Category: News

News and events header (4)

Call for Papers – Rethinking Welfare to Prevent and Combat Gender-Based Violence – Welfare e Ergonomia

The call for papers “Rethinking Welfare to Prevent and Combat Gender-Based Violence: Challenges and Opportunities for an Integrated System” is now open, edited by Pietro Demurtas and Emiliana Mangone.

Selected contributions will be published in issue no. 2/2025 of the journal Welfare e Ergonomia, published by Franco Angeli and recognized as Class A by ANVUR.

The main focus is on the prevention and combating of gender-based violence, considered strategic areas for rethinking the welfare system through an innovative and inclusive approach.

Deadlines

  • Abstract (max 3,000 characters, including spaces): submission by January 31, 2025.

Abstracts must include: introduction, scientific context, methodology, innovative results, and essential bibliography.

Topics of Interest

Proposals should address, also from a comparative perspective, topics such as:

  • Welfare models to prevent gender-based violence and support victims.
  • Integration of anti-violence, social, and digital policies.
  • Territorial management of policies to combat violence.
  • Strategies to address new forms of digital violence.
  • Intersectional approaches and responses to unmet needs of victims.

How to Participate

Send abstracts to welfarergonomia.rel@irpps.cnr.it. After acceptance, registration on the Franco Angeli OJS platform is required (registration link).

Welfare e Ergonomia was established within the Institute for Research on Population and Social Policies of the CNR and is funded by the Department of Human and Social Sciences, Cultural Heritage of the CNR. The journal adopts peer review using the double-blind method and is recognized by ANVUR as a Class “A” scientific journal for area 14 (Political and Social Sciences).

Read More
News and events header (3)

A Science for Peace

World Science Day for Peace and Development, celebrated on November 10, invites us to focus our attention on the possible meanings and contents of the relationship between science, society, and peace.

While science opened up to society starting in the 17th century, largely freeing itself from the paradigm of secrecy, it was primarily in the last century thatโ€”following the development and use of the atomic bombโ€”new, serious questions emerged about the relationship between science and society and about science’s contribution to the establishment of peaceful societies.

Certainly, this is neither an easy nor a univocal discourse, yet it is primarily the scientific community that questions itself. Against a figure like Edward Teller, considered the father of the atomic bomb, we can contrast Jozef Rotblat, one of the ten physicists who signed the 1955 Russell-Einstein Manifesto against the proliferation of atomic weapons, who would help create the theoretical foundations for a series of other important treaties limiting and even prohibiting nuclear weaponsโ€”the latter, which entered into force in 2021, was not signed by states possessing atomic weapons or that are part of military alliances based on nuclear deterrence.

While representatives of science and philosophy have long worked toward the creation of a European cultural space, modern science also bears witness to the necessity of human collaboration: science is an extremely interconnected global activity that lends itself well to building ties and bridges, emphasizing what unites human beings beyond nationalisms.

Some examples: CERN, the world’s most important research laboratory in the field of particle physics, was founded in 1954 by twelve European countries, a full three years before the Treaty of Rome, the founding act of the great European family, as Giorgio Parisi proudly noted.

Subsequently, in 2017, the Synchrotron-light for Experimental Science and Applications in the Middle East (SESAME) laboratory was inaugurated in Jordanโ€”envisioned years earlier by Pakistani physicist Abdus Salamโ€”where scientists from warring countries work not only together, but on a common project that benefits everyone.

Recently, the 2024 UN General Assembly resolution, Pact for the Future, while recognizing that advances in knowledge, science, technology, and innovation could lead to a breakthrough toward a better and more sustainable future for all, nevertheless warns: the choice is ours.

In this perspective, the Science and Dialogue for Peace Laboratory has been established within the CNR Department of Human and Social Sciences and Cultural Heritage, which interprets the scientific community’s desire to put its studies at the service of dialogue for peace and is based on the awareness that science as a whole is a driving force for knowledge and that dialogue is central to the processes of building peaceful societies.

Some of the foundations of scientific practice such as collaboration, the sharing of ideas, and critical reflection constitute valuable tools for managing conflicts and for preventing the outbreak of hatred, the transformation of the enemy into a criminal, and similar aberrations that Morin defines as war hysteria.

Peace, as John Galtung, founder of peace studies, reminded us, is not only the absence of war; the concept of peace includes everything that, oriented toward the prevention of war, is aimed at building peaceful societies, encompassing a variety of factors including the promotion of social justice and labor policies, freedom of expression, respect for gender identities, education, the fight against poverty, human and children’s rights, and sustainable development.

At the same time, for scientific innovation processes to be aligned with society’s values, needs, and expectations, it is necessary that society as a whole be able to understand and engage with the scope of scientific innovation in all its aspects, promoting cultural emancipation that enables the transition from users of innovative products to people capable of making informed choices related to their individual and social sphere. The relationship between science and society cannot be based solely on scientific information and dissemination, but rather on the conscious use of scientific knowledge to enable informed exercise of citizenship rights, as Pietro Greco indicated.

For this reason, an attitude of trust in science perceived not as magical, but as profane and tangible, is increasingly necessary; this is what is related to educational and knowledge levels, as we indicated in the CNR Report on the State of Research in Italy (Valente, Tudisca, Pennacchiotti https://www.dsu.cnr.it/relazione-sulla-ricerca-e-linnovazione-in-italia/). This represents a more mature vision of science, more closely linked to an active and proactive attitude on the part of civil society.

Adriana Valente

Read More
News and events header (2)

Genera 2025 Competition

The competition “Beyond gender stereotypes and towards the professions of the future: women and research in physics” is now open. It is aimed at secondary school students and organized by CNR – IRPPS and INFN – National Institute for Nuclear Physics with the support of the Mind the Geps project. The initiative aims to raise awareness on gender issues and the opportunities offered by the study of Physics through both basic research and its countless applications in technological, medical, cultural, and financial fields, among others.

Participants, individually or in groups and under the coordination of a teacher, must produce a short video on one of the following topics: Women and science, between stereotypes and prejudices or Female scientists who change the world for the first two years of secondary school, and Gender bias in innovation or Gender, Science and Media for the final three years.

Registration by: January 31, 2025
Project submission by: March 10, 2025

The full call for applications, including participation guidelines, technical requirements for videos, and topic descriptions, is available at: https://genera.sites.lngs.infn.it/ .

In order to provide an opportunity for further study on the topics of the call, the GENERA NETWORK group is organizing a free online training course for teachers entitled STEM Disciplines: between professions of the future and the gender gap. Participation in both the course and the competition will allow for the certification of a training activity equal to at least 24 hours. Further details on the course, which will take place between December 2024 and January 2025, will soon be available at: https://genera.sites.lngs.infn.it/.

Read More
News and events header (2)

Changing schools through theater

To celebrate World Teachers’ Day, researcher Tiziana Tesauro discusses the ways in which school spaces, teaching and learning processes, and the roles and relationships of teachers and students can be reimagined through theater.

In the article Changing schools through theater. Non-scuola and Arrevuoto, written for the journal “Scuola Democratica,” Tiziana Tesauro and Alfonso Amendola analyze the cases of two theater companies, Teatro delle Albe and Punta Corsara, empirically demonstrating how theater performs its educational function by subverting the order of discourse, power dynamics, and the routines of school practices. In this performative process, there is no knowledge to be transmitted but rather an experience to be lived; in this way, school space can be reimagined through theatrical space.

To celebrate World Teachers’ Day, researcher Tiziana Tesauro discusses the ways in which school spaces, teaching and learning processes, and the roles and relationships of teachers and students can be reimagined through theater.

In the article Changing schools through theater. Non-scuola and Arrevuoto, written for the journal “Scuola Democratica,” Tiziana Tesauro and Alfonso Amendola analyze the cases of two theater companies, Teatro delle Albe and Punta Corsara, empirically demonstrating how theater performs its educational function by subverting the order of discourse, power dynamics, and the routines of school practices. In this performative process, there is no knowledge to be transmitted but rather an experience to be lived; in this way, school space can be reimagined through theatrical space.

Read More
Header news and events (10)

Labor Exploitation, Rights, and Health in Contemporary Society

Welfare & Ergonomia Issue 1/2024
edited by Marco Omizzolo

The monographic issue of the journal Welfare & Ergonomia 1/2024 dedicated to “Labor Exploitation, Rights, and Health in Contemporary Society” (Franco Angeli) offers reflections on the labor market and its evolution in contemporary forms of exploitation and marginalization.

The 10 contributions presented allow this phenomenon to be framed in terms of a restructuring of Western society itself, of the social pact that constitutes and shapes it, and of the specific type of capitalism that organizes it. As the volume editor, Marco Omizzolo, emphasizes, labor exploitation can no longer be considered exceptional, “that is, as a malfunction of a labor market that actually works. No, on the contrary, all analyses that encompass different sectors of the labor market, from logistics to agricultural work to domestic care work, reflectโ€”also through life storiesโ€”on working conditions systematically based on marginality, vulnerability, and exploitation, which also embrace a dramatically growing number of people, workers, both quantitatively speaking.”

How to cite

Marco Omizzolo (ed.), 2024. “WELFARE E ERGONOMIA” 1/2024, Milan: Franco Angeli, DOI: 10.3280/WE2024-001003

Below are the LONG ABSTRACTS in English of the articles. The complete journal is available for purchase on the Franco Angeli publisher’s website.

Open Section

The complete journal is available on the Franco Angeli website.

This monographic issue also marked an important transition in the life of the journal Welfare & Ergonomia, whose editorship passed from founder Antonella Ciocia to Pietro Demurtas and Anna Milione (CNR-IRPPS), who will continue to share it with Mara Tognetti (Catholic University of Milan), and which became part of the editorial projects funded by CNR-DSU. These developments were presented on September 27, 2024, at the CNR’s Aula Marconi.

Read More
News and events header (4)

Hyperconnection in Adolescence – Audio Abstract

The study analyzes data from two representative cross-sectional surveys conducted among Italian adolescents in 2019 and 2022, within the framework of the Youth Trends Observatory. The study examines changes in social media screen time, identifies the main socio-demographic predictors of hyperconnection, and explores its effects on young people’s relational and psychological well-being.

Read More
Header EVENTS (8)

Call for Papers – 1/2025 – Welfare & Ergonomia

The call is now open to contribute to the next issue of the journal Welfare & Ergonomia, dedicated to “Social agriculture between new and old social work practices, theoretical perspectives and policy innovations“, edited by Angela Genova and Tiziana Tarsia.

The issue will collect theoretical contributions and empirical research (both subject to peer review) related to:

  • case studies at local, national and international level capable of producing critical reflections that highlight the challenges in implementing social agriculture, with a multidisciplinary approach
  • study of policies and their effects with specific attention to national and regional regulatory contexts and practices that connect emerging themes such as innovation processes in the primary sector and the diversification of agricultural activities, energy transition, the return of young people to agricultural activities, attention to well-being and the environment in a one health perspective
  • analysis of the results of social research evaluating social agriculture experiences as a mechanism for rehabilitation processes and social participation of people in disadvantaged situations, but also for promoting community activities and social cohesion.

Potential authors of this issue of Welfare & Ergonomia are invited to submit by September 25, 2024 an abstract of approximately 3,000 characters, and, if accepted, by January 20, 2025 the full contribution.

Read the complete call (English).

Born from a CNR-IRPPS project, Welfare & Ergonomia is a biannual journal published by Franco Angeli and recognized in 2017 in ANVUR’s class A for the field of Political and Social Sciences.

For information and contacts: welfarergonomia.rel@irpps.cnr.it.

Read More
News and Events Header (8)

Exploratory Market Survey FOSSR – PNRR

CNR-IRPPS is conducting an exploratory market survey to collect informal quotations, in order to identify an economic operator to potentially award the provision of a service for acquiring lists of names of the Italian population through electoral lists and vaccination centers.

This service is part of the Project “FOSSR โ€“ Fostering Open Science in Social Science Research“, funded under the NATIONAL RECOVERY AND RESILIENCE PLAN (PNRR) MISSION 4, “EDUCATION AND RESEARCH” – COMPONENT 2, “FROM RESEARCH TO BUSINESS” – INVESTMENT LINE 3.1, “FUND FOR THE CREATION OF AN INTEGRATED SYSTEM OF RESEARCH AND INNOVATION INFRASTRUCTURES”, FUNDED BY THE EUROPEAN UNION โ€“ NEXTGENERATIONEU FOSSR PROJECT.

The subject of the service is the provision of lists of names and related contact addresses necessary for carrying out 4 surveys planned under WP4 of the FOSSR project.

The deadline for submitting quotations is September 16.

Read the complete notice

Go to the CNR Public Relations Office page.

Read More
News and events header (7)

Award presented to the book Social History of Italian Emigration

The book Social History of Italian Emigration: From Unification to the Present, by Enrico Pugliese and Mattia Vitiello and published by Il Mulino, has received the 2024 Memorie Migrate Award from the Municipality of Castelluccio Inferiore.

The volume adopts a historical-sociological approach to the history of Italian emigration abroad, highlighting the significance of emigration in the transformations of our country.

Watch the interview with the authors and read the review in Il Manifesto.

Read More
Header news and events (5)

Intersectional Approach in Antiviolence Centers – Audio Abstract

In the article Intersectional Approach within Italian Antiviolence Centres. Challenges for Research and Policies, Angela Toffanin, IRPPS researcher, analyzes whether and how antiviolence centers in Italy manage to respond to the needs of women victims of violence with an intersectional approach, considering how different levels of vulnerability interact with each other.

The empirical part of the article discusses some of the representations of “women in situations of violence” and “women accessing services” shared by operators of antiviolence centers and shelters in Italy, collected in qualitative research conducted in 2019-20. At the same time, the article discusses some quantitative results on the training and professional practices of antiviolence centers regarding intervention with women who embody multiple vulnerabilities.

The article examines the relational dimension that is at the center of the debate on intersectionality and its potential in research activities. The objective is to contribute to the scientific debate on intersectionality as a theoretical and empirical tool, useful for avoiding the unconscious reproduction of inequalities and privileges during research activities and in professional practices, through a reflexive approach to the categories used and one’s position in a specific social context.

Listen to the author’s audio abstract.

Toffanin A. M. (2023). Intersectional Approach within Italian Antiviolence Centres. Challenges for Research and Policies. Fuori Luogo Journal of Sociology of Territory, Tourism, Technology, 16(3), 75-88. https://doi.org/10.6093/2723-9608/9511

Read More