1,734,128 research outputs found
Migranti e non migranti : accogliere, ospitare e convivere
Questo saggio, attraverso le annotazioni sulle reti sociali stratificate lungo il tempo e i decenni di immigrazione straniera in Italia (Colucci 2018) e osservando tentativi di convivenza e modelli alternativi di ospitalità, ha avuto come obiettivo di illuminare alcuni interstizi (Riccio e Tarabusi 2018) potenzialmente fruttuosi per chi opera nell’accoglienza e inclusione dei migranti
The opera omnia of Giovanni Battista Riccio: a project for the valorisation of a forgotten repertoire / Gli opera omnia di Giovanni Battista Riccio: un progetto per la valorizzazione di un repertorio dimenticato,
Gli opera omnia di Giovanni Battista Riccio si inseriscono all'interno di un più vasto progetto per lo studio e la valorizzazione del patrimonio musicale pervenutoci in uno stato di conservazione incompleto
Migration and Development. Reflections on an Ambivalent Relationship
Nowadays the Migration and Development relation is becoming a kind of “mantra” (Faist 2008) a real “discourse of development” (Grillo, Stirrat 1997) connected, as it is, with other discourses stressing community, civil society, self reliance, and, sometimes problematically, profitable investment. However, from the perspective of African hometown associations, especially those developed in France, such a connection displays a longer story. Already at the beginning of the 80’s Malian and Senegalese organisations embarked on micro-development projects aimed at their country of origin in sub-Saharan Africa (Daum 1998). Codevelopment projects, it was argued, should be ‘decentralised’, their primary movers, and the locus of their activities, are not states, but localities: local states and places, the people who inhabit them, and the institutions of civil society (NGOs, associations etc) they have created. Codevelopment circles also stress the importance of dialogue with migrants and their organisations. Their legitimate interests in the development process, it is argued, should be recognised and they should be encouraged to become ‘development actors’, dissolving the developer/developed distinction (Lavigne-Delville, 1991: 196; Quiminal 1991). What distinguishes codeveloppement from the transnational activities of migrant hometown associations is the involvement of a variety of local institutions and actors ‘here’ (regional and municipal authorities, NGOs, and associations, based locally in Europe but representing particular villages or clusters of villages where migrants originate, with funding from the state, or the EU), and counterparts (local authorities, NGOs, village associations etc) ‘there’, in the South. These activities may represent an original strategy signalling a refusal to break with countries of origin while seeking integration. However, Do these reflect the real demands of migrants or the logic of European planners, politicians, and social practitioners involved in the implementation of migration policies? This is an aspect that applied as much as academic research should always explore, moved from a healthy skepticism (Grillo, Riccio 2004). However, although one should be cautious towards a celebratory as much as pessimistic views towards co-development, a methodological opportunity needs to be recognized: by involving so many social actors, this field of research represents a laboratory for the study of such a complex and ambivalent social process, as is transnational migration. Ideally the student of migration should be working simultaneously on three fronts: with the institutions of the receiving society, among migrants themselves, and in the sending society (Grillo 1985). Therefore, it is important to combine a transnational approach with the need to bridge a divide in the studies of migration, which have tended to consider either the characteristics of an immigrant community or the characteristics of the society incorporating it. With this aim, the study of migrants’ translocal codevelopment projects represents a methodological solution to study social change (De Sardan 1995) by focussing on the interaction between the institutions of the receiving contexts, migrants’ transnational practices and the economic and socio-cultural transformations of the sending context (Riccio 2007)
Migration and Development. Reflections on an Ambivalent Relationship
Nowadays the Migration and Development relation is becoming a kind of “mantra” (Faist 2008) a real “discourse of development” (Grillo, Stirrat 1997) connected, as it is, with other discourses stressing community, civil society, self reliance, and, sometimes problematically, profitable investment. However, from the perspective of African hometown associations, especially those developed in France, such a connection displays a longer story. Already at the beginning of the 80’s Malian and Senegalese organisations embarked on micro-development projects aimed at their country of origin in sub-Saharan Africa (Daum 1998). Codevelopment projects, it was argued, should be ‘decentralised’, their primary movers, and the locus of their activities, are not states, but localities: local states and places, the people who inhabit them, and the institutions of civil society (NGOs, associations etc) they have created. Codevelopment circles also stress the importance of dialogue with migrants and their organisations. Their legitimate interests in the development process, it is argued, should be recognised and they should be encouraged to become ‘development actors’, dissolving the developer/developed distinction (Lavigne-Delville, 1991: 196; Quiminal 1991). What distinguishes codeveloppement from the transnational activities of migrant hometown associations is the involvement of a variety of local institutions and actors ‘here’ (regional and municipal authorities, NGOs, and associations, based locally in Europe but representing particular villages or clusters of villages where migrants originate, with funding from the state, or the EU), and counterparts (local authorities, NGOs, village associations etc) ‘there’, in the South. These activities may represent an original strategy signalling a refusal to break with countries of origin while seeking integration. However, Do these reflect the real demands of migrants or the logic of European planners, politicians, and social practitioners involved in the implementation of migration policies? This is an aspect that applied as much as academic research should always explore, moved from a healthy skepticism (Grillo, Riccio 2004). However, although one should be cautious towards a celebratory as much as pessimistic views towards co-development, a methodological opportunity needs to be recognized: by involving so many social actors, this field of research represents a laboratory for the study of such a complex and ambivalent social process, as is transnational migration. Ideally the student of migration should be working simultaneously on three fronts: with the institutions of the receiving society, among migrants themselves, and in the sending society (Grillo 1985). Therefore, it is important to combine a transnational approach with the need to bridge a divide in the studies of migration, which have tended to consider either the characteristics of an immigrant community or the characteristics of the society incorporating it. With this aim, the study of migrants’ translocal codevelopment projects represents a methodological solution to study social change (De Sardan 1995) by focussing on the interaction between the institutions of the receiving contexts, migrants’ transnational practices and the economic and socio-cultural transformations of the sending context (Riccio 2007)
Sirio Bandini
Invito per la mostra dell\u27artista Sirio Bandini (1929-2009) tenuta alla Galleria "Il Riccio", Venezia, 14 luglio - 26 luglio 1968.
Contiene: nota manoscritta "Domenica, 14 luglio 68 | ore 11. - | per la Vernice
Cesarina Russo Riccio Looking Out on Fairmont Avenue
Included in the exhibition, From Italy to America: Photographs of Anthony Riccio, February 1 - March 30, 2012Photograph digitally scanned from 35 mm original negative, Epson UltraChrome photo black ink printed on Museo Silver Rag fine art paper.https://digitalcommons.fairfield.edu/riccio_images/1024/thumbnail.jp
Scripts for "Variant effect predictors: a systematic review and practical guide" by Riccio et al.
<p>Scripts for generating plots and running linear models for the publication "Variant effect predictors: a systematic review and practical guide" by Riccio et al.</p>
L'immaginazione e il senso : su alcune dimensioni dell'estetico : una conversazione con Alfredo Ferrarin
una conversazione di Agnese di Riccio e Danilo Manca con Alfredo Ferrarin a proposito del suo libro "Un mondo non di questo mondo, ISBN: 9788846765765"
The influence of the Court of Justice of the European Union on national courts in copyright cases
The paper speculates on the influence of the case law of the Court of Justice on Member States’ authorities in the interpretation of copyright law. Looking at the recent stances concerning the role of digital platforms hosting copyrighted content, the author observes that in spite of the important set of judgments handed down by the Court, its case law still seems to suffer from some vagueness in a variety of respects. The lack of crystal-clear guidelines would prevent national courts from taking advantage of a certain degree of harmonisation and uniformity, a gap that the Digital Single Market Directive seems to be equally unable to fill
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