In the 1970s, Italy experienced a difficult crisis that marked the end of the economic model carried out after world war two. The resulting changes in production relations led to the disappearance of traditional public spaces and meeting places such as open squares, workplaces, party offices or the premises of left extra-parliamentary groups. Within this context, in the 1980s and 1990s, these groups managed to create new social and political spaces by setting up Self-Managed Social Centers, ie squatted properties which became the venue of social, political and cultural events. In Italy, over 300 Social Centers have been active over the past 25 years, especially in urban areas. Their organizational modes indicate examples of successful direc...
While regeneration is emerging as a paradigm capable of inspiring public policies and transforming l...
By highlighting the Italian “anomaly” vis-à-vis the Euroatlantic West, our paper argues that Italian...
This article is available on the website of the old publisher Franco Angeli ( http://www.francoangel...
In the 1970s, Italy experienced a difficult transition from Fordism to a flexible accumulation regim...
International audienceFrom the 1980s to the 1990s, squatting for Social Centers (Centri Sociali) has...
Con il termine “centri sociali autogestiti” si indicano sia quegli spazi fisici recuperati da gruppi...
This paper discusses the social movement known in Italy as the movement of the centri sociali. The e...
Die Centri Sociali in Mailand Im Gefolge der Protestbewegung der siebziger Jahre in Italien haben J...
This paper will describe the social uses of urban space by an urban movement actor, the Venetian ‘oc...
This article examines the crisis of social concertation in Italy since 2000. We argue that this cris...
<span class='abs_content'><span class="abs_content">This article is available on the website of the ...
The Italian commons (beni comuni) movement is a powerful example of the way in which social movement...
Squatting for housing and social centers has a long tradition in Rome since the end of the 1960s. By...
The Squatters\u27 Movement in Europe is the first definitive guide to squatting as an alternative to...
The paper focuses on the recent social housing practices in the Northern Italian context. The phenom...
While regeneration is emerging as a paradigm capable of inspiring public policies and transforming l...
By highlighting the Italian “anomaly” vis-à-vis the Euroatlantic West, our paper argues that Italian...
This article is available on the website of the old publisher Franco Angeli ( http://www.francoangel...
In the 1970s, Italy experienced a difficult transition from Fordism to a flexible accumulation regim...
International audienceFrom the 1980s to the 1990s, squatting for Social Centers (Centri Sociali) has...
Con il termine “centri sociali autogestiti” si indicano sia quegli spazi fisici recuperati da gruppi...
This paper discusses the social movement known in Italy as the movement of the centri sociali. The e...
Die Centri Sociali in Mailand Im Gefolge der Protestbewegung der siebziger Jahre in Italien haben J...
This paper will describe the social uses of urban space by an urban movement actor, the Venetian ‘oc...
This article examines the crisis of social concertation in Italy since 2000. We argue that this cris...
<span class='abs_content'><span class="abs_content">This article is available on the website of the ...
The Italian commons (beni comuni) movement is a powerful example of the way in which social movement...
Squatting for housing and social centers has a long tradition in Rome since the end of the 1960s. By...
The Squatters\u27 Movement in Europe is the first definitive guide to squatting as an alternative to...
The paper focuses on the recent social housing practices in the Northern Italian context. The phenom...
While regeneration is emerging as a paradigm capable of inspiring public policies and transforming l...
By highlighting the Italian “anomaly” vis-à-vis the Euroatlantic West, our paper argues that Italian...
This article is available on the website of the old publisher Franco Angeli ( http://www.francoangel...