Academic literature on the topic 'Arona (Italy)'

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Journal articles on the topic "Arona (Italy)"

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Zhou, Qi, Shaomin Liu, Ye Liu, and Huanlu Song. "Comparative Analysis of Volatiles of 15 Brands of Extra-Virgin Olive Oils Using Solid-Phase Micro-Extraction and Solvent-Assisted Flavor Evaporation." Molecules 24, no. 8 (April 17, 2019): 1512. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/molecules24081512.

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Aroma profiles, key aroma compound quantification, and cluster analysis of 15 brands of extra-virgin olive oils (EVOOs) from three countries (Spain, Italy, and Greece) were investigated in the current study. Aroma compounds were isolated from the oil by using solvent-assisted flavor evaporation (SAFE) and solid-phase micro-extraction (SPME) and analyzed by gas chromatography-olfactometry mass spectrometry (GC-MS/O). A total of 89 compounds were screened by SPME/SAFE-GC-MS/O with chromatographic columns in 15 brands of samples. Eighty and 54 compounds were respectively identified by SPME- and SAFE-GC-MS/O. Of those, 44 compounds were detected by both methods. Undecanol, (Z)-4-decenal, (E)-2-dodecenal, and 2-nonanone extracted by SAFE were not found in EVOOs before. Eight classes of aroma compounds were identified, including 17 alcohols, 22 aldehydes, 9 ketones, 4 acids, 14 esters, 5 aromatics, 12 alkene, and 6 others. Eleven compounds were identified as the key aroma compounds in alternative brands of EVOOs by SAFE-aroma extract dilution analysis (AEDA). Hexanal, (E)-2-hexenal, (E)-3-hexenol, acetic acid, and (E)-2-heptenal were the common key aroma compounds by AEDA and odor activity values (OAVs). From the cluster analysis of the heatmap, the aroma compounds of all the Spain EVOOs were similar, and there were some differences from the samples of Italy and Greece. It suggested that both the amount and concentration of aroma compounds determine the similarity of aroma in EVOOs.
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Welch, Katherine. "The Roman arena in late-Republican Italy: a new interpretation." Journal of Roman Archaeology 7 (1994): 59–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s1047759400012502.

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Lorenzoni, Filippo, Filippo Casarin, Claudio Modena, Mauro Caldon, Kleidi Islami, and Francesca da Porto. "Structural health monitoring of the Roman Arena of Verona, Italy." Journal of Civil Structural Health Monitoring 3, no. 4 (November 12, 2013): 227–46. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13349-013-0065-0.

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Bellusci, David. "Gasparo Contarini: From Scholasticism to Renaissance Humanism." Études maritainiennes / Maritain Studies 26 (2010): 55–67. http://dx.doi.org/10.5840/maritain2010263.

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This paper examines the shift from Scholasticism to Renaissance humanism by focussing on the Italian humanist, Gasparo Contarini (1483-1542). The politico-religious climate of 15th-16th century Italy represents the arena in which Contarini developed his philosophy. His studies at the University of Padova where Padovan Aristotelianism dominated reflected the basis of his intellectual formation. The Platonic revival of Renaissance Italy also made its way into Contarini’s humanist philosophy.
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Ponomarenko, Olena. "Organization of Musical Life in Modern Italy." Часопис Національної музичної академії України ім.П.І.Чайковського, no. 3(60) (September 27, 2023): 57–69. http://dx.doi.org/10.31318/2414-052x.3(60).2023.296796.

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The process of organizing musical life in modern Italy is analyzed through the prism of new management approaches aimed at the deployment of Italian musical projects in the general sociocultural space. The issues of management and marketing in today's musical life, which are a significant component in the creation of musical projects, are outlined. The main principles of new types of marketing in the context of the promotion of musical projects in Italy are characterized - event, empirical and territorial. The functioning of the national brand project — the Arena di Verona Opera Festival, the hundredth season of which took place in 2023 on the stage of the Roman Amphitheater Arena, is highlighted. The role of the "Arena di Verona" Foundation in the organization of the opera festival has been determined. Creative advertising measures are considered, thanks to which the project is popularized as an artistic phenomenon among the public. It was found that Italian festival marketing in modern musical life functions thanks to the cooperation of state, financial institutions, private business sector, associations and foundations. The specifics of the promotion of Italian music projects are revealed, which includes analysis, planning, implementation of a massscale event with the help of creativity in advertising, constant technological updating. The dependence of the success of musical projects on the exclusive decisions of the organizers, innovative technologies used in scenery, lighting, stage design, etc. is substantiated. The high artistic component of Italian music projects, which attract more fans, always take place in a certain place and time, strengthen the brand of the territory and make the region attractive both for the local population and for tourists, has been identified. It has been proven that the main goal of organizing musical life in modern Italy, working for a high professional result, is to show the world the historical and artistic sights of Italian cities and preserve Italian musical projects as a national cultural brand for future generations.
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Timossi, Giovanni, Laura Bevacqua, Axel Hausmann, and Stefano Scalercio. "Contribution to the knowledge of South Italian Gelechiidae (Lepidoptera: Gelechioidea)." SHILAP Revista de lepidopterología 51, no. 203 (September 30, 2023): 483–502. http://dx.doi.org/10.57065/shilap.534.

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We provide data concerning 39 species of Gelechiidae collected in Calabria and Basilicata regions, Italy. Twenty-three species are new for the studied area and six new for southern Italy. Most interesting are the records of Cosmardia moritzella (Treitschke, 1835), recorded only in the Alps so far, Aroga pascuicola (Staudinger, 1871), Oxypteryx immaculatella (Douglas, 1850), and Helcystogramma lamprostoma (Zeller, 1847), new for the Italian mainland, and Aproaerema cinctelloides (Nel & Varenne, 2012), new for the Italian fauna.
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Rabezzana, Roberto, Mery Malandrino, Ornella Abollino, Elisabetta Bonometti, Alessia Giordana, Francesca Turco, Giorgio Volpi, and Lorenza Operti. "Characterization of Freisa Wines from Piedmont (Italy) by Aroma and Element Profile." Applied Sciences 13, no. 13 (June 22, 2023): 7425. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/app13137425.

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The main purpose of this study was to characterize Freisa red wines from Piedmont (northern Italy) according to their volatile organic compounds (VOCs) and elemental composition. Moreover, the authors investigated whether it was possible to distinguish among the five different DOCs produced in Piedmont on the basis of these chemical parameters. The VOCs profile of Freisa wines was very similar, and the most abundant species detected were isoamyl alcohol, phenylethyl alcohol, ethyl octanoate, and diethyl succinate. Conversely, elemental composition allowed us to partially distinguish one Freisa DOC with respect to the others. Multivariate statistical analysis applied to elemental composition revealed differences among Freisa wines and other red wines from different regions of Italy. In particular, Freisa wines featured higher concentrations of Cr and Ni metals, which are strongly correlated with the composition of the soil of Piedmont. These two elements are hence good candidates as chemical markers for Freisa wines from Piedmont.
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Foradori, Paolo, and Paolo Rosa. "Italy and the politics of European defence: playing by the logic of multi-level networks." Modern Italy 9, no. 2 (November 2004): 217–31. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1353294042000304965.

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SummaryThe article looks at the role of Italy in the decision-making arena of the EU Common Foreign and Security Policy (CFSP), analysing the initiatives it put in place to address and influence the construction of a common defence. The article aims to explain the ability or inability of Italy to build up a consensus around its proposals. By studying two initiatives in the field of European defence and security, it seeks to determine the factors which resulted in the differing outcomes of Italian actions at the European level.
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Carbone, Maurizio. "Introduction: Italy in the international arena: between the EU and the US?" Journal of Southern Europe and the Balkans 9, no. 2 (July 3, 2007): 97–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/14613190701414095.

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Ippolito, Marzia, and Lorenzo Cicatiello. "Political instability, economic inequality and social conflict: The case in Italy." Panoeconomicus 66, no. 3 (2019): 365–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.2298/pan1903365i.

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Rising economic inequality may produce a contraction of political stability and a spread of social conflict, as suggested by the theory of relative power. Following this approach, participation in the political arena depends on the distribution of incomes, because the relative rich use their power to ensure that the status quo do not change, while the relative poor are likely to abandon the public arena when they realize that their demands will not be discussed. Through the implementation of an index of political stability on the Italian general elections of 2008 and 2013, this study empirically tests whether political instability is linked with economic inequality. The results of the analysis, which examines the sub-regional level, show that the strengthening of economic inequality is a decisive factor affecting the weight of the elites in the determination of economic and political choices, and that it influences the distribution of votes between political blocks. This comes at the disadvantage of the poorest who, aware of their lesser chances to have influence, choose to change the character of their participation.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Arona (Italy)"

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MAESTRI, G. Ezio. "Arena parlamentare e regolazione politica in Italia : Il caso della politica pensionistica - L'impatto dei conflitti redistributivi sul processo di produzione legislativa (1948-1983)." Doctoral thesis, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5298.

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Defence date: 26 June 1987
Examining board: Prof. Jean Blondel ; Prof. Maurizio Cotta ; Prof. Gosta Esping-Andersen ; Prof. Peter Flora ; Prof. Massimo Paci
First made available online: 14 September 2015
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Boscaino, Floriana. "SELECTION AND USE OF YEAST STRAINS ISOLATED FROM AUTOCHTHONOUS SOUTHERN ITALY GRAPEWINE CULTIVARS AND IMPACT ON AROMA PROFILE OF PRODUCED WINES." Tesi di dottorato, 2015. http://www.fedoa.unina.it/10109/1/Boscaino%20Floriana%2027%C2%B0ciclo.pdf.

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Today, the use of selected commercial yeasts (LSA) from Saccharomyces species "sensu stricto" is widespread, because it allows to minimize risks in the production process, to standardize the winemaking procedure and ensure the quality of the final product. On the other hand, the widespread use of starter cultures in the wine industry has resulted in a loss of wine sensory characteristics and in a flattening of those differences crucial to distinguish wines of different cultivars. For this reason, the research is focused on studying new selected yeast cultures that can give a final product enrich of those aromatic compounds which enhance the character of the wine. It is known that the production of many of this aromatic molecules occurs due to the presence of non-Saccharomyces yeasts, found on the grapes and must. These non-Saccharomyces yeast strains predominate in the first phase of the alcoholic fermentation, are able to release metabolites and enzymes, responsible of the aromatic complexity of the wine. Indeed, experimental tests have shown the positive role of non-Saccharomyces yeasts in the fermentation, improving the behavior of the starter and increasing the complexity of the composition of the wine, in particular, the chemical and sensory properties. The biochemical transformation of flavour-inactive grape juice constituents into aromatic components has emerged, as an important, additional mechanism whereby yeasts substantially impact on wine aroma and flavour and facilitate greater expression of grape varietal character. In addition to ethanol, produced of the primary alcoholic fermentation, there are numerous compounds such as esters, higher alcohols, aldehydes, acids, terpenes, ketones, that determine the final quality of the product. The yeasts have the ability to produce these compounds, but it is the quantitative level that determines the difference between the different species and then, within the same species, between different biotypes. The wine yeasts for starter culture development have been sourced from grapes, winery environment or old cellars and spontaneous fermentations that have given wines of acceptable or unique quality. They are selected based on characteristics such as vigor fermentative, alcoholigenous power and they should be tolerant to the antioxidant and antimicrobial compounds, produce minimal foam, as well as produce a balanced array of flavour metabolites, without undesirable excess of volatile compounds and produce enzymes that transform the neutral compounds in flavor active component. Glycosidases and esterases are some of the enzymes produced by yeasts that can make a significant contribution to the aroma of the wine. In particular, the non-Saccharomyces yeasts have more enzymatic activities respect to yeasts S. cerevisiae. The aim of this work was the selection and use of autochthonous yeast strains isolated from cultivars of "Vitis Vinifera" of southern Italy and their impact on aroma profile of wines. We have tested different combination of autochthonous yeasts (S. cerevisiae and non-Saccharomyces) to improve the quality and organoleptic characteristics of the final product but also to emphasize its link with the territory and the ancient wine cultivars. In order to evaluated the aromatic profile, the different wine samples were characterized by Solid Phase Micro Extraction-Gas Crhomatography/Mass Spectrometry (SPME-GC/MS technique).
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Books on the topic "Arona (Italy)"

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Gruppo archeologico storico mineralogico aronese. Il Convento della Purificazione di Arona, 1590-1811. Arona: GASMA, 2018.

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Chiesa di Santa Maria di Loreto e la confraternita di Santa Marta di Arona dai Borromeo ad oggi, storia, restauro e valorizzazione (Conference) (2017 Arona, Italy). La chiesa di Santa Maria di Loreto e la confraternita di Santa Marta di Arona dai Borromeo a oggi: Storia, restauro e valorizzazione : atti del convegno, Arona, 22 aprile 2017. Novara: Interlinea, 2018.

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Peter, Connolly. Colosseum: Rome's arena of death. London: BBC Worldwide, 2003.

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A, La Regina, and Italy. Soprintendenza archeologica di Roma., eds. Sangue e arena. Milano: Electa, 2001.

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Silvia, Lusuardi Siena, ed. Placido Domingo, la mia voce sotto le stelle: Trent'anni all'Arena di Verona. Cinisello Balsamo, Milano: Silvana, 1999.

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Castiglioni, Giovanni. Arena di Verona: Rinascita di un monumento. Verona: Scripta edizioni, 2021.

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Giotto. Giotto: The Arena Chapel frescoes. New York: W.W. Norton, 1995.

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Romano, Burelli Augusto, Cargnelutti Liliana, and Galleria d'arte antica (Udine, Italy), eds. Consilium in arena: Genesi di un dipinto : Tiepolo e Antonio di Montegnacco. Udine: Forum, 2009.

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Romano, Burelli Augusto, Cargnelutti Liliana, and Galleria d'arte antica (Udine, Italy), eds. Consilium in arena: Genesi di un dipinto : Tiepolo e Antonio di Montegnacco. Udine: Forum, 2009.

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Giotto. Giotto, the Arena Chapel frescoes. London: Thames and Hudson, 1993.

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Book chapters on the topic "Arona (Italy)"

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Fabbris, Luigi, and Alfonso Piscitelli. "Cultural and sensorial correlates of Trebbiano wine consumption." In Proceedings e report, 65–70. Florence: Firenze University Press and Genova University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/979-12-215-0106-3.12.

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In this paper we highlight the sensorial and cultural correlates of the consumption of Trebbiano wine produced in the Abruzzo region, Italy. The data have been collected through a questionnaire survey on a sample of 48 adults. The sample was conveniently selected among the participants at a scientific meeting held in Pescara in September 2018. The survey was part of a complex sensorial experiment concerning the preference of this white wine with respect to a series of other regional white wines. The collected data on Trebbiano wine consumption have been analysed through a path analytic regression model in which consumption was the criterion variable, while cultural and sensorial variables, on the one hand, and wine expertise and drinking habits, on the other, were the variables mediating the respondents’ disposition towards this type of wine. The analysis showed that two thirds of the respondents frequently or occasionally used to consume the topical wine. The frequency of consumption was strictly influenced by the relevance the respondents conferred to this wine when put in competition with other wines during an outdoor dinner. The consumers who particularly appreciated it were wine experts (sommeliers, wine course attendants, wine producers) and other wine consumers able to recognise the intrinsic characteristics of a wine thanks to the sensorial skills (for smell and aroma evaluation) they developed through long experience and specific learning.
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"The Best Cheese in Italy." In The Heritage Arena, 96–115. Berghahn Books, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvss40qp.11.

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"CHAPTER 4 The Best Cheese in Italy." In The Heritage Arena, 96–115. Berghahn Books, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781785332951-009.

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Kamiński, Tomasz, and Michał Gzik. "Italy." In The Role of Regions in EU-China Relations. Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Łódzkiego, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18778/8142-517-9.04.

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Fast growing network of national contacts in the Sino-Italian affairs builds the important layer of subnational bilateral relations. The main purpose of this paper is to analyze the role of paradiplomatical cooperation between Italian and Chinese regions. This paper contains a short overview of bilateral Italian-Chinese relations in political, economic and social terms. Furthermore there is a description of competences of the regions in the Italian foreign policy in term of legal environment for the autonomous activities of Italian regions in the international arena. Moreover this paper contains the analyses of existing links between Italian and Chinese regions on the basis of a survey conducted among regional authorities from all Italian regions. Finally it contains the case of Umbria, as a region that active cooperation with China goes well beyond economic relations.
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Giannetti, Daniela, and Andrea Pedrazzani. "Italy." In The Politics of Legislative Debates, 505–27. Oxford University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198849063.003.0025.

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This essay examines speechmaking activity in the Italian Chamber of Deputies from 1996 to 2018. Such a period covers almost entirely the phase called the “Second Republic” following a radical change in the electoral rules and the party system that Italy experienced in the early 1990s. Our analysis of the determinants of speechmaking activity shows that the small percentage of MPs holding leading positions within and for their party in the legislative and executive arena (e.g., committee chairs, parliamentary party groups’ leaders, ministers) do speak more in parliament. Our results largely confirm the hypothesis that, in systems where party government is predominant, floor access is strictly controlled by political parties. This hypothesis receives further support from the analysis carried out in the section of this chapter examining the impact of different electoral incentives on speechmaking activity.
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Seymour, Mark. "Arena or Temple?" In Emotional Arenas, 150–203. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198743590.003.0006.

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States anxious to wrest power from religious authorities viewed their courts of law as quasi-sacred spaces, often characterizing them as a form of ‘temple’ to signal the reverential emotional style required within. Foregrounding the emotional overlap between religious and legal spaces, this chapter portrays Rome’s Court of Assizes during the Fadda murder trial as both secular temple and emotional arena with great symbolic value for Liberal Italy. The argument is contextualized against analysis of the symbolic role of law at crucial stages in the development of other states, particularly England and France. After unification, Italian courts were opened to the public, in some cases for the first time. The civic audience in legal hearings, especially in criminal cases, was a fundamental tenet of Italy’s liberal ideology. The chapter analyses public participation in the Fadda trial against the background of a state’s need to engage its citizens in spaces and rituals that were unmistakably identified with the nation. The Fadda trial’s fascination both helped and hindered the state’s cause, drawing great crowds but provoking emotions that threatened to blur the line between dignified court and popular arena. The trial lasted a month and dominated the nation’s newspapers, drawing Italians from all over the peninsula into the drama in Rome. Ultimately the event was an opportunity to establish the contours of a new type of social space, a new emotional arena, for a new nation.
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"IV. MONASTERY OF ARBONA [PLATES XXIV, XXV.]." In Introduction of Gothic Architecture into Italy by the French Cistercian Monks., 76–85. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463220099-005.

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Maier, Charles S. "The Attrition of the Liberal Regime in Italy." In Recasting Bourgeois Europe. Princeton University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691169798.003.0006.

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This chapter examines the attrition of the liberal regime in Italy. The inability to reestablish a stable centrist majority in Italy brought not only a shift to the right, but also destruction of the parliamentary regime. Struggles for hegemony put an enormous strain on liberal institutions. The Fascists imposed an unofficial terrorism, followed by a legal but coercive regimentation upon the political arena, mass communications, and the labor market. These developments emerged from the inner decay of liberalism as much as from any conquest from outside. The chapter first considers the political ecology of fascism in Italy before discussing the liberals' search for order from the time of Prime Minister Giovanni Giolitti to Benito Mussolini.
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Ingravallo, Ivan. "The Formation of International Law Journals in ItalyTheir Role in the Discipline." In A History of International Law in Italy, 190–214. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198842934.003.0008.

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This chapter analyzes the role played by legal journals as ‘tools’ for international law studies in Italy. The author considers their role in the development of this subject in the domestic arena, where there were no specialized legal journals expressly devoted to these topics until 1898. The early journals represented ephemeral experiments, prior to the foundation of the Rivista di diritto internazionale in 1906 under the leadership of Dionisio Anzilotti. The Rivista represented a turning point in this branch of law and was followed by other periodicals established in the 1930s and 40s, which were partly inspired by the political milieu characterizing Fascist Italy, and by those that developed in the aftermath of World War II, which were influenced in turn by the theoretical and methodological premises of the time and by accentuated contrasts between different academic ‘schools’ of thought. Lastly, the author evaluates how the Italian journals of international law dealt with foreign scholars and foreign languages.
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McHugh, Shannon. "Context: Men and Women Writers in Late-Renaissance Italy." In Petrarch and the Making of Gender in Renaissance Italy. Amsterdam University Press, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463720274_ch02.

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A variety of sociopolitical, domestic, and cultural factors enabled early modern Italy’s uniquely cooperative culture, by which male and female poets were able to share the literary arena. Synthesizing the most important historical and literary studies of early modern gender from the last three decades, this chapter describes how social changes dovetailed with the rise of print culture in Italy, creating a situation in which women could enter into dialogue with men in manuscript and print. The focus here is on the late Cinquecento and early Seicento (about which significantly less has been written than earlier periods), an examination of a generation of writers who had only ever known a world in which women published in significant numbers alongside men.
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Conference papers on the topic "Arona (Italy)"

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Cordero, Chiara Emilia, Erica Liberto, Federico Stilo, Humberto Bizzo, Luis Cuadros Rodriguez, Simone Squara, and Stephen Reichenbach. "Artificial Intelligence smelling machines based on multidimensional gas chromatography: Capturing extra-virgin olive oil aroma blueprint and unique identity." In 2022 AOCS Annual Meeting & Expo. American Oil Chemists' Society (AOCS), 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.21748/okat9384.

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Comprehensive two-dimensional gas chromatography coupled to time-of-flight mass spectrometry (GC×GC-TOF MS) has been recently applied as core technology of a Sensomics-based expert system (SEBES) capable to predict key-aroma signatures of food without using human olfaction. The strategy, also referred to as Artificial Intelligence Smelling, conceptually opens many different opportunities for odorants pattern detection, accurate quantification avoiding time-consuming sample preparation/extraction steps, and samples sensory qualification/discrimination based on computer vision strategies. The contribution illustrates the potentials of GC×GC platforms in the context of Artificial Intelligence Smelling for extra-virgin olive oils selected within high-quality productions from Italy and Brazil. In particular, by accurate quantification of key-aroma compounds and potent odorants strongly correlated to sensory defects, samples’ aroma bluperint is captured and used to discriminate oils based on their peculiar hedonic features. The application of combined untargeted and targeted (UT) fingerprinting strategy of 2D-data patterns enables effective discrimination between oils produced in different Italian Regions and between oils from Italy and Brazil independently by processing technologies and olives cultivars. This identitation process has great potentials being an effective fingerprinting strategy while providing, at the same time, high level information on chemical composition as a detailed profiling.
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CAPRINO, AMEDEO, GIANMARCO BONALDO, FILIPPO LORENZONI, and FRANCESCA DA PORTO. "MULTI-SCALE MT-INSAR TECHNIQUES FOR STRUCTURAL HEALTH MONITORING: APPLICATIONS TO THE ITALIAN CULTURAL HERITAGE CONTEXT." In Structural Health Monitoring 2023. Destech Publications, Inc., 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.12783/shm2023/37026.

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In recent years, the number of applications of Multi-Temporal Interferometric Synthetic Aperture Radar (MT-InSAR) techniques for structural health monitoring (SHM) purposes has constantly raised. One of the main advantages that MT-InSAR can provide is the possibility to analyze wide areas, such as entire cities or archaeological sites. Thus, several interferometric algorithms have proven to be particularly valid when applied in urban contexts, considering the high reflectivity provided by the structures. In addition, the growing availability of high-resolution SAR satellite constellations, such as the Italian COSMO-SkyMed and the German TerraSAR-X, allows obtaining significantly accurate measures and detecting high density of Measurement Points (MP). Consequently, sufficiently detailed information on single structures can be recorded, permitting to perform both urban scale and local scale analyses. On the other hand, several drawbacks are still present, mostly related to the hardly post-processing processes needed. Indeed, beside the technical difficulties that can be encountered during the analysis (e.g. geocoding errors and noisiness in the time series), an expert interpretation of the results is still required to avoid misinterpretation of data. Anyway, considering both advantages and disadvantages of the technique, MT-InSAR undoubtedly represents a very cost-effective tool in the structural monitoring field. In this paper, MT-InSAR applications for structural monitoring on the Italian Cultural Heritage context are presented. The analyses have been conducted at both urban and local scale, processing images acquired by COSMO-SkyMed constellation in Stripmap mode (~3 meters resolution). First, spatial interpolation algorithms have been implemented to estimate the overall deformations at urban scale. Subsequently, the attention has focused on some of the main cultural assets of the case-study cities, investigating the MPs detected on the structures themselves. In this work, three cities are presented as case-studies: Verona, Padova (North Italy), and L’Aquila (central Italy). For each city, a specific Cultural Heritage structure has been selected for the local scale analysis, namely the Roman Arena in Verona, the Scrovegni Chapel in Padova, and the Civic Tower in L’Aquila. All these monuments have been monitored by traditional SHM techniques for years, with the possibility to correlate and validate onsite and satellite data.
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