672,813 research outputs found
[Italy Watercolors 02]
People feeding birds in front of canal in Venice, Italy with bell towers and churches in background.Tiff file: 2990x4030 pixels, 34.5 Mb; Display: jpeg, 594x800 pixels, 75dp
Corporate network data - Italy
The source we used in this work for the benchmark years from 1913 to 1983 is Notizie statistiche sulle principali società italiane per azioni, edited by the Associazione fra le Società Italiane per Azioni (Assonime). The Imita.db database is an electronic version of this source. This dataset contains information on companies, boards of directors, and balance sheets of a large sample of Italian joint-stock companies for several benchmark years. On the whole, the dataset contains data on more than 38,000 companies, almost 300,000 directors, and more than 100,000 balance sheets. Representativeness, in terms of capital, is very high as the sample covers well over 90 percent of the total universe in all but the first two benchmark years (1911 and 1913) and the last one (1983), for which the proportion is around 85 percent.
For the benchmark year 2001 we selected the top 250 companies from Le principali società italiane, the annual report on Italian joint-stock companies edited by R&S-Mediobanca. As this source does not report the names of the board members, we extracted them from Infocamere, a large dataset of Unioncamere, the association of the Italian chambers of commerce.
This paper focuses on seven benchmark years: 1913, 1927, 1936, 1960, 1972, 1983, and 2001. In compliance with the White Paper rules, for each benchmark year we have selected the top 250 companies by total assets, with the exclusion of subsidiaries. The top 250 companies have been selected according to the following repartition: 50 financials and 200 non financials.
As for the directors, we used only data for members of a board of directors in the strict sense, leaving out the members of Collegi sindacali. We have carefully standardized the names of the directors to make them as homogeneous as possible. However, we estimate that the information on boards of directors contained in Imita.db has a margin of error of about one percent, as is the case with other similar databases (Mintz and Schwartz 1985). These errors are mainly due to cases of homonymy, misprints, or shortcomings in the source.
Data on board members of the top 250 Italian joint-stock companies for the year 1991 are not available so we had to drop this benchmark
Carta d'Italia alla scala di 1:25,000 /
Edition varies. Topographic map series of Italy. Shows state, regional, provincial, and commune boundaries, cities, highways, railroads, power plants, aqueducts, canals, airfields, trig points, and vegetation throughout Italy.; Relief shown by contours, hachures, and spot heights.; Series consists of approximately 3,500 sheets?; Some sheets have legend in Italian and English.; "Reticolato Chilometrico Gauss-Boaga."; Some maps printed by Army Map Service (Series M891); Includes compilation diagram, index to adjoining sheets, administrative boundaries diagram, magnetic declination information, and glossary. 136 II SE La Rocca -- 136 III NW Pescia Fiorentina -- 137 II SE Gallese -- 137 III SE S. Martino al Cimino -- 137 III SO Castel D'Asso -- 142 I NE Monte Romano -- 142 I SE La Farnesiana -- 143 IV NE Capranica -- 143 IV NO Vetralla -- 143 IV SE Bassano di Sutri -- 143 IV SO Civitella Cesi -- 233 I SE Monte Arcosu -- 233 I SO Acquacadda -- 233 II NE S. Barbara -- 233 II NO Santadi -- 233 II SE Punta Sebera -- 233 II SO Is Carillus -- 234 Villa D'Orri -- 234 III SO Pula -- 234 IV SO Capoterra.Della carta d'ItaliaItaly 1:25,00
Stars of italy
All works included in this collection belong to their respective authors and cannot be infringed upon. All the works submitted to the "Stars of Italy" competition were considered separately and the works of Uzbekistan artists were placed in one row
Byron and Italy
How did Italy Italianise Byron? And how did Byron Byronise Italy? These are the key questions that the volume sets out to answer.Cover -- Half Title -- Title Page -- Copyright Page -- Tables of Contents -- Notes on Contributors -- Abbreviations -- Byron in Italy: a chronology -- 1816 -- 1817 -- 1818 -- 1819 -- 1820 -- 1821 -- 1822 -- 1823 -- Introduction: 'Un paese tutto poetico' - Byron in Italy, Italy in Byron -- Notes -- 1 The literature of Italy in Byron's poems of 1817-20 -- Notes -- 2 Byron's ethnographic eye: the poet among the Italians -- Byron's poetics of domestication -- Ethnographic investigations: fact versus fiction -- 'Love in full life and length', or when the 'real' overwhelms the 'ideal' -- Notes -- 3 From Lord Nelvil to Dugald Dalgetty: Byron's Scottish identity in Italy -- Notes -- 4 The garden of the world: Byron and the geography of Italy -- Geography as mindscape -- Italy: a 'graced' ruin -- Expanded by the 'genius of the spot' -- Notes -- 5 'Something I have seen or think it possible to see': Byron and Italian art in Ravenna -- Acknowledgements -- Notes -- 6 'Something sensible to grasp at': Byron and Italian Catholicism -- Notes -- 7 The politics of the unities: tragedy and the Risorgimento in Byron and Manzoni -- Acknowledgement -- Notes -- 8 Parisina, Mazeppa and Anglo-Italian displacement -- Notes -- 9 This 'still exhaustless mine': de Staël, Goethe and Byron's Roman lyricism -- Notes -- 10 Playing with history: Byron's Italian dramas -- Notes -- 11 'Where shall I turn me?': Italy and irony in Beppo and Don Juan -- Textual turns: the tre corone of Italian literature -- Serventismo and the performative turn -- 'An Italian Carnival' -- Notes -- Select bibliography -- IndexHow did Italy Italianise Byron? And how did Byron Byronise Italy? These are the key questions that the volume sets out to answer.Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources.Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, YYYY. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries
Italy House
Menu from Italy House restaurant in Hong Kong. Spaghetti, stilton series, ace curry, Italian rice, special drink, appetizers, snacks, catering, salad, grilled supreme meal.https://viuspace.viu.ca/bitstream/handle/10613/3164/LimItaly.pdf?sequence=3&isAllowed=yFrom the Imogene Lim restaurant menu collectio
European Brain ReseArch INfrastructureS-Italy – EBRAINS-Italy
EBRAINS-Italy will be the Italian node of the EBRAINS European distributed infrastructure. It aims at
enabling clinical and experimental activities in the Health sector to adequately exploit the most advanced
modeling, computational and analytical technologies available in the neuroscience field. The main objective is to bring together in a research infrastructure several groups of the highest scientific, technical, and
organizational abilities in the field of experimental/theoretical neuroscience operating in Italy, integrating the
activities in order to guarantee synergies and generate a substantial increase of scientific, industrial, and societal
outcomes on the whole national territory. The results obtained by the project, in terms of know-how,
multidisciplinary resources such as new and unique experimental data, instrumentation and software specific
for neuroscience, advanced computational models, specialized training, and HPC resources, most of which will
be available from a single access point, will strengthen the competitiveness of enterprises, and the development
of new international collaborations and innovative methods for research and development
Land use change multi-approach assessment in a interregional context in South Italy
Objectives
According to international and EU policies, complementary approaches for landscape and environment values assessment, in land use planning, are an essential prerequisite on a supra-regional scale. Study area is an area in transformation, now also affected by the institution of the Matese national park, between Campania and Molise regions. In this context, appropriate management policies and land use change (LUC), in favor of bio-energy crops, may help to create new economies and new spatial development perspectives aimed to change negative trends such as erosion risk, socio-economic problems and environmental impacts. The work intends to present a possible physical-mathematical approach for pragmatic determination of the predictable consequences for LUC environmental effects, through empirical analysis, simulation models and objective diagnosis, as support for the decision makers, already in the ex-ante evaluation stage.
Methods
Tools used in the framework adopted are GIS processing and spatial decision support analysis (ILWIS and ArcGIS software) for LUC scenarios construction. LUC possible impacts assessment on environmental components, was evaluated through science shared approaches of Ecosystem Services considering Habitat Quality and Soil Risk with Invest software, and of landscape metrics such as Patch number, Patch density, Simpson Index, through FRAGSTAT software.
Results
From the framework three scenarios are delineated. First scenario (Scenario 1) refers to the current development trend. Second scenario (Scenario 2) the energy crops spatial allocation is foreseen in areas with the highest LUC degree. The third scenario (Scenario 3) concerns land abandonment and downgrade in the same areas of scenario 2. Ecosystem services values of habitat quality and erosion risk in Scenario 2 showed highest improvement, in contrast to scenarios 1 and 3. On the other hand landscape metrics highlighted greatest risks of landscape homogenisation and mosaic structure simplification, just in Scenario 2. Consequently integrated assessments enforce for further investigation on LUC spatial distribution and for corrective and mitigation measures that would be applied
Lionel Hampton in Italy
7 x 9 1/2 inch photograph. Lionel Hampton playing the vibraphone with Dee Dee Bridgewater [in Italy]300 dpi compressed jpg is displayed. Epson Expression 1640 XL Scanner, Epson TWAIN Pro, Adobe Photoshop 7.0, Archival Master file is a TIFF
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