Browsing by Subject "Italy"
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Item Restricted A conversation in Paris with Ignazio Silone(1955) Silone, İgnazioItem Restricted Anlam oluşumunda görmenin neliği ta da modi'nin gözleri(1997) Aydın, SerdarItem Open Access Art museum visitor segments: evidence from Italy on omnivores and highbrow univores(Ecole des Hautes Etudes Commerciales, 2019) Gürel, Eda; Nielsen, A.This study segments the various types of art museum visitor using two-step cluster analysis. It goes beyond a simple demographic categorization of visitors and investigates why people visit museums, in particular what experiences they seek in museums based on their preferences and participation in various leisure activities. The sample was selected from among visitors to two art museums in Genoa, Italy. Face-to-face interviews were conducted with 400 visitors. The resulting 394 useable questionnaires yielded two clusters – Cultural Omnivores and Art Museum Univores – providing evidence for the omnivore/highbrow univore thesis described in the literature. The data suggest that the experiences visitors look for in museums, their preferences regarding various leisure activities, and their attendance at both highbrow and popular cultural events provide an effective means of segmenting art museum visitors. The theoretical contributions and managerial implications are discussed.Item Restricted Dünyaya açılan pencere: Gezi defteri(1997) Duru, OrhanItem Open Access Ein kupferzeitlicher dolch im eisenzeitlichen Italien – die notwendige Revision einer „sardischen" Stichwaffe aus dem depotfund von San Franscesco, Bologna(Roemisch-Germanisches Zentralmuseum * Forschungsinstitut fuer Vor- und Fruehgeschichte, 2007) Zimmermann, T.This short contribution is a chronological and typological reassessment of a fragmented tanged and riveted dagger belonging to the famous Bologna-San Francesco metal hoard, found in 1877, with the majority of associated artefacts dated to the European Iron Age. This critical reappraisal suggests that this dagger, commonly identified as of Iron Age »Sardinian« type, belongs to a totally different period and culture: It bears all formal and technical details significant for the so-called »Malé Leváre« group of Copper Age daggers from East-/Southeast Europe and the Balkans, commonly dated to the midth of the 4th millennium B.C. Since this hoard contains several other items already identified as of pre-Iron Age date, one more object can now be associated with this group, thereby increasing the overall number of this relatively rare Copper Age stabbing weapon.Item Restricted Federico Fellini(1990) İ. MursaloğluItem Open Access International regulations and environmental performance(Routledge, 2008) Yörük, B. K.; Zaim, O.This article employs the data envelopment analysis (DEA) approach to compute the environmental performance of all but two Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries. It is found that although the environmental performance of countries differs over time, Poland and Hungary are the two best performers for all periods while Italy, Japan, Austria and Switzerland are ranked among the worst. The effect of international regulations and some observed characteristics of countries on environmental performance are also investigated. International regulations are reported to have a positive effect on environmental performance.Item Open Access İnternet: demokrasiye açılan kapı? Türkiye ve İtalya örnekleri çerçevesinde e-devlet uygulamaları(Türkiye ve Orta Doğu Amme İdaresi Enstitüsü, 2009) Saylan, İbrahimKarar alma süreçlerine etkin yurttaş katılımını demokrasinin vazgeçilmez unsurlarından biri olarak gören bu çalışmanın amacı, siyasal etkinliğin hizmetine yeni olanaklar sunan Bilgi ve Đletişim Teknolojileri’nin (BĐT) merkezi ve yerel yönetimler düzeyinde kullanımını e-devlet uygulamaları ile e-demokrasi ilişkisi çerçevesinde incelemektir. E-devlet uygulamaları ile e-demokrasiyi bütünleşik olarak kavrayan ve hayata geçirmeyi amaçlayan eyönetişim modelini temel alan bu çalışma, e-devlet ile e-demokrasi ilişkisi üzerine kuramsal bir tartışmadan sonra, karşılaştırmalı içerik analizi yöntemi ile Türk ve Đtalyan devletlerinin e-devlet ve e-demokrasi ilişkisini nasıl kavradığı, bunun etkin yurttaş katılımını ne yönde etkilediği soruları tartışılmaktadır.Item Restricted Logos, 8(1994) Berk, İlhanItem Open Access Margaret Fuller's Rome and the problem of provincial American democracy(Routledge, 2006) Roberts, T. M.Margaret Fuller's visit to Italy as a correspondent for the New York Tribune at the time of the 1848 revolutions gave her a unique perspective on them, not only as a feminist intellectual but also as a commentator on the American relationship with revolutionary Europe. In her Tribune writings she addressed issues at once more partisan and more global than those she had covered inside the United States, including the political condition of Italy as a subject state under Austrian imperial control, and as an object of ridicule by many American observers, and the condition of American slavery. Italian peoples and slaves, in her mind, were, like women, oppressed by a transatlantic patriarchy whose prejudices allowed only for white males to enjoy political independence. Fuller called for American support for the Roman republic, but her sympathies did not reflect the thrust of American opinion. Many Americans did not believe Italians were capable of maintaining republican self-government, which was different, they alleged, from their own version, part of the inheritance of the American Revolution. That heritage conferred a unique American revolutionary 'exceptionalism'. For these Americans, the 1848 revolutions provided evidence that Europe was impulsive, reactionary and flawed; they saw in them confirmation of the superiority of American race relations and democratic society. After her death in 1850, the American Civil War would confirm Fuller's implicit sense that the United States and Europe were more alike than many Americans of her generation believed or realized. Her critique of American attitudes to the prospect for democracy in Italy provides perspective on the ambiguity of American global leadership today.Item Open Access Modelling the maritime cultural landscape of the Costiera Amalfitana: the first three seasons of research (2016–2018)(Taylor & Francis, 2021-08-10) Harpster, M.; Trakadas, A.; Denel, E.; Capriglione, V.; Lucarini, C.; Meranda, M.; Morselli, M.; Pelling, R.; Bennett, I.; Zazzaro, C.; Demirci, Ö.; Donadio, C.; Ferranti, L.; Stanislao, C.; Zavagno, Luca; Pecci, P.Human activity along the Amalfi coastline in Italy has been tied to the sea for millennia – for sustenance, migration, trade, warfare, and leisure. As a result, this region has an equally rich and extensive maritime cultural landscape composed of tangible and intangible elements. In 2016, a multi-disciplinary project began efforts to model and to understand changes within this landscape, and this essay presents the preliminary results of our first three seasons of work. Some efforts, such as the documentation of maritime cultural heritage in local museums, archival work, and geomorphological research proceeded smoothly. Unexpectedly, however, little material from the pre-modern era was found under water, adding questions to this study that future work in the Marine Protected Area west of Positano may answer.Item Open Access The politics of austerity and public policy reform in the EU(Sage Publications Ltd., 2014-04-07) Ladi, S.; Tsarouhas D.The European Union (EU) is at a critical juncture that will either trigger further integration or reinforce a mode of intergovernmental cooperation. The spread of market pressure to a growing number of states demonstrates that the crisis needs to be dealt with at the European and not just the national level. Up to now the 'politics of extreme austerity' has been the mainstream recipe promoted to and adopted by member states. The measures are tougher in those countries where there has been external financial assistance (i.e. Greece, Portugal and Ireland) but the rest of Europe is following suit (e.g. Italy and the UK). This introduction outlines the key directions of EU reforms to put into context the more specific cases discussed elsewhere in this symposium. The strengths and weaknesses of the theoretical frameworks employed in the articles are discussed to demonstrate the lessons that the crisis offers for our well-established public policy models and to highlight avenues for further research. Two main arguments are advanced: first, the crisis calls for an interdisciplinary approach to comprehend its full extent and deal with it efficiently; and second, the current political trajectory of the EU calls for urgent changes to strengthen its cohesion and long-term viability.Item Restricted Religion as opposition a Gramscian Analysis(1990) Billings, Dwight B.Item Restricted Şiir ve mafya!.(1994) Akın, SunayItem Restricted Yaralanan kim?(1997) Erişti, Ahmet Bülent