Course
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Credits
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Scientific Disciplinary Sector Code
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Contact Hours
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Exercise Hours
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Laboratory Hours
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Personal Study Hours
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Type of Activity
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Language
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21801008 -
GENERAL SOCIOLOGY
(objectives)
CANALE A-L - The course aims to introduce students to the basic concepts of sociology and the main sociological
theories as tools for a critical analysis of social reality. A specific attention will be paid to the phenomenon of poverty,
marginalization and social exclusion in contemporary societies. - To provide students with knowledge and conceptual tools useful to analyze contemporary social change.
M-Z 1) TO INTRODUCE STUDENTS TO THE MAIN SOCIOLOGICAL CONCEPTS, THEORIES AND MODELS. IN PARTICULAR, THE RELATION BETWEEN SOCIETY, SOCIAL SUBJECTS, TECHNOLOGY AND CAPITALISM IS THE FOCUS OF THE COURSE.
2) TO PROVIDE STUDENTS WITH KNOWLEDGE AND CONCEPTUAL TOOLS USEFUL TO ANALYZE CONTEMPORARY SOCIAL CHANGE.
Group:
AL
-
ROSSI EMANUELE
( syllabus)
FIRST PART: ESPISTEMOLOGY AND METHODOLOGY OF SOCIAL SCIENCE The origins of sociology and its epistemologic status. Epistemology, methodology and social theory. The main paradigms in sociology. Quantitative and qualitative methods. SECOND PART: MAIN SOCIOLOGICAL CONCEPTS AND THEMES Culture - Structures, social actions and power – Groups and organizations - Social stratification, social classes and global inequalities - Ethnicity and migrations - Gender and sexualities – Families and socialization process – Deviance - Social changes, globalization and social movements. THIRD PART: INTRODUCTION TO SOCIALOLOGICAL THEORIES The birth of sociology: sociology and positivism - Karl Marx – Emile Durkheim – Georg Simmel – Max Weber – The Chicago School of Sociology – George H. Mead - Italian sociology at the beginning of '900 – Sigmund Freud and the birth of psychoanalysis - Critic theory – Functionalism – Alfred Schutz – Peter Berger and Thomas Luckmann – Erving Goffman – Contemporary sociology FOURTH PART: POVERTY, INEQUALITIES AND SOCIAL EXCLUSION FIFTH PART: THE SOCIOLOGY OF GEORG SIMMEL: DOMINATION SIXTH PART: SOCIETY IN THE ERA OF COVID-19
( reference books)
First and second part: – CROTEAU D., HOYNES W. (2018), SOCIOLOGIA GENERALE. TEMI, STRUMENTI, CONCETTI, SECOND EDITION (EDITED BY ANTONELLI F., ROSSI E.) MC GRAW HILL EDUCATION, MILANO [with the exception of the following chapters 10 E 12]. Third part : –JEDLOWSKI P. (2017) IL MONDO IN QUESTIONE. INTRODUZIONE ALLA STORIA DEL PENSIERO SOCIOLOGICO, CAROCCI EDITORE, ROMA, [with the exception of the following chapters 1, 13, 14]. Fourth part • – ROSSI E., (2012), IN DISPARTE. APPUNTI PER UNA SOCIOLOGIA DEL MARGINE, ARMANDO EDITORE Fifth part – SIMMEL G., (2017), IL DOMINIO, (edited by CARLO MONGARDINI), ROMA, BULZONI SIXTH PART - MARCHETTI M.C., ROMEO A., (EDITED BY), NOI RESTIAMO A CASA. IL MONDO VISTO DA FUORI AI TEMPI DEL COVID-19, MIMESIS EDITORE, 2020.
Group:
MZ
-
Derived from
21801008 SOCIOLOGIA GENERALE in Scienze politiche per la cooperazione e lo sviluppo L-36 MZ ANTONELLI FRANCESCO
( syllabus)
PART ONE: EPISTEMOLOGY AND METHODOLOGY OF SOCIAL SCIENCES The origin of the sociology and its epistemological status. The modern science and its scientific paradigms. Verificationism vs Falsificationism. Epistemology, methodology and social theory. Main sociological paradigms. Quantitative and qualitatives methods.
PART TWO: CONCEPTS, SUBJECTS AND SOCIOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVES Culture, institutions and cultural processes - Power, social action and social structures - Social interactions, groups and socialization - Migrations and ethnicity - Gender and sexuality (with references to the sociology of families) - Social stratification and inequlities in the globalization era - Social changes, social movements and globalization - Classical Sociological Perspective - The main sociological perspectives: functionalism, conflictualism, interactionism - A gender-sensitive perspective on sociological theories: from classic to contemporaries.
PART THREE: SECOND MODERNITY, RISCK AND CLIMATE CHANGE The sociology of risk in Ulrick Beck's thought - Individualisation and inequalities - Science and Politics - The climate change within the global risk society: Bruno Latour's contribution - Science, politics and society facing the ecological crisis - History and critics on the idea of the Nature - Root causes of the ecological denial: post-apocalyptic perspectives and political gnosticism - Rethinking democracy and representativeness.
( reference books)
Attending Students (10 CFU):
PART ONE AND SECOND: – CROTEAU D.,HOYNES W. (2018), SOCIOLOGIA GENERALE. TEMI, STRUMENTI, CONCETTI, NUOVA EDIZIONE ITALIANA A CURA DI ANTONELLI F., ROSSI E. MC GRAW HILL EDUCATION, MILANO [NO CHAPTERS 10 e 11, 12]. - ANTONELLI F. (ED.) (2018), GENERE, SESSUALITA' E TEORIE SOCIOLOGICHE, CEDAN-Wolters Kluwer Italia, MILANO
PARTE TERZA: - BECK U., LA SOCIETA' DEL RISCHIO. VERSO UNA SECONDA MODERNITA', CAROCCI, ROMA (ANY ITALIAN EDITION). - LATOUR B. (2020), LA SFIDA DI GAIA. IL NUOVO REGIME CLIMATICO, MELTEMI, UDINE.
------------
Not attending students:
PART ONE AND SECOND: – CROTEAU D.,HOYNES W. (2018), SOCIOLOGIA GENERALE. TEMI, STRUMENTI, CONCETTI, NUOVA EDIZIONE ITALIANA A CURA DI ANTONELLI F., ROSSI E. MC GRAW HILL EDUCATION, MILANO [NO CHAPTERS 10 AND 11]. - ANTONELLI F. (ED.) (2018), GENERE, SESSUALITA' E TEORIE SOCIOLOGICHE, CEDAN-Wolters Kluwer Italia, MILANO - COLLINS R. (2006), TEORIE SOCIOLOGICHE, BOLOGNA, IL MULINO [NO CHAPTERS 9 AND 10].
PART THREE: - BECK U., LA SOCIETA' DEL RISCHIO. VERSO UNA SECONDA MODERNITA', CAROCCI, ROMA (QUALUNQUE EDIZIONE ITALIANA). - LATOUR B. (2020), LA SFIDA DI GAIA. IL NUOVO REGIME CLIMATICO, MELTEMI, UDINE.
PART FOUR: - ANTONELLI F. (2019), TECNOCRAZIA E DEMOCRAZIA. L'EGEMONIA NELLA SOCIETA' DIGITALE, L'ASINO D'ORO, ROMA [NO CHAPTERS 4 AND 6].
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10
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SPS/07
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80
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
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ITA |
21801982 -
MODERN HISTORY
(objectives)
The course gives basic information about the formation of the contemporary world and its main cultural, economic, institutional, political and social transformations. Through repeated use of complex and critical knowledge, students will be introduced to a better comprehension of the roots of today global society
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MORO RENATO
( syllabus)
The course is divided in two parts: a) the first is basic and it is devoted to an historical introduction to the contemporary world b) the second is more advanced and it is devoted to the history of Italy during the Cold War
PART ONE (6 CFU) This part introduces to the history of 19th and 20th Century, to methodological issues (periodization, political use of history, memory, sources), to the main phenomena (revolutions and political ideas, industrial development, mass society), and to the main historical interpretations. Main topics: 1. Introduction to Historical Knowledge 2. The Contemporary Age: An Appraisal looking from Today 3. The Demographic Revolution 4. The Industrial and Environmental Revolution 5. Communication Revolution 6. The Cultural Revolution: The Individual and the Spread of Culture 7. The Social Revolution: Peasants, Workers, Middle Class, Women 8. Political Revolutions 9. The Rise of the Contemporary “Political Sphere”: Reactionaries, Conservatives, Liberals, Radicals, Socialists 10. Nationalism: Unification in Italy and Germany 11.The Role of Religion: Secularization and De-Christianization 12. The Age of Modernization Begins 13. The Second Acceleration of Progress. The Second Industrial Revolution 14. The Birth of Mass Society 15. Colonial Imperialism 15. Reshaping Europe: The Surfacing of America and Asia 16. World War I 17. The Age of Totalitarianism: Crisis of Democracy and Economic Collapse 18. Bolshevik Communism 19. Fascism 20. Nazism 21. World War II 22. The Cold War 23. Decolonization and Third World 24. The Origins of Welfare 25. The Affluent Society 26. The Age of the Digital Revolution
PART TWO (4 CFU) A first module (2CFU) introduces to the political history of contemporary Italy and to her deep connection with Cold War bipolarity: from the break of the Anti-Fascist Alliance in 1947 to the «national solidarity« governments of the 1970s. Main topics: 1. The National and the International Dimension of the «Total» Cold War 2. The Heritage of Fascism and War (1943-1946) 3. The Birth of the Italian Political System and the Beginning of the Cold War (1947-1949) 4. The Conflicts of the Centrismo Age (1950-1955) 5. Beyond Centrismo (1956-1961) 6. Peaceful Coexistence and Center-Left (1962-1968) 7. The Years of the «Strategy of Tension» and of the Crisis of the West (1969-1973) 8. «National Solidarity » (1974-1978)
A second module (2 CFU) analyses the issue of the Italian state difficulties from the national unification to the present.
( reference books)
Part One ○ G. SABBATUCCI – V. VIDOTTO, Storia contemporanea. L’Ottocento, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2019, pp. 376 (esclusi i capitoli I-IV) ○ G. SABBATUCCI – V. VIDOTTO, Storia contemporanea. Dalla Grande Guerra ad oggi, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2019, pp. 552 ○ S. CAVAZZA – P. POMBENI, L’età contemporanea, Bologna, Il Mulino 2018, pp. 232 (the book is available also in the online Pandoracampus platform, with supplementary resources, and interactive contents)
Part Two ○ G. FORMIGONI, Storia d’Italia nella Guerra Fredda (1943-1978), Bologna, Il Mulino, 2016, pp. 686 ○ S. CASSESE, Governare gli italiani. Storia dello Stato, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2014, pp. 408
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10
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M-STO/04
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80
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-
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-
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-
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Core compulsory activities
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ITA |
21801439 -
LANGUAGE, CULTURE AND INSTITUTIONS OF ENGLISH SPEAKING COUNTRIES
(objectives)
Students A-L The course is made up of two modules. While the first module deals with some of the main grammar and morpho-syntactic structures of the English language, the second module focuses on the diversity of American culture through short stories and their writers. A selection of American short stories from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries will be read and discussed. Special attention will be given to their formal and rhetorical characteristics as well as their impact and legacy on American history and culture.
Students M-Z The course is made up of two modules. While the first module deals with some of the main grammar and morpho-syntactic structures of the English language, the second module focuses on the literary and critical contribution by twentieth-century African-American writers. In an interdisciplinary framework, the analysis of the formal features of these texts will be instrumental to connect literary and socio-cultural issues. By promoting active participation in class, the adopted teaching method envisages the improvement of language skills and the ability to engage in open discussion.
Group:
AL
-
Derived from
21801978 LINGUA, CULTURA E ISTITUZIONI DEI PAESI DI LINGUA INGLESE in Scienze politiche per la cooperazione e lo sviluppo L-36 AL BECCE NICOLANGELO
( syllabus)
First module - Focus on English Grammar
The first module deals with some of the main grammar and morpho-syntactic structures of the English language.
Second module - American Short Stories
The second module is an introduction to the diversity of American culture through short stories and their writers. At the end of the module, the students will be able to: analyze the chronological and historical development of the American short story through its most representative authors; become familiar with the act of analyzing and interpreting short stories through appropriate theoretical and methodological frameworks, acknowledging alternative interpretations and developing critical thinking; experience how literary and cultural texts can transform one’s perception and understanding of self, other and communities.
( reference books)
Edgar Allan Poe, “The Tell-Tale Heart” (1843) Kate Chopin, “Desiree’s Baby” (1893) Susan Glaspell, “A Jury of Her Peers” (1917) Joyce Carol Oates, “Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been?” (1966) Ambrose Bierce, “An Occurrence at Owl Creek Bridge” (1890) Ralph Ellison, “Battle Royal” (1947) Alice Walker, “Everyday Use” (1973) Ray Bradbury, “There Will Come Soft Rains” (1950) Ernest Hemingway, “The Killers” (1927) Charlotte Perkins Gilman, “The Yellow Wallpaper” (1892) James Thurber, “The Secret Life of Walter Mitty” (1939) Shirley Jackson, “The Lottery” (1948) Tim O’Brien, “The Things They Carried” (1990)
The short stories listed above may be read in any edition in English.
Group:
MZ
-
Derived from
21801439 LINGUA, CULTURA E ISTITUZIONI DEI PAESI DI LINGUA INGLESE in Scienze politiche e relazioni internazionali L-36 MZ ELIA ADRIANO
( syllabus)
First module: English grammar: Learning the Language The first module deals with some of the main grammar and morpho-syntactic structures of the English language. The language skills acquired by the students will be assessed at the end of the course.
Second module: Twentieth-century African-American voices The second module focuses on the literary and critical contribution by twentieth-century African-American writers. In an interdisciplinary framework, the analysis of the formal features of these texts will be instrumental to connect literary and socio-cultural issues. By promoting active participation in class, the adopted teaching method envisages the improvement of language skills and the ability to engage in open discussion.The reference material includes works of fiction, critical essays and audiovisual material.
( reference books)
For all students:
- Adriano Elia, Serena I. Volpi, Heading South with Zora Neale Hurston and Langston Hughes, Padova, Libreriauniversitaria.it, 2021. - Adriano Elia, W.E.B. Du Bois and Langston Hughes - Two Remarkable Men, Novalogos, 2020. - Adriano Elia, La Cometa di W.E.B. Du Bois, Roma, RomaTrE-Press, 2015.
Further reference material will be given during the course.
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8
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L-LIN/12
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Basic compulsory activities
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ITA |
Optional group:
Esami a scelta dello studente (16 cfu) - (show)
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16
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21810066 -
STORIA DELL'EUROPA
(objectives)
The course aims to acquire the basic scientific-disciplinary skills aimed at identifying the main historical issues that characterize European history in the Early Modern Age. The objective, in particular, is to develop in students the critical knowledge of the main cultural, religious and political moments that marked the transition from the Europe of the religious wars to the Europe of religious and political tolerance. The aim of the course is to teach the students to understand the complexity of historical phenomena and the intertwining of its institutional, political, religious, social and cultural dimensions.
-
CARAVALE GIORGIO
( syllabus)
The course aims to acquire the basic scientific-disciplinary skills aimed at identifying the main historical issues that characterize the European history in the Early Modern Age. The objective in particular is to develop in students the critical knowledge of the main cultural, religious and political moments that marked the transition from the Europe of the religious wars to the Europe of tolerance. The aim of the course is to teach the student to understand the complexity of historical phenomena and the intertwining of its institutional, political, religious, social and cultural dimensions.
( reference books)
1) R. Bainton, La Riforma protestante, Torino, Einaudi, 2014
2) RONALD BAINTON, LA LOTTA PER LA LIBERTÀ RELIGIOSA, BOLOGNA, IL MULINO, 2009 (TEXT AVAILABLE IN DOUBLE COPY AT THE FACULTY LIBRARY)
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8
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M-STO/02
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21801968 -
STATISTICAL MODELLING
(objectives)
Being able to choose the most appropriate statistical model for the analysis of socio-economic phenomena. Getting familiar with the statistical environment R for model estimation and goodness of fit evaluation. Being able to communicate efficiently the model output.
-
Derived from
21801968 MODELLI STATISTICI in Scienze politiche e relazioni internazionali L-36 LAGONA FRANCESCO
( syllabus)
Introduction to R e R Studio. Importing data. Basic graphs. Basics of descriptive data analysis. Linear models: analysis of variance and regression. Interactions and transformations, Generalized linear models: logistic regression and Poisson regression. Time series analysis: temporal autocorrelation and linear models with ARMA errors. Spatial statistics: spatial autocorrelation and linear models with SAR and CAR errors. Panel data: random effects and generalized linear mixed effects models.
( reference books)
Dalgaard, P (2008) Introductory Statistics with R, Springer.
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8
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SECS-S/02
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21801250 -
THE SOCIOLOGY OF COMMUNICATION
(objectives)
Nonviolent communication and the internet
The main objective of this course is to create a critical consciousness on the use of everyday communication tools, forms, and practices, from orality to digital media. In the first part of the course students will be introduced to the main paradigms, methodologies and works of the sociology and history of media. We will read and discuss passages from the manual written by Mario Ricciardi, "La comunicazione. Maestri e paradigmi" (Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2012). Students will have to write weekly responses on the assigned readings and engage in both online and offline discussions guided by the instructor. In the second part of the course, these prevalently Western theories and authors will be reexamined and criticized in the light of completely different approaches. We will introduce the concept of “nonviolent communication”, elaborated and practiced, between others, by the Mahatma Gandhi. Writers, intellectuals, social and political activists like Danilo Dolci, Aldo Capitini, Paulo Freire, Frantz Fanon, Houria Bouteldja, Lanza Del Vasto, Vandana Shiva and others will be the starting point for analyzing and finally deconstructing the aggressive and manipulative Western communication forms and techniques that dominate the present media scenario. This analysis will lead us to address critically our own everyday online interactions as to understand how the digital dimension can transform and manipulate our emotions, ideas, cognitive habits, etc. and guide our behaviors and actions towards specific commercial, political, and cultural objectives. At this point students will be asked to create and experiment with nonviolent forms of communication, both verbally and online. The final objective will be to create new communication codes and practices that can help students to discover and express their own creative potential and accomplish an autonomous capacity to communicate effectively and peacefully in the real world.
-
Derived from
21801250 SOCIOLOGIA DELLA COMUNICAZIONE in Scienze politiche per la cooperazione e lo sviluppo L-36 FIORMONTE DOMENICO
( syllabus)
In the first part of the course students will be introduced to the main paradigms, methodologies and works of the sociology and history of media. We will read and discuss passages from the manual written by Mario Ricciardi, "La comunicazione. Maestri e paradigmi" (Roma-Bari, Laterza, 2012). Students will have to write weekly reading responses on the assigned readings and engage in both online and offline discussions guided by the instructor. In the second part of the course, these prevalently Western theories and authors will be reexamined and criticized in the light of completely different approaches. We will introduce the concept of “nonviolent communication”, elaborated and practiced, between others, by the Mahatma Gandhi. Writers, intellectuals, social and political activists like Danilo Dolci, Aldo Capitini, Paulo Freire, Frantz Fanon, Houria Bouteldja, Lanza Del Vasto, Vandana Shiva and others will be the starting point for analyzing and finally deconstructing the aggressive and manipulative Western communication forms and techniques that dominate the present media scenario. The third part of the course, if the sanitary situation will allow it, will be a practical hands-on session. Students will be asked to analyze their own online interactions, as to identify implicit and explicit "violent codes" (i.e. culturally inappropriate expressions or biases, etc.) in their online language and posts. Finally, they will have to create and experiment with nonviolent forms of communication, both verbally and online.
( reference books)
Required readings (for all students)
1) Harold Innis, The Bias of Communication, Toronto, University of Toronto Press, 2008. 2) Mohandas Karamchand Gandhi, Hind Swaraj or Indian Home Rule, 1909. (Available free of charge from: https://www.mkgandhi.org/ebks/hind_swaraj.pdf) 3) Houria Bouteldja, Whites, Jews, and Us. Toward a Politics of Revolutionary Love, MIT, 2017 4) Danilo Dolci, Dal trasmettere al comunicare. Non esiste comunicazione senza reciproco adattamento creativo, Casale Monferrato, Sonda, 2011. 5) Aldo Capitini, La ragioni della nonviolenza. Antologia degli scritti, Pisa, ETS.
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8
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SPS/08
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21801579 -
PUBLIC ECONOMIC LAW
(objectives)
At the end of the course students will have acquired basic legal knowledge about the relationship between markets and institutions with special regard to the constitutional framework, to competition and antitrust law and to regulated sectors.
-
DE BENEDETTO MARIA
( syllabus)
Course description
State and markets: constitutional and European framework Independent regulatory agencies Competition (cartels, abuse of dominant position, mergers) Public services (in general and sectors: municipal, electronic communications, energy and gas, transports, etc.) Financial regulation Markets, institutions and globalization
( reference books)
Enzo Cardi, Mercati e istituzioni in Italia. Diritto pubblico dell’economia, Torino, Giappichelli, ultima edizione or Claudio Franchini, La disciplina pubblica dell'economia tra diritto nazionale diritto europeo e diritto globale, Editoriale Scientifica, 2020
Marco D’Alberti, Poteri pubblici, mercati e globalizzazione, Bologna, Il Mulino, 2008
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8
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IUS/05
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21810126 -
DIRITTO E POLITICHE DELL'UNIONE EUROPEA
(objectives)
The course aims to provide students with the basic knowledge and useful cognitive tools to understand the multi-level legal system of the European Union and Member States, the functioning of the European institutions and the regulatory context of the main European Union policies.
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Derived from
21810126 DIRITTO E POLITICHE DELL'UNIONE EUROPEA in Scienze politiche e relazioni internazionali L-36 TORINO RAFFAELE
( syllabus)
History of the European process of integration European institutions and European governance European legislative acts European multi-level legal system Internal market and competition policy European citizenship Area of freedom, security and justice Fundamental rights Common Agricultural Policy Common commercial policy Consumer protection Common transport policy Economic and monetary Union Common security and defence policy
( reference books)
Diritto e politiche dell'Unione europea, a cura di R. Torino e C. Di Maio, 2020, Wolters Kluwer
Trattato sull’Unione europea, Trattato sul funzionamento dell’Unione europea, Carta dei diritti fondamentali dell’Unione europea, Pigreco edizioni, 2017
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8
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IUS/14
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21801025 -
HISTORY OF INTERNATIONAL RELATIONS
(objectives)
The course intends to provide undergraduate students with a broad overview of the evolution of the international system in the twentieth century, focusing in particular on the Second World war, the rise of the Cold war and its stabilization, the key crises of the bipolar confrontation, its final years and the collapse of the Soviet Union (1939-1991)
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Derived from
21801025 STORIA DELLE RELAZIONI INTERNAZIONALI in Scienze politiche e relazioni internazionali L-36 N0 NUTI LEOPOLDO
( syllabus)
Part 1 The origins and the evolution of the second world war. The rise of the bipolar system The first phase of the war, 1939-1941; The birth of the Grand alliance, 1941-1943; Searching for a solution for the postwar period, 1944-1946; – The formation of the blocs, 1946- 1947; The consolidation of the blocs, 1948-1949. The Korean war and the transition in the US and in the USSR, 1950-1953; The early phase of decolonization: India and the Middle East; The Origins of European Integration
Part 2 The consolidation and fall of the bipolar system. In search of stability, 1953-1956; Bloc tensions: the Sino-Soviet Schism and Transatlantic crises, 1956-1960; The twin crises in Berlin and Cuba; Arms control and the rise of detente, 1963 -1968; European integration and the Gaullist challenge; The Vietnam war and the beginning of detente, 1963-1968; Détente and ostpolitk, 1968-1975; The crisis of détente; The second cold war, 1979-1984; The transformation of the international system, 1985-1991
( reference books)
Ennio Di Nolfo, Storia delle relazioni internazionali, vol 1, Dalla pace di Versailles alla conferenza di Potsdam 1919-1945, from p. 233 on vol.2, Gli anni della guerra fredda 1946-1990
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8
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SPS/06
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21801278 -
HISTORY OF EUROPEAN INTEGRATION
(objectives)
The course aims at providing the students with knowledge, understanding and historical interpretation of the process of European integration. The evolution of the institutional framework of the EC/EU and their policies will be critically analyzed through their different historical phases. The course takes into consideration the origins of European integration in the 1940s and 50s; the early problems faced by the EEC in the 1960s and the internal tensions of those years; the gradual progress of European politics through the years of international détente and the revival of European integration from the mid-1980s. The last part of the course analyses the development of the European Union from the Treaty of Maastricht to the Treaty of Lisbon, together with some fundamental topics related to the enlargement of the EU to the Countries of Central and Eastern Europe. Finally, the course gives a general understanding of the institutional architecture of the EU today.
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Derived from
21801278 STORIA DELL'INTEGRAZIONE EUROPEA in Scienze politiche e relazioni internazionali L-36 N0 FASANARO LAURA
( syllabus)
The origins and development of the European integration process, 1945-1957. Federalism and Europeanism at the end of World War II; The German question in Europe and its impact on transatlantic relations; The rise of the Cold War in Europe; The Marshall Plan and the Organization for European Economic Cooperation (OEEC); Franco-German relations and the coal issue; The Schuman Plan and the European Coal and Steel Community (CECA); The problem of German rearmament and the European Defense Community; From the European Defense Community to the Treaties of Rome.
The early steps of the European Communities, 1958-69. Objectives and structure of the European Economic Community (EEC); The Single Market; Euratom; The Gaullist challenge and the stalemate of the Community, 1961-67; Europe and détente; The Hague summit, 1969.
The developments of the EEC during the 1970s. The first enlargement and the problems related to British membership; The project and the limits of a European monetary policy: from the Werner Plan to the creation of the EMS; European Political Cooperation; The reform of the European Parliament.
The EEC and the new European leaders: Margareth Thatcher, Valéry Giscard d'Estaing, Helmut Schmidt.
From the Single European Act to the Maastricht Treaty. The debate about the reform of the EEC in the early 1980s; Institutional reforms and the completion of the Single Market; the difficult relaunch of the EEC and international Cold War tensions; The European Commission led by Jacques Delors; The Single European Act; The second enlargement to Greece, Spain and Portugal; Franco-German cooperation in European politics (François Mitterrand and Helmut Kohl); The events of 1989, the end of the Cold War in Europe and German reunification; The Treaty of Maastricht and the creation of the European Union.
The big challenge - Europe in the 1990s. The "pillar" structure of the European Union and the road to the Euro; Common Foreign and Security Policy and its shortcomings; The conflict in the Western Balkans and European political balance; The Treaty of Amsterdam; The negotiations for the enlargement to the Countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the problem of reforming the EU; The Prodi Commission.
The EU at the beginning of the 21st century. A compromise found with the Treaty of Nice; The Iraqi crisis and its consequences on European politics; Difficult relations between the Commission and the Member States; The project of the Constitutional Treaty and the European Convention on the Future of Europe; The Treaty of Lisbon.
The institutional architecture of the EU today and the main conceptual and theorical approaches to European integration. The European Commission; The Council of Ministers; The European Council; The European Parliament; Federalism, Functionalism, Unionism; Intergovernmental cooperation and supranational integration within the EU.
( reference books)
Required readings for the exam (both for students attending the course and for those who do not attend the course), (8 CFU).
Di Nolfo E., Storia delle relazioni internazionali, 1919-1999 (Roma: Laterza, 2000), pp. 595-902;
Calandri E., Guasconi M.E., Ranieri R., Storia politica e economica dell’integrazione europea. Dal 1945 ad oggi (Napoli, Edises, 2015).
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8
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SPS/06
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
|
ITA |
21810175 -
STORIA DELL'AMBIENTE
(objectives)
The course aims to provide a basic preparation on the relation between man and the environment during history; more precisely on the behaviors towards the environment during the different centuries, on the historical roots of environmental problems, on the degree of awareness on the matter, on the single exemplary cases and on the minor ones.
Through the paradigms and categories of historical analysis, we want to provide tools of knowledge and analysis that can be valid for history and for the present.
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8
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M-STO/04
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21810176 -
FAMILY LAW
(objectives)
The course illustrates the institutes of family law modified by the last legal regulation on civil unions and cohabitation and unification of child status, as well as the fundamental notions of inheritance law, aiming to provide the tools to understand, through legal discipline, the evolution of the social reality of family relationships.
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8
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IUS/01
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21801481 -
HISTORY OF CONTEMPORARY ITALY
(objectives)
The course aims to analyze the main political, cultural, social and economic issues of the history of contemporary Italy, with special attention to the 20th century history. Furthermore, the course aims to examine the origin, the emergence and the spread of the idea of Italian nation, from the Risorgimento to the Republican years.
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Derived from
21801481 STORIA DELL'ITALIA CONTEMPORANEA in Scienze politiche e relazioni internazionali L-36 D'ALESSANDRI ANTONIO, SCARANTINO ANNA
( syllabus)
The course is divided in two parts carried out by two different teachers. The first, held by Dr. Antonio D’Alessandri, focuses on the historical events between the Napoleonic age and the political crisis of the late Nineteenth century. Particular attention is paid to the formation of the Italian national movement, within the broader framework of Europe during the so-called century of nationalities. The analysis deals with the many insurrectional attempts up to the crucial years of national unification. Then, the main problems of the new unitary state are tackled: from internal politics to the difficult search for an adequate international position for the country. The second part, taught by dr. Anna Scarantino, focuses on the historical events happening between Giolitti's period and the crisis of the so-called First Republic. Insights will include, in particular, fascism (movement and regime) and the evolution of democracy in the Republican Italy, through the consolidation and following decline of the traditional political parties and their respective political cultures. The analysis will take into account the contemporary social and cultural transformations within the country.
( reference books)
Maurizio Ridolfi, Storia della politica. Italia e italiani in prospettiva transnazionale nei secoli XIX-XXI, Pearson, Milano-Torino, 2020. Students not attending classes must also prepare for the exam on the book by Arianna Arisi Rota, Risorgimento. Un viaggio politico e sentimentale, il Mulino, Bologna, 2019.
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8
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M-STO/04
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64
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
21810303 -
THE UNITED NATIONS 2030 AGENDA FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT: POLITICAL AND SOCIAL IMPLICATIONS
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Modulo base
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3
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18
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
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LE IMPLICAZIONI POLITICHE E SOCIALI
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5
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IUS/13
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46
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-
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-
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-
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Elective activities
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ITA |
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Optional group:
Seminari A.A. 2020/2021 - (show)
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6
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