214 research outputs found

    Design and performance evaluation of a Linux HPC cluster

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    In this paper after a short theoretical introduction about modern techniques used inparallel computing, we report a case study related to the design and development of the Caliban Linux High Performance Computing cluster, carried out by the author in the High Performance Computing Laboratory of the University of L’Aquila. Finally we report some performance evaluation tests related to the Caliban cluster performed using HPL (High-Performance Linpack) benchmarks

    Speech at the assembly of the People’s Radical Party in Kragujevac

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    Title: Speech of Pera Todorović at the assembly of the People’s Radical Party in Kragujevac (1882) Language: Serbian The excerpts used are from Slobodan Jovanović, Bnaõa Muπaнa Oбpeнoeuћa (Belgrade: ГeЦa Кoh, 1926–1927), pp. 155–156. About the author Pera Todorovic [1852, Vodice (near Smederevo, east Serbia) – 1907, Belgrade]: politician and journalist. He was born into a well-off family. He first attended a secondary school in Kragujevac, later resuming his education at the gymnasium in Belg..

    Accountability of NGOs in the Italian Legal Framework of International Adoption

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    The paper focuses on the accountability of private and public entities with competence in the international adoption of minor children in the Italian legal framework. The author detects sources of law, models, and operative rules implemented by legislation, court rulings, and practitioners, distinguishing two different levels and relationships. The first involves the relationship between the Commission for International Adoption and the NGOs, focusing on the nature of the NGOs (Non-governmental organizations) which are private bodies with public functions that implement private rights, acting in the public interest. The second level involves the contractual relationship between the appointed NGO and the aspiring parents. The survey offers a critical perspective on some relevant issues, such as: - the centrality of trust, in both the public and the private law domain, as a fundamental element of the model; - the nature and the contractual obligations of the NGOs who assist the prospective parents; and - alternative legal arguments that courts could follow to better protect the rights and values of the parties involved, or to fill gaps in the rationales already adopted

    COMPARING THE MARSHALL PLAN AND THE EUROPEAN NEXT GENERATION UE. Models and Legal Tools of International and Supernational Cooperation to Promote Economic Development

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    The article analyzes and compares the European Recovery Plan of 1948, commonly known as the Marshall Plan, for the reconstruction of Europe after the Second World War (paragraphs 2, 2.1, 2.2), and the Next Generation EU (paragraphs 3, 3.1) through the lens and methods of legal comparison and historical analysis. As the description of the law cannot ignore the historicization of the object of study, such comparison is carried out inductively, through the analysis of the legal mechanisms in their concrete attitudes and the construction of descriptive schemes of facts, having regard to the legal discipline, but also to the functional profiles and the context in which the rules are conceived. Therefore, the author attempts to frame the two different models of international development cooperation by examining their forms and contents, as well as their methodological approaches and governance tools. This essay also takes a critical look at the system of controls called “vincoli esterni”, which can be translated as external constraints or conditionalities. These controls are particularly relevant as long as aid, grants and loans are conditional on plans for structural reforms of the legal system (paragraphs 4, 4.1). The conclusive remarks point out how this system of conditionalities – which for the state takes the form of a debt to give or not to give, to do or not to do – can lead to forms of subordination and structural homologation of the member states. It affects sovereignty, the way how powers and competences are exercised, policy strategies and the relationship between the “lender” and the “borrower” are conceived and practiced in concrete

    The Public Performance Of Sanctions In Insolvency Cases: The Dark, Humiliating, And Ridiculous Side Of The Law Of Debt In The Italian Experience. A Historical Overview Of Shaming Practices

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    This study provides a diachronic comparative overview of how the law of debt has been applied by certain institutions in Italy. Specifically, it offers historical and comparative insights into the public performance of sanctions for insolvency through shaming and customary practices in Roman Imperial Law, in the Middle Ages, and in later periods. The first part of the essay focuses on the Roman bonorum cessio culo nudo super lapidem and on the medieval customary institution called pietra della vergogna (stone of shame), which originates from the Roman model. The second part of the essay analyzes the social function of the zecca and the pittima Veneziana during the Republic of Venice, and of the practice of lu soldate a castighe (no translation is possible). The author uses a functionalist approach to apply some arguments and concepts from the current context to this historical analysis of ancient institutions that we would now consider ridiculous. The article shows that the customary norms that play a crucial regulatory role in online interactions today can also be applied to the public square in the past. One of these tools is shaming. As is the case in contemporary online settings, in the public square in historic periods, shaming practices were used to enforce the rules of civility in a given community. Such practices can be seen as virtuous when they are intended for use as a tool to pursue positive change in forces entrenched in the culture, and thus to address social wrongs considered outside the reach of the law, or to address human rights abuses

    Searching for a common core of family law in Europe

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    In this Article the Author, a member of the group of European investigators involved in the searching process for a Common Core of Family Law in Europe, does not want to present the results of the project, that will be published in a forthcoming volume, but, instead, seeks to distinguish the FLCCP (Family Law Common Core Project) from similar research experiences, such as the CEFL (Commission of European Family Law) one. In order to highlight these differences, in the first part (paragraphs 1,2,3) the paper describes the goals of the Common Core Project and the methodology it employs, making references to the Cornell’s Studies, the Schlesinger’s factual approach and the Sacco’s formants theory. In the second part, the analysis pinpoints the peculiarities of functionalism and the way the Common Core method re-interprets it on a large scale as a collaborative effort, because of the synergy between the work of the national rapporteurs, the answers obtained through the questionnaires and group sessions and reports (par. 4). Further, the Article stresses the different goals of CEFL and FLCCP and argues how these differences concerning also their respective goals and methods affect the research’s results and the idea of what the harmonization of family law (if any and possible) might be the expression of (par. 5).In the last part, the Author maps an alternative route to the harmonization of European family law, which combines the use of European international private law regulations on family matters, the concepts of private autonomy and Courts rulings, together with doctrine efforts (par. 6)

    Islamic Rites and ceremonies in the Pandemic Emergency between Parallel Legal Orders

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    The essay investigates how some religious Islamic rules have been accommodated in front ofthe Covid emergency in some European countries and religious communities, highlighting the different and interconnected dimensions involved in this process of accommodation. The author uses the word country, having regard to the state-territorial legal order; and the word religious community, referring to the Islamic rule of law-religion model, based on a personal law conception. In particular, after some conceptual definition on some peculiar issues involved (para. 1), the analysis goes through some rules on funeral rites and ceremonies (para. 2) and on the sacred pilgrimages (para. 3). The conclusive remarks (para. 4) underline how the Covid 19’s emergency has given a chance for forms of virtuous reasonable accommodation, looking forward areas of middle ground between parallel legal systems

    Corpus and distribution of personal names of the type Pera

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    U prvom će se dijelu članka naći korpus antroponima tipa Pera nastao na osnovi literature, onomastičke, dijalektološke i leksikografske, te na osnovi autorovih terenskih istraživanja dalmatinskog prostora. U drugom će dijelu autor u nacrtu prikazati raspodjelu antroponima ovoga načina tvorbe najprije u prostoru i zatim u vremenu, od pojave tvorbenog modela u prajeziku, preko prvih potvrda u pisanim dokumentima do primjera ostvarenih u naše doba.Personal names of the type Pera have not been properly described in linguistic literature at any level of their nature. This was a motive for the author to present personal names of such formation mode in the Croatian language with relation to their corpus and distribution in space and time. Most of the corpus includes personal names and nicknames from which other kinds of personal names are derived. The limits of their spreading are not clear. With some differences in density they can be found in all dialects. In general, they are more common west of the rivers Neretva and Bosna than to the east of the boundary. According to the time of their appearance, personal names of this formation mode developed earlier than suffix formations when taking into consideration the model by which similarly structured formations in Indo-European languages were formed. On the basis of the description of the corpus of personal names of the type Pera, the condition of their position in space, their appearance, their morphologic, phonologic and formation features could be better told than has been done long since

    Firman dan sebiji apel / Delasari Pera ; editor: Tia Setiadi

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    Arrels sota l'aigua : la meva experiència com a traductora de Virginia Woolf

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    Entre els actes, de Virginia Woolf, publicada l'any 1989, en traducció de Marta Pera, és l'última novel·la que va escriure l'autora, i la va acabar dies abans de suïcidar-se, en una atmosfera de guerra imminent. Tant per la forma experimental com per les estratègies literàries i els temes que tracta, aquesta novel·la és alhora un compendi de l'obra de l'autora i una porta oberta a noves possibilitats de creació literària que, malauradament, Virginia Woolf no va poder experimentar. La traductora ens parla de la gènesi de la traducció i de la seva lectura d'Entre els actes.Entre els actes, Virginia Woolf's Between the acts (1941), translated into Catalan by Marta Pera and published in 1989, is the last novel written by Virginia Woolf. She finished it days before committing suicide in an atmosphere of imminent war. Because of its experimental form and its literary strategies, the book is both a compendium of the work of the author and an open door to new possibilities in literary creation that, unfortunately, Virginia Woolf was not able to fully experience in her life time. The translator tells us about the genesis of this translation and about her own reading of Between the acts
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