8 research outputs found

    The Thirteenth-Century Fresco Decoration of Santa Maria Ad Cryptas in Fossa, Italy

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    This paper discusses the fresco decoration of Santa Maria ad Cryptas. The frescoes are described and analyzed, and then compared to similar programs in order to determine which features are based on earlier sources, and which are unusual or unique to this particular church. The traditional features are found to reflect a long-established pattern of church decoration reflected in such monuments as Old Saint Peter’s, Sant’Angelo in Formis, the Cathedral of Monreale, and the Cappella Palatina. The unusual features (including the placement of the Passion cycle in the presbytery, and the location of the Crucifixion over the altar) are explained as modifications that emphasize themes of local importance, or of special significance to the patron. The Fossa frescoes utilize programmatic elements, such as the Old and New Testament narrative cycles, to explain sacred history as it related to a medieval man of the patron’s class and profession

    Spatial audio in small display screen devices

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    Our work addresses the problem of (visual) clutter in mobile device interfaces. The solution we propose involves the translation of technique-from the graphical to the audio domain-for expliting space in information representation. This article presents an illustrative example in the form of a spatialisedaudio progress bar. In usability tests, participants performed background monitoring tasks significantly more accurately using this spatialised audio (a compared with a conventional visual) progress bar. Moreover, their performance in a simultaneously running, visually demanding foreground task was significantly improved in the eye-free monitoring condition. These results have important implications for the design of multi-tasking interfaces for mobile devices

    Assessment of the Need for Health Services Among Farmworkers in Georgia

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    A report prepared for the Georgia Department of Community Health, State Office of Rural Health

    Authenticity: Is Corporate Social Responsibility the Key to Overcoming Crisis?

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    The paper aims to develop within the theoretical and normative perspective the concept of the “golden rule” of authentic CSR-driven strategy as a necessary path to overcoming the financial crisis. To this end, firstly a critical review is provided of the recent Encyclical Letter (Pope Francis, Laudato Sì, 2015) focusing on the care of our “common home” that emphasizes the complexity of the crisis and suggests the path to overcoming the crisis through a renewed environmental, economic and social ecology. Secondly, the work provides the business context with a series of examples related to companies which in “hard times” voluntarily persist in investing in CSR (Corporate Social Responsibility) activities conceived as an effective and leading way to building the future and replying to the current and future crises. The work intends to feed the scientific debate on the opportunity to focus attention on the origins of entrepreneurial and managerial behaviors that have lead to the crisis and the need for a profound rethinking of the business conduct. Moreover, it provides examples to the corporate world by observing the validity of the strategic and operational behaviors that are based on a durable and tough CSR orientation as well as on an authentic socio-responsibility driven decision-making process

    The Effectiveness of CSR’s Approaches: Before Practice or Theory? Insights from Italian Corporate Territorial Responsibility Projects

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    The work proposes an overview of the process and the models relative to the diffusion of CSR and sustainability based on a public-private involvement. The multilevel and multidimensional approach to CSR and sustainable growth can be interpreted as a specific model of territorial social responsibility which is based on the rise of paths of local governance and social innovation whose protagonists are members of a localized network. Starting from these premises and drawing from the reflections developed in previous works this paper intends to add new perspectives on the current debate by presenting a comparative analysis based on Italian case-studies related to CSR and sustainability-driven best practices which are being developed in two Italian areas (notably the Marches and Emilia Romagna Regions). The selected projects started even before the discussion on multilevel and territorial governance begun at the national and international level and they are highly innovative and dynamic since over the years their objectives have become progressively enriched and adapted. Using a qualitative-based approach the empirical analysis focuses on both the weaknesses and strengths, as well as on the similarities and differences of these bottom-up approaches of territorial responsibility and sustainability. Findings underline the effectiveness of approaches and tools which are not disconnected from specific local (anthropological, cultural and socio-economic) dynamics. Territorial pathways of CSR and sustainability seem more suited to lead and preserve sustainability over time. Accordingly , in the analysis of sustainable development processes, a priority should be attributed to the territorial dimension since it contains all combined factors (human and environmental resources, entrepreneurial and social creativity) which generate processes of social innovation. At the same time, these innovative pathways that are capable of generating social innovation underline the urgency of new theoretical constructs which take into account a maturity model of CSR/sustainability based on different stages and actors involved in CSR and sustainability-oriented projects. The chapter is organized into three main sections: the first presents the theoretical framework, the second describes the empirical analysis, while discussion and conclusions summarize the main theoretical propositions and empirical implications of the present research and offer insights useful for further investigation

    F#ck Your Family!: The Visual Jurisprudence of Automobility

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    This paper considers the popular visual jurisprudence of bumper stickers. Drawing upon a sample sticker/driver/vehicle assemblages observed at the Gold Coast, Australia in 2014, we argue that the meanings and messages projected by the assemblages have a significant legal dimension. The argument is located at the intersection of past research into bumper stickers, increased scholarly interest in the relation of law to automobility and especially recent considerations of the popular visual jurisprudence of the motor vehicle, its cultures and semiotics. In particular we argue that the sticker/driver/vehicle assemblage represents an engagement with law and legality. We suggest this goes beyond immediate denotations of brands with intellectual property or flags and the sovereign nation state to more essential engagement with consumer capitalisms law of the image, the friend/enemy distinction, the ouroboros of rights and the essential legality of living in a polis.Arts, Education & Law Group, School of Criminology and Criminal JusticeNo Full Tex
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