungo termine, prevede l’allestimento dell’edizione critica integrata del testo dell’Editto e di tutte le Leges, sulla base della collazione e recensione completa dei testimoni pervenuti. L’edizione sarà corredata di un glossario digitale dei termini longobardi. I motivi per cui si è scelto di allestire un’edizione digitale basata su standard di codifica internazionali (gli schemi XML/TEI) sono molteplici. In primo luogo, la codifica TEI permette di gestire più livelli di edizione e di presentarli con a fronte le immagini del facsimile digitale dei testimoni selezionati: in questo modo si valorizza la dimensione storica di ogni documento, offerto ai lettori nel suo contesto paleografico e codicologico, oltre che linguistico e filologico. In secondo luogo, la flessibilità di un’edizione digitale consente di integrare le edizioni diplomatiche con l’edizione critica che sarà preparata una volta portata a termine la prima fase. Infine, ma non da ultimo, la pubblicazione sul web in modalità open access consente di raggiungere un pubblico più vasto, non esclusivamente accademico, in accordo con l’obiettivo di valorizzare e diffondere la conoscenza del Patrimonio Culturale italiano che è parte del progetto PRIN

    Nourishing the body and food for soul: The role of animals in the South Asian Sufi environment

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    This article investigates some aspects concerning the consumption of meat for food in Islam in general and in the South Asian cultural environment in particu- lar. Starting out from a look at the primary sources of authority in Islam, i.e. the Koran and the prophetic Traditions (hadith), concerning legal prescriptions with regard to feeding on meat, the focus moves on to describe how muslims, espe- cially Sufis, in the Indian subcontinent have adapted to the local culture and de- veloped a particular attitude towards eating or refraining from eating meat in their daily diet and/or in the specific circumstances of their initiatory discipline. It argues in favor of a common stance among practitioners in different spiritual traditions, thereby creating a common understanding and attitude characteristic of the multi-cultural environment of India and Pakistan

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