00994nam0-2200301 --450 991026555700332120180419102941.088-299-1586-6IT2006-66920180419h20052004kmuy0itay5050 baitaIT 001yy<<La >>riabilitazione dell'emiplegicomanuale multimediale di valutazione e recupero delle funzioni motorieG. Dolce, R. Prati, L. F. Luccapresentazione del prof. Nino BasagliaPadovaPiccin[2005]stampa 2004XV, 128 p.ill.25 cm1 CD-ROMEmiplegiciRieducazione616.84221Dolce,Giuliano749902Prati,Ruggero749903Lucca,Lucia F.749904ITUNINAREICATUNIMARCBK991026555700332190 U 9c 18414/2017FMEBCFMEBCRiabilitazione dell'emiplegico1509284UNINA08463oam 2200721I 450 991015513000332120210104171538.01-317-50688-X1-315-71640-21-317-50689-810.4324/9781315716404 (CKB)4340000000023839(MiAaPQ)EBC4767028(OCoLC)1000430345(EXLCZ)99434000000002383920180706d2017 uy 0engurcnu||||||||rdacontentrdamediardacarrierThe Routledge companion to intangible cultural heritage /edited by Michelle L. Stefano and Peter DavisLondon ;New York :Routledge,2017.1 online resource (xxiii, 502 p.) illRoutledge companions1-138-86055-7 Includes bibliographical references and index.PART I. decade later: critical reflections on the UNESCO-ICH paradigm : 1 Development of UNESCO’s 2003 Convention: creating a new heritage protection paradigm? / Janet Blake -- 2 The examination of nomination files under the UNESCO Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage / Rieks Smeets and Harriet Deacon -- 3 A conversation with Richard Kurin -- 4 Placing intangible cultural heritage, owning a tradition, affirming sovereignty: the role of spatiality in the practice of the 2003 Convention / Chiara Bortolotto -- 5 Is intangible cultural heritage an anthropological topic? Towards interdisciplinarity in France / Christian Hottin and Sylvie Grenet -- 6 The impact of UNESCO’s 2003 Convention on national policy-making: developing a new heritage protection paradigm? / Janet Blake -- PART II. Reality check: the challenges facing intangible cultural heritage and its safeguarding : 7 From the bottom up: the identification and safeguarding of intangible cultural heritage in Guyana / Aron Mazel, Gerard Corsane, Raquel Thomas and Samantha James -- 8 Making the past pay? Intangible (cultural) heritage in South Africa and Mauritius / Rosabelle Boswell -- 9 A conversation with Yelsy Hernández Zamora: protecting intangible cultural heritage in Cuba -- 10 The management of intangible cultural heritage in China / Tracey L.-D. Lu -- 11 Aging musically: tangible sites of intangible cultural heritage / Bradley Hanson -- 12 Intangible cultural heritage in the Czech Republic: between national and local heritage / Petr Janeček -- 13 Damming Ava Mezin: challenges to safeguarding minority intangible cultural heritage in Turkey / Sarah Elliott -- 14 Documenting and safeguarding intangible cultural heritage: the experience in Scotland / Alison McCleery and Jared Bowers -- PART III. Intangible cultural heritage up close : 15 Officially ridin’ swangas: slab as tangible and intangible cultural heritagein Houston, Texas / Langston Collin Wilkins -- 16 Locating intangible cultural heritage in Norway / Joel Taylor -- 17 Intangible cultural heritage in India: reflections on selected forms of dance / Parasmoni Dutta -- 18 Second-hand as living heritage: intangible dimensions of things with history / Staffan Appelgren and Anna Bohlin -- 19 A conversation with Linina Phuttitarn: safeguarding a spiritual tradition in Thailand -- 20 Public experiences and the social capacity of intangible cultural heritage in Japan: Bingata, a textile-dyeing practice from Okinawa / Sumiko Sarashima -- 21 Stretching the dough: economic resiliency and the kinesthetics of food heritage across the US–Mexico border / Maribel L. Alvarez -- PART IV. Intangible cultural heritage and place : 22 Refuting timelessness: emerging relationships to intangible cultural heritage for younger Indigenous Australians / Amanda Kearney and Gabrielle Kowalewski -- 23 Common ground: insurgence, imagination and intangible heritage / Jos Smith -- 24 Indigenous geography and place-based intangible cultural heritage / R.D.K. Herman -- 25 ‘If there’s no place to dance to it, it’s going to die’: reflecting on the living tradition of Baltimore Club music and the importance of place / Michelle L. Stefano, Christopher Clayton and Baronhawk Poitier Williams -- 26 Landscape and intangible cultural heritage: interactions, memories and meanings / Maggie Roe -- PART V. Intangible cultural heritage, museums and archives : 27 Making history tangible: POLIN Museum of the History of Polish Jews, Warsaw / Barbara Kirshenblatt-Gimblett -- 28 A conversation with Clifford Murphy: archives and intangible cultural heritage -- 29 Bin Jelmood House: narrating an intangible history in Qatar / Scott Cooper and Karen Exell -- 30 Standing in the gap: Lumbee cultural preservation at the Baltimore American Indian Center / Ashley Minner -- 31 A conversation with Tara Gujadhur: the Traditional Arts and Ethnology Centre in Laos -- 32 Museums and intangible cultural heritage in Lusophone countries / Ana Mercedes Stoffel and Isabel Victor -- PART VI. Alternative approaches to safeguarding and promoting intangible cultural heritage -- 33 Safeguarding maritime intangible cultural heritage: Ecomuseum Batana,Croatia / Dragana Lucija Ratković Aydemir -- 34 Reflections of a heritage professional: intangible cultural heritage at the Ecomuseum of Terraces and Vineyards, Italy / Donatella Murtas -- 35 Conveying Peruvian intangible heritage through digital environments / Natalie M. Underberg-Goode -- 36 Growing ecomuseums on the Canadian prairies: prospects for intangible cultural heritage / Glenn C. Sutter -- 37 The intangible made tangible in Wales / Einir M. Young, Gwenan H. Griffith, Marc Evans and S. Arwel Jones -- 38 A conversation with Paula Assunção dos Santos and Marcelle Pereira: intangible cultural heritage and social and ecological justiceThis collection provides an in-depth and up-to-date examination of the concept of Intangible Cultural Heritage and the issues surrounding its value to society. Critically engaging with the UNESCO 2003 Convention for the Safeguarding of the Intangible Cultural Heritage, the book also discusses local-level conceptualizations of living cultural traditions, practices and expressions, and reflects on the efforts that seek to safeguard them. Exploring a global range of case studies, the book considers the diverse perspectives currently involved with intangible cultural heritage and presents a rich picture of the geographic, socioeconomic and political contexts impacting research in this area. With contributions from established and emerging scholars, public servants, professionals, students and community members, this volume is also deeply enhanced by an interdisciplinary approach which draws on the theories and practices of heritage and museum studies, anthropology, folklore studies, ethnomusicology, and the study of cultural policy and related law. The Routledge Companion to Intangible Cultural Heritage undoubtedly broadens the international heritage discourse and is an invaluable learning tool for instructors, students and practitioners in the field.Routledge companions.Companion to intangible cultural heritageIntangible propertyCultural propertyProtectionCultural propertyProtectionInternational cooperationCultural propertyProtection (International law)cultural heritageeurovocengUnescoeurovocengintangible asseteurovocengmuseumeurovocengheritage protectioneurovocengcultural promotioneurovocengElectronic books.Intangible property.Cultural propertyProtection.Cultural propertyProtectionInternational cooperation.Cultural propertyProtection (International law)cultural heritageUnescointangible assetmuseumheritage protectioncultural promotion363.6932.04.02EP-CLASSDavis Peter459459Stefano Michelle L972320MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910155130003321The Routledge companion to intangible cultural heritage2210849UNINA05039nam 2200625 450 991081055020332120230807212047.00-8389-1289-3(CKB)3710000000264453(EBL)1822793(SSID)ssj0001350274(PQKBManifestationID)12499866(PQKBTitleCode)TC0001350274(PQKBWorkID)11288442(PQKB)11015658(MiAaPQ)EBC1822793(Au-PeEL)EBL1822793(CaPaEBR)ebr10959920(OCoLC)893732382(EXLCZ)99371000000026445320141113h20152015 uy 0engurcnu||||||||txtccrLibraries and the Affordable Care Act helping the community understand health-care options /Francisca Goldsmith ; book design by Alejandra DiazChicago, Illinois :ALA Editions,2015.©20151 online resource (113 p.)Description based upon print version of record.0-8389-1288-5 Cover; Libraries and the Affordable Care Act; Contents; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Chapter 1. The Affordable Care Act: Overview and Context; Legislation Facts and Texts; A Brief History of Affordable Health-Care Legislation in the United States; Affordable Care Act Synonyms and Editorial Names; Roles of the Federal and State Governments; Federal Law; Insurance Exchange (Marketplace) Types; Medicaid; Outcomes Already In Place; Insurance Enrollment; Who is Affected by the Enrollment Requirement?; Recognizing Local Needs; Project Management and Staff Awareness of Affordable Care Act NewsChapter One: Questions and Tasks Notes; Chapter 2. Health Insurance and Insurance Exchange Structures; Federal and State Insurance Exchanges: More than Enrollment Portals; Criteria for Exchange Shopping Eligibility; Insurance Exchange and Insurance Plan Coverage Structures; Research a Plan's Network Details; Certified Assisters; Small Business Health Options Program (SHOP); Medicaid and the Health Insurance Exchange; Health-Care Access and the Library; Chapter Two: Questions and Tasks; Notes; Chapter 3. Know Your Community; What You Already Know; Digging More DeeplyEthnicity, Culture, Language, and Health Linguistically Isolated Populations; Your Community around the Clock; Learn Firsthand; Community Focus Groups; The Small Business Community; Growing Ties with Diverse Communities; Chapter Three: Questions and Tasks; Note; Chapter 4. From Affordable Care Act Policies to Functional Library Tactics; From Goals to Tactics; Goals of the Federal Health Agency; Five Policy Objectives of the Affordable Care Act; Strategies: What Has Happened Already and What Comes Next; Extracting ""Library Tactics"" from the Current Policy Strategies; Language AccessAccess to Technology Expanding Diversity Awareness; Your Library's Tactics; Chapter Four: Questions and Tasks; Notes; Chapter 5. Ethics and Legal Matters Related to Health-Care Information Services; Ethics: Codes of Appropriate Behavior; Other Ethics Codes of Interest to You and Your Community's Health-Care Information Consumers; Ethics and Politics; Ethics and Diversity; Ethics and Library Collections; Legal Aspects of Health-Care Insurance Questions; Technical Access and Technology Access; Chapter Five: Questions and Tasks; Note; Chapter 6. Health-Care Related Reference InterviewingCommunication Best Practices: An Overview; Practicing Good Health and Health-Care Reference Interviewing Techniques; Building the Inquirer's Reference Capacity; Professional Interpretive Services a Must; The Adult Researcher; Responding to Health-Care Insurance Questions; Affordable Care Act Reference Questions beyond Health-Care Insurance; Evaluating Reference Interviewing Success; Inventorying the Environment for Best Practices in Health-Care Reference; Chapter Six: Questions and Tasks; Note; Chapter 7. Literacy, Health Literacy, and Financial Literacy; Many LiteraciesDemystifying Health InsuranceThis important guide, the first written specifically for library staff, offers best practices, advice, and examples of library responses from the first open enrollment period (October 2013-March 2014).LibrariesSpecial collectionsMedicineLibrariesSpecial collectionsHealth educationHealth educationLibrary resourcesLibrariesSpecial collectionsMedicine.LibrariesSpecial collectionsHealth education.Health educationLibrary resources.025.2/761Goldsmith Francisca1094476Diaz AlejandraMiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910810550203321Libraries and the Affordable Care Act3995923UNINA