Academic literature on the topic 'Calabria (Italy) In literature'

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Journal articles on the topic "Calabria (Italy) In literature"

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Cafiero, Carlo, Monica Palladino, Claudio Marcianò, and Giuseppa Romeo. "Traditional agri-food products as a leverage to motivate tourists." Journal of Place Management and Development 13, no. 2 (November 11, 2019): 195–214. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/jpmd-05-2019-0032.

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Purpose This paper aims to provide evidence on the extent to which traditional agri-food products (TFPs) constitute a leverage to promote tourism in the province of Reggio Calabria, Italy, and discuss ways in which community-led local development governance institutions might enhance it. Design/methodology/approach The study is based on a review of existing information on Calabrian TFPs to classify them by area of production and identify those that are specific or relatively small areas, in addition to a qualitative analysis of the content of the texts of a sample of websites promoting tourism in the region. Findings Though food is one of the leverages used to promote tourism in Calabria, TFPs are not yet sufficiently exploited to attract tourists to the province of Reggio Calabria, in spite of their potential as a vital expression of local culture and traditions. Research limitations/implications The selection of the websites used in the study may not be exhaustive of the full spectrum of Web-based promotion of tourism in Calabria. Practical implications The results provide useful insights to public and private institutions responsible for rural development and tourism promotion in Calabria. The database on the TFPs of the province of Reggio Calabria permits an easy reading of the geographical distribution of the different categories of products, useful as a resource for further studies and as a local development policy support tool. Social implications Promoting a form of culturally sensitive, food-based tourism in the interior areas of Calabria may constitute an important factor to revert the trend towards impoverishment, migration of young people and depopulation of the interior areas of Calabria. This is a particularly sensitive issue in Italy today, in view of the difficulties that other strategies pursued in the area are facing. Originality/value Existing literature on typical food products in Italy focuses on those labelled by denomination of origin and geographic protection. This is one of the first papers focusing on TFPs labelled as Prodotti agroalimentari tradizionali in the Italian legislation. By exploring the role of local food and traditions in promoting tourism, this paper expands the scope of existing studies of rural tourism and on rural development in Calabria, and beyond.
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Spampinato, Giovanni, Rita Crisarà, Piergiorgio Cameriere, Ana Cano-Ortiz, and Carmelo Maria Musarella. "Analysis of the Forest Landscape and Its Transformations through Phytotoponyms: A Case Study in Calabria (Southern Italy)." Land 11, no. 4 (April 2, 2022): 518. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/land11040518.

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Place names, or toponyms, provide a useful geographical reference system; they can help analyse past landscapes, recover history and understand changes. Among place names, plant place names (phytotoponyms) can be used to analyse the current and past distribution of plants and plant communities and to highlight changes in land use due to human impacts and climate change. We assessed the feasibility of using place names related to species and forest ecosystems to evaluate changes that have affected the forest landscape. As a case study, we considered Calabria, a region in southern Italy rich in toponymic studies. We used the official topographic maps of Calabria, at scales of 1:25,000 and 1: 10,000, and literature data on Calabrian toponymy. To interpret toponyms related to plants and avoid errors, we performed a joint linguistic and naturalistic analysis. A total of 1609 phytotoponyms were identified relating to 45 forest species (28 trees and 17 shrubs) and 399 place names generically related to woods and forests. The most frequent plants associated with place names were Castanea sativa (8.3% of all plant place names), Quercus pubescens s.l. (7.2%), Salix sp. pl. (6.9%) and Quercus frainetto (5.6%). All the phytotoponyms were georeferenced and mapped in a GIS. Phytotoponym distribution maps were compared with current Calabrian forest vegetation, using digital orthophotos, land use maps and literature data. A close correspondence between phytotoponyms and forest vegetation for the mountain belt was identified. In contrast, in the basal belt, we found poor correspondence between phytotoponyms and current forest vegetation, especially for wet forests, that can be accounted for by the severe changes in the landscape due to the agricultural and urban transformations that have occurred. The spread of phytotoponyms concerning species linked to forest degradation, such as Spartium junceum, emphasises the ancient anthropic impacts on forests. Our study shows that phytotoponyms are an important tool for analysing changes in vegetation over time. They make it possible to reconstruct changes in the landscape and the intended use of the territory and provide useful information on the restoration of forest ecosystems.
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Terranova, O. G., and P. Iaquinta. "Temporal properties of rainfall events in Calabria (southern Italy)." Natural Hazards and Earth System Sciences 11, no. 3 (March 9, 2011): 751–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.5194/nhess-11-751-2011.

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Abstract. Temporal properties of 152 575 rainfall events, recorded at time steps of 5 min, having different durations and occurring between 1989 and 2008 at 155 localities of Calabria (Italy), have been analysed in this paper. Samples from 45 533 storms have been selected to classify rainfall events as "significant" with regard to their contribution to soil erosion, flooding and/or other geo-hydrological processes. The samples are representative of a wide variety of situations in terms of duration, total rainfall, intensity, etc. The use of standardized rainfall profiles (SRP) is proposed to describe the within-storm temporal pattern. The main attraction of this method lies in the fact that it is based on actual data of regional precipitation. Its weak point is that large samples of data are required to obtain regional profiles. The research necessities for improving the use of Huff curves for storm disaggregation and its the potential use are summarized in this paper on the basis of the specific literature. A new criterion – based on the comparison of the areas A1, A2, A3 and A4 that underlie the four 25% of durations of a given SRP, and the corresponding four values of the "uniform" SRP (USRP), is suggested here with the aim of improving the use of the information content of SRP. Some interesting results concerning the sample frequency and the characterization of parameters for hydrological applications are commented on. The study conducted so far has produced important, albeit preliminary, results for different contexts of Calabria concerning the use of SRP among the methods for constructing design storm hyetographs.
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Sicoli, Giovanni, Nicodemo G. Passalacqua, Antonio B. De Giuseppe, Anna Maria Palermo, and Giuseppe Pellegrino. "A new species of Psathyrella (Psathyrellaceae, Agaricales) from Italy." MycoKeys 52 (May 16, 2019): 89–102. http://dx.doi.org/10.3897/mycokeys.52.31415.

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Sporophores of a newPsathyrellaspecies have been reported for the first time as growing at the base ofCladiummariscusculms in the Botanical Garden of the University of Calabria, Rende, Cosenza, southern Italy. The fungus was initially identified asP.thujina(=P.almerensis) by means of both ecology and macro- and microscopic characteristics of the basidiomes, then referred toP.cladii-mariscisp. nov. after extraction, amplification, purification and analysis of the rDNA ITS region. We came to this conclusion after comparing our specimen with the descriptions of the taxa available in the literature for the genusPsathyrella.
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Di Pietro, Romeo, Antonio Luca Conte, Piera Di Marzio, Lorenzo Gianguzzi, Giovanni Spampinato, Orazio Caldarella, and Paola Fortini. "A multivariate morphometric analysis of diagnostic traits in southern Italy and Sicily pubescent oaks." Folia Geobotanica 55, no. 3 (September 2020): 163–83. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s12224-020-09378-0.

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AbstractSpecies identification within the species complex of Q. pubescens is a well-known taxonomic challenge among European botanists. Some of the specific pubescent oak binomials currently accepted in various European floras and checklists were originally described in Sicily and southern Calabria. As a consequence, several species belonging to the pubescent oaks group (Q. pubescens, Q. amplifolia, Q. congesta, Q. dalechampii, Q. leptobalana and Q. virgiliana) are reported in the taxonomic and phytosociological literature. To verify whether it was possible to associate a diverse set of morphological characters with each of these different taxa, thirteen natural populations of pubescent oak from Sicily and southern Calabria were sampled. A total of 391 trees, 3,887 leaves and 1,047 fruits were collected. Overall, 28 morphological characters of oak leaves and fruits were statistically analysed using univariate and multivariate procedures. The results showed that neither the groups of morphological diversity identified by cluster analysis, nor those obtained by our expert identification through the use of analytical keys, matched with the current taxonomical frameworks as proposed by the most recent floras and checklists. Nearly all of the morphological characters considered displayed a more or less continuous trend of variation, both within and among populations. In the light of these findings it seems unlikely that more than one biological species of pubescent oak occurs in Sicily and southern Calabria.
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Pezzi, Marco, Stjepan Krčmar, Federica Mendicino, Francesco Carlomagno, Domenico Bonelli, Chiara Scapoli, Milvia Chicca, Marilena Leis, and Teresa Bonacci. "Lucilia sericata (Diptera: Calliphoridae) as Agent of Myiasis in a Goose in Italy and a Review of Myiasis by This Species in Birds." Insects 13, no. 6 (June 13, 2022): 542. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/insects13060542.

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Myiasis is a type of parasitosis by larvae of Diptera that may affect vertebrates, including wild and domestic birds. Traumatic myiasis was discovered in a domestic goose, Anser anser domesticus L. (Anseriformes: Anatidae), in June 2020 in a rural area of the region Calabria (Southern Italy). The myiasis was caused by Lucilia sericata (Meigen) (Diptera: Calliphoridae). In Italy, this was the first case of myiasis by L. sericata ever described in a bird. It was also the first case of myiasis detected in a goose in Italy. The description of the case is integrated by a discussion on nonhematophagous dipteran larvae causing myiasis in birds and by an updated and detailed review of literature cases of myiasis by L. sericata in birds reported worldwide, useful for monitoring and management of dipteran species of medical and veterinary interest.
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Festa, Vincenzo, Marianna Cicala, and Fabrizio Tursi. "The Curinga–Girifalco Line in the framework of the tectonic evolution of the remnant Alpine chain in Calabria (southern Italy)." International Journal of Earth Sciences 109, no. 7 (September 12, 2020): 2583–98. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s00531-020-01918-5.

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Abstract In the peri-Mediterranean metamorphic belts, the tectonic evolution of the Calabria–Peloritani terrane during the dominant compressive tectonics of the Eocene represents one of the most problematic points in palinspastic restorations. A matter of particular debate is its shortening, which could have occurred during the Alpine or the Apennine subduction. In this regard, a crucial joint is provided by the kinematics of one of the most relevant shear zones such as the Curinga–Girifalco Line, cropping out in central Calabria. This shear zone juxtaposed a nearly complete Hercynian crustal section (i.e. the Sila and Serre Unit) onto the remnants of the Castagna Unit. The data in the available literature on ductile kinematics from the south-eastern branch of the Curinga–Girifalco Line indicate a downward movement of the hanging wall. In the present paper we show new, ductile kinematic data and petrographic evidence from outcrops in the north-western and south-eastern branches of the Curinga–Girifalco Line. Our results highlight the coherent kinematics of the Eocene shortening during the Alpine subduction system, followed by (late Eocene?)Oligocene to early Miocene, dominantly ductile extensional reworking, relating to the Apennines subduction system.
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Tropea, Mauro, Giuseppe Fedele, Raffaella De Luca, Domenico Miriello, and Floriano De Rango. "Automatic Stones Classification through a CNN-Based Approach." Sensors 22, no. 16 (August 21, 2022): 6292. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/s22166292.

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This paper presents an automatic recognition system for classifying stones belonging to different Calabrian quarries (Southern Italy). The tool for stone recognition has been developed in the SILPI project (acronym of “Sistema per l’Identificazione di Lapidei Per Immagini”), financed by POR Calabria FESR-FSE 2014-2020. Our study is based on the Convolutional Neural Network (CNNs) that is used in literature for many different tasks such as speech recognition, neural language processing, bioinformatics, image classification and much more. In particular, we propose a two-stage hybrid approach based on the use of a model of Deep Learning (DL), in our case the CNN, in the first stage and a model of Machine Learning (ML) in the second one. In this work, we discuss a possible solution to stones classification which uses a CNN for the feature extraction phase and the Softmax or Multinomial Logistic Regression (MLR), Support Vector Machine (SVM), k-Nearest Neighbors (kNN), Random Forest (RF) and Gaussian Naive Bayes (GNB) ML techniques in order to perform the classification phase basing our study on the approach called Transfer Learning (TL). We show the image acquisition process in order to collect adequate information for creating an opportune database of the stone typologies present in the Calabrian quarries, also performing the identification of quarries in the considered region. Finally, we show a comparison of different DL and ML combinations in our Two-Stage Hybrid Model solution.
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Guagliardi, Ilaria, Tommaso Caloiero, Ernesto Infusino, Giovanni Callegari, and Nicola Ricca. "Environmental Estimation of Radiation Equivalent Dose Rates in Soils and Waters of Northern Calabria (Italy)." Geofluids 2021 (April 27, 2021): 1–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.1155/2021/6617283.

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In this study, the equivalent dose rate of natural radionuclides ( H T ) in 99 spring water and surface soil samples was determined using an alpha, beta, and gamma high sensitivity detector up within a Geiger-Muller tube and with an external probe NaI (Tl). The samples were collected in the Crati basin (southern Italy), and during sample collection, water quality parameters were detected in situ and at the University of Calabria laboratories. A Pearson correlation coefficient analysis was applied to identify and clarify the relationships between water physical-chemical properties and soil and water radioactivity. Results show that the mean H T for spring waters is 97.07 μSv/h. Furthermore, the mean H T for surface soils is 97.92 μSv/h, thus evidencing higher mean H T values than worldwide ones reported in a previous literature. Low correlation coefficients were detected between water H T and conductivity and pH. On the contrary, a reasonable correlation was found between H T in spring water and in soil. This relationship is associated with some rocks of the Sila Massif and of Coastal Chain, i.e., plutonic and metamorphic crystalline rocks. Finally, the estimation of the health risk was calculated: results did not evidence serious dangers for people living in the studied environment. The results from this survey for the H T evaluation provide an extensive assessment of the background exposure levels in the investigated area.
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Novembre, Daniela, Carla Pace, and Domingo Gimeno. "Synthesis and characterization of wollastonite-2Mby using a diatomite precursor." Mineralogical Magazine 82, no. 1 (February 2018): 95–110. http://dx.doi.org/10.1180/minmag.2017.081.025.

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ABSTRACTSolid phase reaction synthesis of wollastonite-2Mby a natural rock precursor as the source of amorphous silica and CaCO3is reported. Chemical treatments were carried out on a diatomitic rock from Crotone (Calabria, Italy) in order to measure its reactive silica and CaCO3contents. Four series of synthesis were performed at 1000°C at ambient pressure by mixing, at different stoichiometry, the diatomitic rock with a natural limestone as a source of additive CaCO3, and sodium carbonate (Na2CO3) as triggering agent.Wollastonite-2Mwas characterized by chemo-physical, crystallographical and morphological-microtextural analyses. All these characterizations, together with infrared and nuclear magnetic resonance (29Si) responses provide values comparable to literature data. Estimation of the amorphous phase in the synthesis powders was performed through quantitative phase analysis using the combined Rietveld and reference intensity ratio methods, resulting in a final product of 96.3% wollastonite-2M.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Calabria (Italy) In literature"

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Matkovic, Iva. "Roman settlement of Northern Bruttium : 200 B.C.-A.D. 300 /." *McMaster only, 2001.

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Walston, J. "Mafia and clientelism : Roads to Rome in post war Calabria." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 1986. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.384551.

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Knott, S. D. "Structure, sedimentology and petrology of an Ophiolitic flysch terrain in Calabria, south Italy." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1988. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.233528.

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Signoretta, Paola E. "Sustainable development in marginal regions of the European Union : an evaluation of the Integrated Mediterranean Programme Calabria, Italy." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.318294.

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Nebel, Sabine M. "Wild food plants in Graecanic communities in Calabria, Southern Italy : ethnobotany, current role in Mediterranean diets and antioxidant activity." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2006. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.435748.

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Huldt, Sofia. "Urban form, public life and social capital : a case study of how the concepts are related in Calabria, Italy." Thesis, KTH, Urbana och regionala studier, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-244440.

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The aim of this thesis isto investigate the urban structure of two Italian towns based upon physicalstructure and social function. The towns are Bova and Bova Marina in theancient Greek part of Calabria, Area Grecanica. This is done by answering theresearch questions about how the urban structures are and what preconditionsthere are for public life and in extension social capital. This is alsocompared to the discourse in research about Calabria as a region lacking behindas well as the Greek cultural heritage. The thesis was conducted during onesemester spent in the area and based upon qualitative research in form ofobservations of the towns, mapping, textual analysis and interviews. Theresults showed that the urban form of the two towns differ from each otherbecause of their history and their localisation. Bova is an ancient town in themountains that is separated through topography, and therefore conserved withmany old structures but few inhabitants, suffering from out-migration. BovaMarina is placed on the coast of the Ionic Sea, south of Bova and connected tothe region by train and roads, while Bova is mainly connected to Bova Marina.Bova Marina was founded as a town in late 19th century and expanded a lotbecause of the railroad. It is a town with inconsistent walking network, a lotof traffic and houses in bad condition. Due to this the conclusion was that theurban form in both towns are seemingly bad for public life, but theobservations showed that there was intense social activity in public spacesnevertheless which generates social capital. Despite this the social capital isin research presented as bad in the Area Grecanica, something that might haveto do with a history of being neglected as well as lack of control over theirown area
Syftet med denna avhandlingär att undersöka stadsstrukturen i två italienska städer baserat på fysiskstruktur och social funktion. Städerna är Bova och Bova Marina i den antikagrekiska delen av Kalabrien, området Grecanica. Detta görs genom att svara påfrågorna om hur stadsstrukturerna är och vilka förutsättningar det finns fördet offentliga livet och i förlängningen social kapital. Detta jämförs också meddiskursen i forskning om Kalabrien som en region som avbefolkas och riskeraratt förlora det grekiska kulturarvet. Avhandlingen genomfördes under en termini området och är baserad på kvalitativ forskning i form av observationer avstäderna, kartläggning, textanalys och intervjuer. Resultaten visade att de tvåstädernas urbana form skiljer sig från varandra på grund av deras historia ochlokalisering. Bova är en gammal stad i bergen som separeras genom topografi ochkonserveras därför med många gamla strukturer men med få invånare på grund avutvandring. Bova Marina ligger på kusten av Joniska havet, söder om Bova ochansluten till regionen med tåg och vägar, medan Bova är huvudsakligen anslutentill Bova Marina. Bova Marina grundades som en stad i slutet av 1800-talet ochutökades mycket på grund av järnvägen. Det är en stad med inkonsekventgångnätverk, mycket trafik och byggnation i dåligt skick. På grund av detta varslutsatsen att stadsformen i båda städerna ur vissa aspekter är uppenbart dåligför det offentliga livet, men observationerna visade att det fanns intensivsocial aktivitet i offentliga utrymmen som emellertid genererar social kapital.Trots detta är det sociala kapitalet i forskning presenterad som dålig iområdet Grecanica, något som kan ha att göra med en historia av att försummassåväl som bristande kontroll över sitt eget område
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Greaves, Anthony Eric. "Stendhal's Italy : a writer's magic lantern." Thesis, University of Exeter, 1992. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.304475.

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Pipyrou, Stavroula. "Power, governance and representation : an anthropological analysis of kinship, the ’Ndrangheta and dance within the Greek linguistic minority of Reggio Calabria, South Italy." Thesis, Durham University, 2010. http://etheses.dur.ac.uk/465/.

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Power within the Greek linguistic minority in Reggio Calabria, South Italy, is found equally within symmetrical and asymmetrical nexuses of relations. In this thesis I argue that these relations have acquired the status and authority of governance. I consider there to be three main intertwined nexuses of relations that condition politics in Reggio; kinship, kin-like relations – such as friendship, godparenthood and the ’Ndrangheta (Calabrian Mafia) – and clientelism. The appropriation of kinship symbols such as the ‘archaic’ family, ancestors and saints into the modes of governance of these nexuses legitimises their authority. The two implicated and at first glance oppositional sovereignties – the ’Ndrangheta and the state – adopt the same language of representation, that of kinship, which suggests that there is no simple opposition between the two. Further examination of the politics of the Grecanici cultural associations problematises the coexistence of various forms of clientelism – inclusive as well as exclusive. Carefully assessing the ‘governmentalities’ of these relations, I conclude that power comes as the direct result of the actors’ productive kinesis across various social points and is not merely localised in ‘conventional’ political forms of representation such as the political parties, local administrators and economic lobbies. Thus my main theoretical argument comes to challenge previous understandings of a Southern Italian society characterised by vertical types of social relations that inhibit collective mobilisation and the empowerment of civil society.
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Panzarella, Gioia. "Disseminating migration literature : a dialogue with contemporary Italy." Thesis, University of Warwick, 2018. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/113827/.

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This thesis engages with migration literature in Italian keeping at the centre of the analysis its dissemination. I argue that this approach offers new insights into the ways migration dialogues with contemporary Italian literature - and, more generally, with contemporary Italy - with a focus on the work of translingual authors writing in Italian. The aim of this research is not to engage critically with the body of texts written by migrant writers. Rather, it focuses on sites of dissemination of this production, analysing the aims, content, and outcomes of selected case studies from this perspective. Key concerns are the public perception of migration and growing attention in the media: this thesis seeks to explore to what extent these tensions emerge when migration literature is communicated to a wide public audience and whether they affect the way in which these writers and their works are presented. This thesis considers these case studies in relation to the scholarly debate on transnational and migration literature in Italian. Thanks to the notion of 'cultural intermediary', I discuss the role and prerogatives of agents involved, for example the creative nature of their work. The case studies cover a range of time that spans from the early nineties to 2017 and they include: initiatives devoted specifically to migration literature such as series of book launches and workshops (Centro culturale Multietnico La Tenda in Milan, Seminari della Sagarana); television broadcasts (with a focus on three television broadcasts on the Italian public television channel RAI 3); educational materials for schools; and writers (Compagnia delle poete and Gabriella Ghermandi). Thanks to this approach, this thesis inserts some crucial moments of the dissemination of migration literature in Italian into a polycentric network of initiatives that uses the internet as a means to communicate and as a repository of materials. The thesis demonstrates the impact that these modes of dissemination have had not only on reception, but also on artistic practices and the production of literary texts.
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Jones, Richard James. "Tobias Smollett : travels through France, Italy and Scotland." Thesis, University of Oxford, 1999. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.312679.

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Books on the topic "Calabria (Italy) In literature"

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Douglas, Norman. Old Calabria. Evanston, Ill: Marlboro Press/Northwestern, 1996.

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Blanchard, Paul. Southern Italy: From Rome to Calabria. 6th ed. London: Black, 1986.

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1929-, Flower John, ed. Southern Italy: From Rome to Calabria. 7th ed. London: Black, 1990.

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Southern Italy: South of Rome to Calabria. 9th ed. London: A. & C. Black, 1999.

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Chiarella, Peter. Out of Calabria. [Victoria, BC]: Trafford Pub., 2007.

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Kessel, Fletcher Janet, and Lindgren Shelley, eds. My Calabria: Simple family recipes from Southern Italy. New York: W. W. Norton & Company, 2010.

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Pipino, Giuseppe. La Calabria contemporanea tra vincoli e opportunità. Reggio Calabria: Falzea, 2000.

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Giuttari, Michele. A death in Calabria. Oxford: Isis, 2012.

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Proverbi calabresi. Firenze: Giunti, 1998.

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A death in Calabria. London: Little, Brown, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Calabria (Italy) In literature"

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Vanoli, Alessandro. "Calabria and the Muslims during Saint Neilos’s lifetime." In Greek Monasticism in Southern Italy, 246–57. 1st [edition]. | New York : Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315585871-11.

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Riccardi, Lorenzo. "Art and architecture for Byzantine monks in Calabria." In Greek Monasticism in Southern Italy, 96–143. 1st [edition]. | New York : Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315585871-5.

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Morini, Enrico. "Monastic interactions between Calabria and Mount Athos in the Middle Ages." In Greek Monasticism in Southern Italy, 191–207. 1st [edition]. | New York : Routledge, 2017.: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315585871-8.

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Noyé, Ghislaine. "The Still Byzantine Calabria: a Case Study." In New Directions in Early Medieval European Archaeology: Spain and Italy Compared, 221–66. Turnhout: Brepols Publishers, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.hama-eb.5.108006.

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Tarquin Teale, C., and Jeremy R. Young. "Isolated Olistoliths from the Longobucco Basin, Calabria, Southern Italy." In Marine Clastic Sedimentology, 75–88. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-009-3241-8_4.

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Bianchini, Silvia, Francesca Cigna, and Nicola Casagli. "Improving Landslide Inventory with Persistent Scatterers in Calabria, Italy." In Landslide Science and Practice, 119–25. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-31325-7_15.

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Fantucci, Rosanna, and Marino Sorriso-Valvo. "Dendrogeomorphological Analysis of a Landslide near Lago, Calabria (Italy)." In Advances in Global Change Research, 91–101. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-90-481-8736-2_8.

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Tinti, S. "Evaluation of Tsunami Hazard in Calabria and Eastern Sicily, Italy." In Tsunamis in the World, 141–57. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-017-3620-6_12.

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Milli Konewko, Simonetta. "Neorealism and Literature." In Neorealism and the "New" Italy, 37–46. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/978-1-137-52416-4_4.

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Tagarelli, Giuseppe, Nicola Cantasano, Tommaso Caloiero, and Gaetano Pellicone. "Integrated Coastal Zone Management of Natura 2000 and cultural heritage sites in Calabrian coastal landscape (Southern Italy)." In Proceedings e report, 338–47. Florence: Firenze University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-147-1.34.

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This study shows the link connecting natural and cultural goods in the coastal landscape of Calabria (Southern Italy), considering seaboard and human impact risk conditions. In fact, Calabria has 58 Natura 2000 sites located on seaboard areas within a length of 300 meters from coast and 63 cultural heritage sites of which 42.9% coincides with the Natura 2000 network. As a results of this paper, the increasing coastal erosion and a heavy human impact have been highlighted as the main hazards to which the natural and cultural goods are exposed, thus it’s necessary a broader approach for the integration of natural and cultural issues into an active Integrated Coastal Zone Management process
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Conference papers on the topic "Calabria (Italy) In literature"

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VERSACI, ROSA, FRANCESCA MINNITI, GIANDOMENICO FOTI, CATERINA CANALE, and GIUSEPPINA CHIARA BARILLÀ. "RIVER ANTHROPIZATION: CASE STUDIES IN REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY." In SDP 2018. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sdp180761.

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Cifci, G., and R. Nicolich. "Studies of deep seismic and modelling in Calabria (Italy)." In 55th EAEG Meeting. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 1993. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201411633.

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GERIA, PAOLO FANTINO, GIANDOMENICO FOTI, and PIERFABRIZIO PUNTORIERI. "MORPHODYNAMIC ANALYSIS OF THE TUCCIO RIVER, SOUTH CALABRIA, ITALY." In FRIAR 2018. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/friar180131.

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Bavusi, M., A. Giocoli, E. Rizzo, and V. Lapenna. "Geophysical investigations in the Castle of Crotone (Calabria Region, Italy)." In 2007 4th International Workshop on, Advanced Ground Penetrating Radar. IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/agpr.2007.386529.

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NUCERA, ANTONELLA, GIANDOMENICO FOTI, CATERINA CANALE, PIERFABRIZIO PUNTORIERI, and FRANCESCA MINNITI. "COASTAL FLOODING: DAMAGE CLASSIFICATION AND CASE STUDIES IN CALABRIA, ITALY." In RISK ANALYSIS 2018. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/risk180081.

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Canale, Caterina, Giuseppe Barbaro, Giandomenico Foti, Olga Petrucci, Giovanni Besio, Vincenzo Fiamma, Giuseppina Chiara Barillà, Pierfabrizio Puntorieri, and Lucia Bruzzaniti. "Floods and sea storms: analysis of contemporaneity conditions in Calabria, Italy." In Eighth International Conference on Remote Sensing and Geoinformation of the Environment (RSCy2020), edited by Kyriacos Themistocleous, Silas Michaelides, Vincent Ambrosia, Diofantos G. Hadjimitsis, and Giorgos Papadavid. SPIE, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2571215.

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BARILLÀ, GIUSEPPINA CHIARA, GIUSEPPE BARBARO, GIANDOMENICO FOTI, PIERLUIGI MANCUSO, VINCENZO FIAMMA, AGNIESZKA MALESINSKA, PIERFABRIZIO PUNTORIERI, and MARIA MANDALARI. "COASTAL EROSION HAZARD AND VULNERABILITY: CASE STUDY OF PORTICELLO, SOUTH CALABRIA, ITALY." In SUSTAINABLE WATER RESOURCES MANAGEMENT 2021. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/wrm210161.

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BORRELLO, MANUELA MARIA, GIANDOMENICO FOTI, and PIERFABRIZIO PUNTORIERI. "SHORELINE EVOLUTION NEAR THE MOUTH OF THE PETRACE RIVER, REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY." In RIVER BASIN MANAGEMENT 2017. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/rbm170071.

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CALABRÒ, TOMMASO, GIUSEPPE IIRITANO, and MARIA ROSARIA TRECOZZI. "ACTIVITIES TRAINING ON CITY LOGISTICS: CASE STUDY OF THE CALABRIA REGION, ITALY." In SUSTAINABLE CITY 2019. Southampton UK: WIT Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.2495/sc190151.

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Shimabukuro, David H., Sabina Caparelli, and Eugenio Piluso. "RECONSTRUCTING THE EUROPEAN HYPEREXTENDED MARGIN OF THE ALPINE TETHYS IN CALABRIA, SOUTHERN ITALY." In GSA Annual Meeting in Denver, Colorado, USA - 2016. Geological Society of America, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1130/abs/2016am-280784.

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Reports on the topic "Calabria (Italy) In literature"

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Gore, Tim, Mira Alestig, Sabita Banerji, and Giorgia Ceccarelli. The Workers Behind Sweden's Italian Wine: An illustrative Human Rights Impact Assessment of Systembolaget's Italian wine supply chains. Oxfam, September 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.21201/2021.7703.

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This paper reports on an illustrative human rights impact assessment (HRIA) of the Italian wine supply chains of Systembolaget, the Swedish monopoly alcohol retailer. The HRIA aimed to evaluate the actual and potential human rights impacts at the production stage of the value chain in Italy, to identify their root causes, and to provide recommendations to relevant stakeholders concerning their prevention, mitigation and/or remediation. The assessment took just over a year and consisted of five phases of analysis using a methodology aligned with the UN Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights (UNGPs). However, the onset of Italy’s severe first wave of coronavirus in 2020 meant that the assessment team was unable to conduct the field study phase with the full rigour required of an HRIA. The field phase started in September 2019, with an initial assessment phase based on a literature review and a round of stakeholder interviews from September 2019 to March 2020. Further, limited, worker interviews were conducted from October 2020 to January 2021. The result is an illustration of the human rights risks that are present in the areas of Italy from which Systembolaget sources its wine.
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Hicks, Jacqueline. The Role of Gender in Serious and Organised/Transnational Crime. Institute of Development Studies, March 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/k4d.2021.059.

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This rapid review synthesises evidence on the role of gender in serious and organised/transnational crime (SOC) with regard to gender norms, participation and prevention. It looks at the literature on the roles women play in organised crime groups and their pathways to participation, the impact of cultural gender norms in different forms of participation for men and women in SOC, and the role of gender dynamics within families or communities in preventing SOC. Key Overall Findings linking gender norms, female participation and prevention of SOC: 1). Gender norms and women’s participation in SOC are varied and highly contextual, highlighting the importance of gender analysis to programming; 2). Gendered perceptions of men as perpetrators and women as victims in SOC undermine effective responses; and 3). Some types of masculine identity have been linked to involvement in violent crime and societal tolerance of organised crime groups. In Italy, some feminists characterise opposition to SOC as an anti-patriarchal struggle.
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Jordan, Ramon L., Abed Gera, Hei-Ti Hsu, Andre Franck, and Gad Loebenstein. Detection and Diagnosis of Virus Diseases of Pelargonium. United States Department of Agriculture, July 1994. http://dx.doi.org/10.32747/1994.7568793.bard.

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Pelargonium (Geranium) is the number one pot plant in many areas of the United States and Europe. Israel and the U.S. send to Europe rooted cuttings, foundation stocks and finished plants to supply a certain share of the market. Geraniums are propagated mainly vegetatively from cuttings. Consequently, viral diseases have been and remain a major threat to the production and quality of the crop. Among the viruses isolated from naturally infected geraniums, 11 are not specific to Pelargonium and occur in other crops while 6 other viruses seem to be limited to geranium. However, several of these viruses are not sufficiently characterized to conclude that they are distinct agents and their nomenclature and taxonomy are confusing. The ability to separate, distinguish and detect the different viruses in geranium will overcome obstacles te developing effective detection and certification schemes. Our focus was to further characterize some of these viruses and develop better methods for their detection and control. These viruses include: isolates of pelargonium line pattern virus (PLPV), pelargonium ringspot virus (PelRSV), pelargonium flower break virus (PFBV), pelargonium leaf curl (PLCV), and tomato ringspot virus (TomRSV). Twelve hybridoma cell lines secreting monoclonal antibodies specific to a geranium isolate of TomRSV were produced. These antibodies are currently being characterized and will be tested for the ability to detect TomRSV in infected geraniums. The biological, biochemical and serological properties of four isometric viruses - PLPV, PelRSV, and PFBV (and a PelRSV-like isolate from Italy called GR57) isolated from geraniums exhibiting line and ring pattern or flower break symptoms - and an isolate ol elderbeny latent virus (ELV; which the literature indicates is the same as PelRSV) have been determined Cloned cDNA copies of the genomic RNAs of these viruses were sequenced and the sizes and locations of predicted viral proteins deduced. A portion of the putative replicase genes was also sequenced from cloned RT-PCR fragments. We have shown that, when compared to the published biochemical and serological properties, and sequences and genome organizations of other small isometric plant viruses, all of these viruses should each be considered new, distinct members of the Carmovirus group of the family Tombusviridae. Hybridization assays using recombinant DNA probes also demonstrated that PLPV, PelRSV, and ELV produce only one subgenomic RNA in infected plants. This unusual property of the gene expression of these three viruses suggests that they are unique among the Carmoviruses. The development of new technologies for the detection of these viruses in geranium was also demonstrated. Hybridization probes developed to PFBV (radioactively-labeled cRNA riboprobes) and to PLPV (non-radioactive digoxigenin-labeled cDNAs) were generally shown to be no more sensitive for the detection of virus in infected plants than the standard ELISA serology-based assays. However, a reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction assay was shown to be over 1000 times more sensitive in detecting PFBV in leaf extracts of infected geranium than was ELISA. This research has lead to a better understanding of the identity of the viruses infecting pelargonium and to the development of new tools that can be used in an improved scheme of providing virus-indexed pelargonium plants. The sequence information, and the serological and cloned DNA probes generated from this work, will allow the application of these new tools for virus detection, which will be useful in domestic and international indexing programs which are essential for the production of virus-free germplasm both for domestic markets and the international exchange of plant material.
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