Margherita Poto | Università degli Studi di Torino (original) (raw)
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University of the Basque Country, Euskal Herriko Unibertsitatea
UERJ - Universidade do Estado do Rio de Janeiro / Rio de Janeiro State University
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Papers by Margherita Poto
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio reports, Jun 1, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio reports, Mar 3, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Routledge eBooks, Mar 28, 2023
Septentrio Conference Series, 2019
Content: Our presentation will focus on a project idea that brings together conventional and unco... more Content: Our presentation will focus on a project idea that brings together conventional and unconventional teaching methods by means of a story of indigenous stories illustrated by artists. Storybooks -when authentic and not grammatically sequenced- have the merit among the others to: (1) convey a direct message; (2) offer different interpretations of a certain event, liberated from cultural assumptions; (3) expose the reader to several tenses at the same time (Ellis, Brewster, 2002; Mourão, 2003) which gives a sense of circuitry and multidimensionality; (4) be dynamic and adaptive, and therefore not statically connected to certain events or interpretation, as well as released from beliefs and value-sets; (5) be uncontroversial, thus universally shareable. Objective and audience: collecting indigenous stories from different legal traditions that will be narrated by two shape-shifters feminine spirits. Both stories and storytellers mirror the fluid and immanent governing water and e...
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio reports, Jun 1, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio reports, Mar 3, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Septentrio educational, Apr 28, 2023
Routledge eBooks, Mar 28, 2023
Septentrio Conference Series, 2019
Content: Our presentation will focus on a project idea that brings together conventional and unco... more Content: Our presentation will focus on a project idea that brings together conventional and unconventional teaching methods by means of a story of indigenous stories illustrated by artists. Storybooks -when authentic and not grammatically sequenced- have the merit among the others to: (1) convey a direct message; (2) offer different interpretations of a certain event, liberated from cultural assumptions; (3) expose the reader to several tenses at the same time (Ellis, Brewster, 2002; Mourão, 2003) which gives a sense of circuitry and multidimensionality; (4) be dynamic and adaptive, and therefore not statically connected to certain events or interpretation, as well as released from beliefs and value-sets; (5) be uncontroversial, thus universally shareable. Objective and audience: collecting indigenous stories from different legal traditions that will be narrated by two shape-shifters feminine spirits. Both stories and storytellers mirror the fluid and immanent governing water and e...
The range of treatments offered currently by healthcare providers worldwide is very fragmented, a... more The range of treatments offered currently by healthcare providers worldwide is very fragmented, and should be replaced with a system in which integrated therapies, both complementary and conventional, are concentrated in health-delivery organisations following a patient-centred approach. The first part of this article portrays the regulatory
Food law is one of those systems subject to global regulation: when the first food crisis hit in ... more Food law is one of those systems subject to global regulation: when the first food crisis hit in the late 1990s, the response of the European Union was to build up a well-structured skeleton of regulatory tools in order to frame psychotic symptoms of a threat to our health. The crisis and the consecutive drops in consumption were the engine that powered a season of regulatory reforms. Particularly, the regulatory model is based on good administration principles, a set of actors (national and supranational) and a toolbox of global mechanisms worked as laissez-passer to the qualification of food law as a sector of the global administrative law. The ripple effects of the regulation on the economies connected to the European market witness this trespass from the regional problem-solution to a wider dimension. After the global financial earthquake provoked by the 2008 financial crisis, a dramatic and even more pervasive wave of crisis engulfed Europe and the entire world. Since the financial crisis triggered an increase in unemployment, severe wage cuts and increased payments for loans, caused a decrease in the overall consumption of products worldwide. The decline in consumption consequently resulted in the decrease of the consumption of agro-food products, as people became more price-sensitive and were trying to reduce their expenditures. Because the overall household's disposal income decreased, the price contradiction became more noticeable for products with higher value added. As a result, the demand for more expensive products fell and nowadays many people choose to consume basic and cheaper products, leading thus to the decrease use of agro-food products. And once again the food law system had to be rethought. The decision to focus on safety and to build up a structured system around " safe food "-that worked so well as an anxiolytic response to the first (food) crisis-has to leave room to a more elaborate set of regulatory techniques, where the password shall be related to a concept of integrated sustainability, rather than on a vague concept of " consumers' health protection. Moving from a top-down regulatory perspective to a