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VENEZIA COME PARCO ARCHEOLOGICO NEL 2030: LA PROVOCAZIONE (O LA CONSTATAZIONE) IN UN VIDEO DEL GRUPPO ANONIMO “VENEZIA MORTA”

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«Venite al Parco Archeologico di Venezia, uno spazio aperto per voi». È lo slogan con cui si chiude l’ultimo, provocatorio video ideato e realizzato da Venezia Morta, la realtà (non chiamatelo collettivo) di stampo futurista emersa dal web con un proprio Manifesto nel corso del 2020, dichiarando appunto la morte di Venezia avvenuta per mano dei veneziani stessi. Rimasto sotto traccia per via dell’anonimato degli ideatori o, verosimilmente, per aver esplicitamente messo i veneziani di fronte alle proprie responsabilità, questa volta il progetto Venezia Morta ha collezionato in poco più di 48 ore migliaia di visualizzazioni nei propri canali e social network, grazie al video “Venezia 2030”. Nell’ironico filmato promozionale, l’attrice Flavia Imperato -che non fa parte del gruppo- passeggia per le calli della città d’acqua, naviga tra i canali e solca la laguna in barca, magnificando quella Venezia che, dopo dieci anni di pandemia, sarebbe alla fine diventata un parco archeologico pronto ...

POST NUMERO DUE

Immagine
  This study investigates the health-related social costs of air pollution in 432 European cities in 30 countries (the EU27 plus the UK, Norway and Switzerland). Social costs are costs affecting welfare and comprise both direct health care expenditures (e.g. for hospital admissions) and indirect health impacts (e.g. diseases such as COPD, or reduced life expectancy due to air pollution). These impacts affect welfare because people have a clear preference for healthy life years in a good and clean environment. As a clean environment is not something that can be bought in the marketplace , however, a robust methodology is required to monetize them in order to quantify the wider public health impacts. Environmental economists have performed numerous studies to quantify the impacts of air pollution on health and monetize these as social costs. These studies were used to develop the methodological framework adopted in the present study, which encompasses sixteen health impacts attributa...

POST NUMERO UNO PROVA

Immagine
  This study investigates the health-related social costs of air pollution in 432 European cities in 30 countries (the EU27 plus the UK, Norway and Switzerland). Social costs are costs affecting welfare and comprise both direct health care expenditures (e.g. for hospital admissions) and indirect health impacts (e.g. diseases such as COPD, or reduced life expectancy due to air pollution). These impacts affect welfare because people have a clear preference for healthy life years in a good and clean environment. As a clean environment is not something that can be bought in the marketplace, however, a robust methodology is required to monetize them in order to quantify the wider public health impacts.  Environmental economists have performed numerous studies to quantify the impacts of air pollution on health and monetize these as social costs. These studies were used to develop the methodological framework adopted in the present study, which encompasses sixteen health impacts attr...