Saturday, April 02, 2022

Ambassador Andrea Canepari and the book on the Italian Legacy in Philadelphia


Ambassador Andrea Canepari, former Ambassador of Italy to the Dominican Republic and former Consul General of Italy in Philadelphia, and Professor Judith Goode, Professor Emerita of Anthropology and Urban Studies at Temple University, have recently published the book "The Italian Legacy in Philadelphia. History, Culture, People, and Ideas" which contains essays and images showcasing the rich contribution of Italians and Italian Americans to Global Philadelphia.


Here is a short description of the book by the publisher:
"Italian arts and culture have been a significant influence on Philadelphia dating back to Thomas Jefferson and colonial times. Throughout the ensuing decades, Italian art and architecture styles flourished, and wealthy Philadelphians traveled to Italy and brought back objects to display in emerging institutions of art and culture. New immigration formed neighborhoods—such as South Philly, home to the Italian Market—and Italian business leaders, politicians, artists, musicians and sports figures came to prominence and became part of the social fabric of the city.
This glorious volume, The Italian Legacy in Philadelphia, celebrates the history, impact, and legacy of this vibrant community, tracing four periods of key transformation in the city’s political, economic, and social structures. The editors and contributors chronicle the changing dynamics of the city as Italian immigrants established themselves and as they continue to have lively interactions with people and institutions in Italy.
Interdisciplinary essays, along with nearly 250 gorgeous images, explore the changing perspectives and styles of those who contributed Italian influences. As travelers to and from Italy, settlers and their descendants brought everyday cultural practices, memories, and traditions, they created different Italian-American experiences that became important parts of American culture, a legacy that is thriving in contemporary, globalized Philadelphia."

Andrea Canepari and Judith Goode (edited by). The Italian Legacy in Philadelphia. History, Culture, People, and Ideas, Temple University Press, Philadelphia, 2021, pp. 424, $50.00.

The book is available at  Amazon.com 
 
The Introduction of the book is available online

Andrea Canepari, former Ambassador of Italy to the Dominican Republic, was Consul General in Philadelphia and promoted public diplomacy initiatives to foster synergies among Italian-Americans, Italy, and the Delaware Valley. He served on several committees and boards, including the Presidential Advisory Board of Jefferson University. He received the 2016 Global Philadelphia Award from Temple University. He is the coeditor of The Italian Legacy in Washington, D.C.: Architecture, Design, Art and Culture (Skira, 2007), and editor of The Italian Legacy in the Dominican Republic: History, Architecture, Economics, and Society (Umberto Allemandi editore, 2021).

Judith Goode is Professor Emerita of Anthropology and Urban Studies at Temple University. She is the coeditor of The New Poverty Studies: The Ethnography of Power, Politics, and Impoverished People in the United States and coauthor of Reshaping Ethnic and Racial Relations in Philadelphia: Immigrants in a Divided City (Temple) and The Anthropology of the City: An Introduction to Urban Anthropology. In 2000, she was awarded the Prize for Distinguished Achievement in the Critical Study of North America by the Society for the Anthropology of North America.

Saturday, March 26, 2022

Italian diplomat Giuseppe Mistretta publishes "Africa’s pathways, The future of the Continent through Europe, Italy, China and New Actors"


The Italian Diplomat Giuseppe Mistretta, currently  Director for Sub-Saharian Africa at the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation and former Ambassador of Italy to Ethiopia, has just published the book "Africa’s pathways, The future of the Continent through Europe, Italy, China and New Actors" (LUISS University Press, 2021). The author sketches a realistic portrait of the continent avoiding some of the slogans and stereotypes related to Africa. He presents an overall optimistic approach on future prospects, without neglecting, however, the difficult tests foreseen in the coming years for African states and peoples. The foreword to the book is by Romano Prodi, former President of the EU Commission and former Italian Prime Minister.

Here is a brief description of the book by the Publisher:
"African current events, and the complex political and social dynamics underlying them, are still too often subject to commonplaces and stereotypes in the political debate and in the media. Giuseppe Mistretta is a diplomat and a major expert of the African continent. In this book, he outlines a realistic and detailed picture of Africa and its various countries, of their development perspectives, along with the broader international scenario involving China, Russia, Turkey and Saudi Arabia. He recalls the key role that Europe and Italy play as major actors in the African geopolitical context. Without overseeing the tough challenges and trials facing African countries and populations in the next years, Africa’s pathways offers an optimistic perspective on the future of this young and dynamic continent, where investments and initiatives of both public and private organisations are steadily growing, infrastructures are rapidly progressing, and extremely interesting potential is foreseeable in the technological and financial development."
 
Giuseppe Mistretta, Africa’s pathways, The future of the Continent through Europe, Italy, China and New Actors, LUISS University Press, Rome, 2021, pp. 150, €16.00.

Giuseppe Mistretta has been Ambassador of Italy in Angola and in Ethiopia, and has spent twenty years of his professional life in Africa. Presently he is Director for Sub-Saharian Africa at the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation. He is the author of several books, such as Un ponte lungo quattro secoli (Gangemi, 2013), Angola. Un paese moderno nel centro dell’Africa (Polaris, 2014) and I noti ospiti (Greco&Greco, 2018). He has also been a contributing editor to La Repubblica and Corriere della Sera newspapers and to the monthly magazine Capital. Africa’s pathways is his first book to be translated into English.

Saturday, March 19, 2022

“NATO and the Middle East. The making of a partnership”: the new book by Alessandro Minuto Rizzo


Alessandro Minuto Rizzo, a former Italian
 diplomat, has just published a new book titled  “NATO and the Middle East. The making of a partnership” (New Academia Publishing, 2018).


Here is a brief description by the author:
 “This is a book on NATO and the Arabs. The author has been Deputy Secretary General of NATO from 2001 to the end of 2007, and at present is the founder and President of the NATO Defense College Foundation in Rome. In those years he was tasked by the North Atlantic Council to launch possible partnerships with the Arabs of the Mediterranean, of the Gulf, and Israel. NATO wished to compensate for the disaster in Iraq, but we never had before any kind of relationship with the Arab world, traditionally very suspicious of NATO. The narrative of the book is about that policy and the objective to reach out to the Arabs. In the end it was considered to be a success story. Putting the basis for two existing partnerships and a long term relationship. A first edition of the book came out in Italy in 2013. As the relationship with the Arabs has recently become so dramatically relevant and the transatlantic bond so strained, this version  of the book has been substantially updated ,revised and expanded with a completely new Epilogue titled "The Concert of Nations in a Changing World. Where is Multilateralism Going?".  “I recognize that it is impossible to recount THE history of something! In politics, as in personal life, there is never just one version. All depends on one’s point of view, and the way you personally experience the situation… This work first and foremost is about my personal experiences in the field, dealing with governments and important players. Admittedly, dealing with unexpected situations sometimes can lead one to perceive an “exotic” dimension, which may unintentionally receive an overly “literary” treatment in the telling."

Alessandro Minuto Rizzo, NATO and the Middle East. The making of a partnership,  New Academia Publishing, Washington D.C., 2018, pp.222, $ 24.00

The book is available on main online bookshops (e.g. Amazon.com or Barnes and Noble)

It is also possibile to read online an excerpt of the book  click here 

Ambassador Minuto-Rizzo was Deputy Secretary General of the Atlantic Alliance from 2001 to 2007 and the founder and President of the Nato Defense College Foundation. Prior to that, he was Senior Advisor to three Ministers of Defense of Italy, a founding member of the Political and Security Committee of the European Union, and personal representative of the Prime Minister for the Trans-European Networks of transport and energy. He was also a member of the Board of the Italian Space Agency, the American Chamber in Italy, and of Finmeccanica in 2013-2014. He taught European Defense and Security Policy for several years at LUISS University in Rome. He is the author of The Road to Kabul. The International Community and the Crises in Central Asia (Il Mulino 2015) and A Political Journey Without Maps in the Greater Middle East (Rubbettino 2013).