Anna Trono
University of Salento
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Publication
Featured researches published by Anna Trono.
International Journal of E-Planning Research (IJEPR) | 2018
Angelo Corallo; Anna Trono; Laura Fortunato; Francesco Pettinato; Laura Schina
Cultural events are an important driver of socio-cultural-economic transformation. The growth of Information and Communication Technologies (ICTs) has affected the ways in which people can play an active role in cultural event management and urban planning. This work proposes a methodological approach that identifies the key elements for building bottom-up urban e-planning strategies. After a brief theoretical analysis of the impact of cultural activities, tourism and ICTs on urban planning, this paper presents the results of an empirical study carried out in the Puglia region (south of Italy) during the cultural event known as “La Notte della Taranta”, in which the crowd created added-value information via comments posted on social media. Data were collected using a mobile application specifically created for this event as part of the Folkture project, as well as from Facebook and Twitter posts. Using network-analytic and sentiment/semantic algorithms, the work aims to support the event management decisional process and produce results valuable to the field of urban planning.
Archive | 2017
Anna Trono; Maria Chiara Zerbi; Valentina Castronuovo
This chapter considers urban renewal policies involving Italian cities over the last 20 years with reference to public and private measures designed to resolve situations of environmental and socio-economic blight in degraded urban areas. Presenting a case-based empirical examination of private initiatives and public policies adopted by local government, the chapter seeks to verify the capacity for management of public funding by local government and to assess the important role played by the private sector in supporting public bodies in the process of urban regeneration and therefore on urban governance. Three case studies are analysed: two medium-sized cities in the South of Italy, Lecce and Taranto, and a large city in the North, Milan. The first two were the recipients, albeit in different periods, of EU funds linked to the “urban” initiative for the renewal of strategic urban areas and urban development. The sharp differences in the results achieved were essentially due to the management capacity of the local administrations and their public and private partners. Taranto was unable to achieve the envisaged urban regeneration, intended to reverse the consequences of poorly conceived industrial and military policies that were responsible for the devastation of the area. This contrasted with the more positive outcome of the urban renewal strategies adopted in Lecce, where public and private actors invested and continue to invest in the rebirth of the old town and the recovery and promotion of the city’s cultural heritage. For Milan, the results are still being evaluated. In many cases, the partnership of public and private sectors facilitated the success of the strategies and measures adopted for the renewal of central and semi-central portions of the city (once occupied by industries or by infrastructure that had become obsolete). Over the last few years, the budgets of local bodies, together with their responsibilities in terms of orientation and monitoring of regional transformation processes implemented in concert with private players, have increasingly highlighted the need for public administrations to base their decisions on solid planning of priorities and management skills that are commensurate with the complexity of the measures to be implemented.
Archive | 2015
Anna Trono; Gabriella Trombino
One of the main issues in Europe in the field of environmental protection is the need to develop political decision-making systems that can support the complex mechanisms guiding the development and implementation of European policies while considering both the interests of stakeholders and social conflicts. Resolving the environmental problems of European coasts and seas requires a political response that takes account of all strategic sectors linked to water, nature, pollution, fishing, climate change and regional planning. Historically these have been considered separate policy domains, but with the adoption of the Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) in 2008, an integrated response is being pursued. This management approach considers the entire ecosystem and aims to achieve good environmental status for a number of specific environmental aspects.
Ocean & Coastal Management | 2014
Michael Elliott; Nicholas D. Cutts; Anna Trono
GeoJournal | 2002
Anna Trono; Maria Chiara Zerbi
Religious tourism and pilgrimage management: an international perspective | 2015
Anna Trono
Plurimondi. An International Forum for Research and Debate on Human Settlements | 2013
Anna Trono
Turizam : međunarodni znanstveno-stručni časopis | 2010
Noga Collins-Kreiner; Yoel Mansfeld; Anna Trono
methaodos.revista de ciencias sociales | 2017
Anna Trono; Luigi Oliva
Archive | 2017
Anna Trono