2,890 results
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2. Digital transformation in the Greek fashion industry: A survey.
- Author
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Ponis, Stavros T. and Lada, Chrysanthi
- Subjects
FASHION ,INDUSTRY 4.0 ,COVID-19 pandemic ,RETAIL industry - Abstract
The purpose of this study is to explore the emerging issue of Digital Transformation (DT) in the Greek fashion industry, which according to literature, is highly fragmented, populated by a large number of digitally immature SMEs and financially strained, even before the outburst of the COVID-19 crisis. This paper aims to explore the current level of knowledge, understanding and adoption of Digital Transformation from fashion companies in Greece, by evaluating the results of an online survey of sixty middle and top-level executives from the fashion industry. The descriptive analysis of the survey data reveals the aforementioned technology lag and -among other findings- showcases the need for a more comprehensive, efficient, structured, less fragmented and coordinated approach towards developing a digital strategy and implementation roadmap that will guide fashion companies through the harsh realities of the post-COVID19 era, as dictated and imposed by the 'next normal' for manufacturers and retailers all over the world. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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3. A review of research on cyber-bullying in Greece.
- Author
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Antoniadou, Nafsika and Kokkinos, Constantinos M.
- Subjects
CYBERBULLYING ,VIOLENCE ,BIBLIOGRAPHICAL periodicals ,SCHOLARLY publishing ,RESEARCH papers (Students) - Abstract
Cyber-bullying is a recently emerging type of violence, which has gained significant media and research attention. Although research across Europe and the USA has been extensive, in Greece it is sparse and at an elementary level. This paper aimed at reviewing existing research literature on cyber-bullying experiences with Greek subjects. The bibliographical research carried out for this purpose yielded studies conducted between 2005 and 2012. Findings illustrate that to date, most evidence regarding cyber-bullying in Greece is drawn from European-level research projects which mainly provide statistics regarding the prevalence of the phenomenon, but give little information regarding its correlates, while most of the few national studies are conducted with small, non-nationwide samples or have not been published in scholarly papers. In conclusion, cyber-bullying research seems to be at a premature level in Greece, but it is a global issue that sooner or later should be systematically addressed. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
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4. Special education provision in Greek mainstream classrooms: teachers' characteristics and recruitment procedures in parallel support.
- Author
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Koutsoklenis, Athanasios and Papadimitriou, Vassilios
- Subjects
TEACHERS ,SPECIAL education ,SPECIAL education teachers ,BRAILLE ,EDUCATION policy ,TEACHER recruitment ,TEACHER qualifications ,MEDICAL teaching personnel - Abstract
Parallel support is a Greek type of special education provision aiming at providing additional support to students identified with special educational needs and/or disability in mainstream classrooms. Drawing from quantitative data for the school-year 2018–2019 this paper presents findings on certain characteristics of primary and pre-primary teachers who work in parallel support including gender, educational qualifications, teaching experience and further certifications in braille and/or sign language. In so doing, the paper analyses several shortcomings regarding the staffing of parallel support, especially in relation to teachers' qualifications and teaching experience. Additionally, it reports data on the recruitment procedures of teachers revealing significant delays in the hiring of teachers who work in parallel support. Finally, the paper discusses how the current educational policy creates structural barriers that hinder the educational inclusion of students with special educational needs and/or disability. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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- View/download PDF
5. Democracy, philosophy and sport: animating the agonistic spirit.
- Author
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McCoy, Breana and Martínková, Irena
- Subjects
DEMOCRACY ,PERSUASION (Rhetoric) ,SPORTS ,GOAL (Psychology) - Abstract
The three social practices – democracy, philosophy and sport – are more similar than we might initially suspect. They can be described as 'essentially agonistic social practices', that is, they are manifestations of 'agon' (contest). The possibility to participate in agonistic social practices derives from the human condition, i.e. from the necessity to care for one's existence, which requires ongoing attention and decision-making, and which sometimes means going against others. We call this character of human existence by the ancient Greek term 'polemos' (struggle), which can be manifested through various types of agon. If society cherishes agonistic social practices, it enables its citizens to compete to prove themselves and achieve goals (e.g. to push through a persuasive argument, or to win in sport) in a respectful, peaceful and productive way. Believed to have played a significant role in ancient Greece, agon presents itself in both intellectual and physical forms – in philosophy, democratic politics and sport – suggesting that the relationship between these practices is deep-rooted and significant. This paper explores the idea that developing our understanding of polemos and agon can enhance our experience of agonistic social practices and enable our existence to proceed in a more free, pro-social and enriching way. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
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6. Reconstructing historical road landscapes along the corridors of early 20th-century road networks in Northern Greece.
- Author
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Ntassiou, Konstantina
- Subjects
GEOGRAPHIC information systems ,CULTURAL landscapes ,CULTURAL property ,TWENTIETH century ,MAPS ,HISTORICAL maps - Abstract
The paper aims to reconstruct historical road networks, focusing on an area of South-Eastern Europe (specifically on a part of northern Greece) and to contribute to the research for cultural heritage landscapes promotion. By the proposed approach, ignored cultural corridors would be revealed, paving the way for significant management and the emergence of cultural landscapes. Geographical Information Systems (GIS) tools, textual references and historical maps are utilised to identify the historical roadways. The spatial information is mined from the historical maps, whilst the descriptive information is mined from both the textual sources and the maps as well. The combination of the maps and the narratives supported an integrated classification of the roads for all periods, according to the construction style/technique, allowing the interpretations of the historical roads' landscapes. The suggested approach and the consequent maps could serve as a valuable contribution to the enhancement of heritage management of historical landscapes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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7. Necroharms: the normalisation and routinisation of social death in refugee camps on the Greek Island of Lesvos.
- Author
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Iliadou, Evgenia
- Subjects
PSYCHOLOGY of refugees ,PRACTICAL politics ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,ANTHROPOLOGY ,VIOLENCE ,EXPERIENCE ,REFUGEE camps ,DEATH - Abstract
This paper explores the consequences of the necropolitical border regime on border crossers' lives on the Greek island of Lesvos. It focuses on the manifold abandonments (left-to-die practices) that border crossers experience inside and beyond the refugee camps and detention centres, arguing that this inhuman and degrading treatment inflicts, normalises and naturalises disposability, humiliation, and social death. The paper combines a social harm approach, critical migration and border studies, and insights from anthropology to analyse border crossers' lived experiences of violence. In doing so, the paper contributes to the growing literature on the politics of abandonment and disposability as a modus operandi of migration governance. It also expands on social harm typologies by introducing a new conceptual category of harm which I term 'necroharms'. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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8. Dynamics in the economic performance of farms: a quintipartite decomposition of the profitability change at the aggregate level.
- Author
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Sapolaite, Vaida, Reziti, Ioanna, and Balezentis, Tomas
- Subjects
ECONOMIC indicators ,PROFITABILITY ,CAPITAL intensity ,FARMS ,PROFIT margins - Abstract
This paper presents a framework for decomposition of changes in farm profitability with regards to structural, activity and intensity (efficiency) effects. The Index Decomposition Analysis (IDA) is adapted for isolation of the effects of profit margin, asset turnover, leverage, capital intensity and structure. The proposed approach complements the regression-based analysis as the IDA allows combining data from different levels of aggregation and taking the structural change into account. The Shapley value is applied to facilitate the decomposition. The proposed model is applied to the case of Greek farms for 2010–2017. Besides from the theoretical contribution to analysis of the farm profitability, this paper is first to evaluate the financial performance of Greek farms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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9. Making use of countertransference in qualitative research: exploring the experiences of mental health professionals working with refugee and immigrant families.
- Author
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Navridi, Anthia and Anagnostaki, Lida
- Subjects
IMMIGRANTS ,PSYCHOANALYTIC theory ,WORK ,FAMILIES ,INTERVIEWING ,QUALITATIVE research ,REFUGEES ,EXPERIENTIAL learning ,COUNTERTRANSFERENCE (Psychology) ,WOUNDS & injuries ,EARLY medical intervention ,PSYCHOANALYSIS - Abstract
The objective of the paper is to explore countertransference in qualitative research. Specifically, through the examination of a study which explored the experiences of mental health professionals working with refugee and immigrant families with infants and young children, the paper aims to demonstrate how the monitoring of countertransference can be transformed into a useful research tool. Countertransference movements are examined on multiple levels, in the mental health worker-immigrant/refugee dyad, in the researcher-participant dyad, and at the institutional level. The importance of thinking about a whole research process in terms of the process of countertransference is discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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10. Mousike or music? Using analysis to explore shifts in musical attention.
- Author
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Sborgi Lawson, Francesca R.
- Subjects
MUSIC industry ,MUSICALS ,LINGUISTICS - Abstract
This paper argues that ethnomusicology has trended away from analysing music sound and, consequently, has not distinguished between two distinct-yet-complementary modes of attention, namely the multimodal cognition associated with mousike and the more 'teleomusical' (music-directed) attention associated with music. Building on (1) research on music in ancient Greece and China, (2) studies on multimodal perception, (3) the discovery of teleomusical perception in infants, and (4) three contemporary case studies, this paper concludes that mousike and music may be best understood as endpoints on a continuum of musical engagement. Mousike requires attending to the synergistic interaction among competing modalities, such as the linguistic, musical, visual, and kinesthetic, whereas music involves a greater amount of 'technologizing' in 'extending' musical cognition (extended mind thesis), requiring an attentive shift towards music sound. Founded on stages in infant development, the adult processes of attending to mousike and music must be ascertained through analysis, which can, nevertheless, present both challenges and advantages. The challenges are the biases that can emerge from the music-directed emphasis of ethnomusicological training, which may impede our ability to attend to other competing modalities in performance; the advantages are the revelatory insights that can only come from attending to music sound. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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11. When private meets public: young people and political consumerism in the name of environmental activism.
- Author
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Hockey, Jennifer A.
- Subjects
- *
YOUNG adults , *ENVIRONMENTAL activism , *GREEN marketing , *CLIMATE change , *AUSTRALIANS , *HABIT - Abstract
This paper explores how Australian youth climate activists experiencing ecoanxiety overcome obstacles and frustrations in their climate action initiatives by exercising meaningful political agency in the marketplace. It briefly outlines how their concerns about climate change inaction galvanised and continue to drive their engagement in climate politics, reflecting fears and anxieties about their own and the planet’s future. Despite this growing interest and engagement in climate politics, however, the efficacy of political consumerism as a strategy, particularly among young people, remains largely unexplored [Micheletti, M. 2010.
Political Virtue and Shopping Individuals, Consumerism, and Collective Action . New York: Palgrave Macmillan], with limited research on their consumption habits and behaviours [Kyroglou, G., and M. Henn. 2022. “Young Political Consumers between the Individual and the Collective: Evidence from the UK and Greece.”Journal of Youth Studies 25 (6): 833–853. https://doi.org/10.1080/13676261.2021.2012139]. Thus, this paper investigates how young activists in the study, despite their vulnerabilities and experiences of ecoanxiety, endeavour to address structural imbalances linked to climate change through political consumerist initiatives. Utilising in-depth interviews and a photo-elicitation exercise with ten participants aged 18–35, the 2022 Australian study examines youth activism and the interplay between political consumption, views on hope and sustainable lifestyle choices. It reveals that environmentally conscious consumption patterns such as buycotting, boycotting, engaging in discursive actions, and embracing lifestyle politics that young activists engage in serve as a source of hope for them. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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12. Open educational resources in public administration: a case study in Greece.
- Author
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Mikroyannidis, Alexander and Papastilianou, Anastasia
- Subjects
- *
PUBLIC administration , *CROWDSOURCING , *REMIXING of sound recordings , *WEBINARS - Abstract
The use of Open Educational Resources (OER) for training in public administration has yet to see a wide adoption globally, mostly due to challenges related to the discovery and reuse of high-quality OER for training purposes. These challenges, combined with the general lack of openness in the public sector, have greatly impacted the penetration of OER in public administration. This paper presents a case study on the use of OER for expanding and enhancing curricular and resource sharing in public administration in Greece. Within this case study, an OER authoring and sharing platform was introduced to the Greek public sector, employing crowdsourcing methods for supporting trainers and trainees in authoring, sharing, reusing and remixing OER. The paper presents the deployment of this platform and the use of OER in the context of training programmes in the Greek public sector and reports on the lessons learned and the impact on public administration. The results of the case study showed that the use of OER was very positively received by civil servants, with a remarkable response, through active participation and engagement that led to the enhancement of existing OER and the co-creation of new ones for public administration. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
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13. The first reactions of early childhood education schools during the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic in Greece.
- Author
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Chalari, Maria and Charonitis, George
- Subjects
COVID-19 pandemic ,DISTANCE education ,SEMI-structured interviews - Abstract
In this paper, we report the first findings of a study that sheds light upon the way early childhood education schools in Greece responded to the COVID-19 lockdown conditions. Specifically, we explore through content analysis and semi-structured interviews: (a) the way 16 early childhood education schools in Athens (8 public and 8 private) first contacted students and their families to inform them about the suspension (b) the way they adapted their programmes to continue to provide education during the first lockdown (Spring 2020) using different models of home-schooling and (c) teachers' views on the teaching practices they followed at their schools and the challenges they faced. We argue that schools' first reactions reveal what they advocate, their real beliefs, their deep pedagogical goal, as well as the Greek Government's attitude towards early childhood education. In this attempt, we use analytical tools developed by Michel Foucault and refined by Mitchell Dean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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14. Coverage of environmental issues in undergraduate curricula in social work in four European countries: the UK, Switzerland, Germany and Greece.
- Author
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Papadimitriou, Evripidis
- Subjects
CURRICULUM ,NATURE ,ENVIRONMENTAL sociology ,SOCIAL work education - Abstract
The inclusion of the natural environment in the theory, education and practice of social work has increasingly become a matter of interest amongst scholars and social work educators. There is a large and increasing amount of literature on this topic. However, the inclusion of environmental issues in the curricula seems to be evolving very slowly to date. This paper examines 94 social work curricula in four European countries, and notes the presence of environmental issues in their content, by using term categories. Findings show that the natural environment is extremely under-represented in the education of social workers. The paper argues that social work curiccula need to undergo immediate reform on an international level. The discussion section includes suggestions on how the natural environment could be integrated into social work curricula. The first suggestion is to create new subjects with a direct reference to environmental issues and green social work. The second one is to include in existing subjects topics that will draw on environmental sociology and focus on the interconnections between social and environmental problems. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
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15. Greece and Yehud in the Achaemenid Period: The Background of Cultural Transfer.
- Author
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Poloczek, Sławomir and Ziemba, Kacper
- Subjects
AXIOMS ,SCHOLARS - Abstract
The paper aims to analyze the circumstances of cultural transfer between the Southern Levant and Greece in the Achaemenid period in order to assess the plausibility of Greek influences on the Hebrew Bible. First, the article addresses the theoretical question of possible "contact zones" between Greek and Levantine cultures. Second, it presents evidence of Greek presence in the Ancient Near East in that epoch. Third, it tries to estimate the possible extent of Greek influence in the Southern Levant. The next question to discuss is the presence of Levantines in Mainland Greece and the meaning of this phenomenon for understanding the situation in Yehud. Finally, the paper deals with the question of the mobility of the inhabitants of Yehud. In conclusion, the authors wonder whether the collected data allow for the creation of a coherent model of intercultural exchange between Greece and Yehud, as postulated by some scholars. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Restructuring local-level spatial planning in Greece amid the recession and recovery period: trends and challenges.
- Author
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Gemenetzi, Georgia
- Subjects
POLITICAL succession ,RECESSIONS ,PATRONAGE ,PRIVATIZATION - Abstract
The paper examines the restructuring of local-level spatial planning in Greece during and after the crisis period. It analyses the reform paths that were developed and assesses the directions of change concerning the scope of planning, the actors and the practices. The paper concludes that the orientation has turned towards special-purpose planning, the privatisation of planning powers, and the transfer of planning power to the central state. However, despite these shifts, the domestic local-level planning maintains its long trends, such as clientelism and conformative approach, making the trajectory of planning unpredictable. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
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17. Transferring sustainability: imaginaries and processes in EU funded projects in Thessaloniki.
- Author
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Athanassiou, Evangelia
- Subjects
SUSTAINABILITY ,FINANCIAL crises ,FRAMES (Social sciences) ,URBAN policy - Abstract
Since the 1990s, sustainability agenda has dominated cities' efforts to improve their environment; has been elaborated in European Commission documents, has been disseminated and funded through different mechanisms. The paper examines the way urban sustainability has been framed in Thessaloniki's EU funded urban regeneration projects, focusing on projects that have been materialized or planned, since the outbreak of the financial crisis in Greece in 2010. It places emphasis on conceptual shifts in EU policies regarding sustainability and their reflection on specific urban projects. A critical light is shed on imaginaries pursued, and processes employed in these projects. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
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18. A thorough look into the state-market divide: depoliticisation of privatisation in post-crisis Greece.
- Author
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Sarımehmet Duman, Özgün
- Subjects
PRIVATIZATION ,EUROZONE ,POLITICAL systems ,ECONOMIC policy - Abstract
Privatisation is a strategic policy restructuring the relationship between the state and the market, the public and the private, and hence, the political and the economic. It opens non-capitalist spaces to capital accumulation and creates new markets for international competition. Privatisation alters a society's relationship to public goods, services and rights by commodification practices, and turns into a highly controversial reform in economic restructuring. This paper discusses how privatisation gained priority in Greece with the economic crisis. It incorporates the concept of depoliticisation to offer a new perspective on the analysis of the economic plans, programmes and documents that Greece signed with international creditors for the sake of its economic recovery. It claims that depoliticisation functioned as a strategy for putting privatisation policies onto the agenda by simply reproducing the elusive separation between the political and the economic. The paper argues that introducing extensive privatisation policies through internationally agreed-upon documents confirms the attempt to erode the political character of the process in order to (i) present such policies as a technical, economic imperative, (ii) externalise political decisions, and (iii) limit public discontent. The depoliticisation and privatisation processes reinforce each other in widening the state-market divide. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
19. Entity Management Using RDA and Wikibase: A Case Study at the National Library of Greece.
- Author
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Zapounidou, Sofia, Ioannidis, Lazaros, Gerolimos, Michalis, Koufakou, Eftychia, and Bratsas, Charalampos
- Subjects
- *
KNOWLEDGE graphs , *INFORMATION services , *DATA libraries , *DATA curation , *DATA modeling - Abstract
The force driving the implementation of Linked Data (LD) technologies in libraries is the aspiration for widespread interoperability of library data and for advanced information services. Toward these goals, libraries change their data models, update their communication formats, and develop prototype applications that use new models and formats and enable entity-based cataloguing. The National Library of Greece (NLG) has been actively adapting its policies, workflows, and tools to make its data LD-ready. Within this context, NLG has developed -in cooperation with Open Knowledge Greece- an entity management prototype using RDA/RDF in a Wikibase instance. The vision is to build a shared entity management system used by all memory institutions in Greece to describe entities of Greek interest. Data is to be stored as a knowledge graph that can be exported in RDF serializations, and in legacy MARC format. This paper first examines related efforts from other National Libraries, and then outlines the steps involved in the publication of the NLG Authority File as linked data; namely dataset selection, modeling, data curation, mapping, and publication. The development of the NLG entity management prototype is also presented. The paper concludes with challenges, lessons learned, and next steps. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. Recollection of Childhood Memories from Parental Drug and Alcohol Misuse in a Qualitative Study of Women in Greece.
- Author
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Sakkopoulou, Anna and Tsiboukli, Anna
- Subjects
ADVERSE childhood experiences ,MEMORY ,CHILDREN of people with alcoholism ,SUBSTANCE abuse ,ALCOHOLISM ,PSYCHOLOGY of parents ,CHILDREN of parents with disabilities ,INTERVIEWING ,GAMBLING ,QUALITATIVE research ,PSYCHOSOCIAL factors ,THEMATIC analysis ,THERAPEUTIC alliance - Abstract
The present paper focuses on the recall of childhood experiences of adults who had at least one parent misusing alcohol and/or drugs. The study aims to gain an in-depth understanding of the recall of these experiences in adulthood and their effect on relationships with significant others. Twelve (12) adults, who had experienced as children in their family's drug and alcohol misuse were interviewed and their interviews were analyzed using thematic analysis. The findings of the qualitative study suggest that adults recall in their childhood the reversal of family roles and traumas that seem to affect their current relationships. The research findings indicate the necessity of supporting early enough children who grow up in families where alcohol and drug misuse are part of daily life and to create a therapeutic alliance in adult life in order to advance in their relationship with self and others. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Geographies of (in)justice and the (in)effectiveness of place-based policies in Greece.
- Author
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Petrakos, George, Topaloglou, Lefteris, Anagnostou, Ageliki, and Cupcea, Victor
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NONPROFIT sector ,METROPOLITAN areas ,PUBLIC sector ,EXTRATERRESTRIAL resources ,MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
This paper investigates the policy context of spatial injustice in Greece. Given the polarized nature of the economy and the centralized structure of the public sector, the paper examines whether place-based policies that attempt to strengthen the local level and mobilize local assets would be better opt to deliver a fair and equitable distribution of socially valued resources and opportunities in space. In this context, the paper presents and discusses the findings of four case studies and four policy-driven actions related to the design and implementation of a post-lignite local strategy, the establishment of a credible innovation strategy in a metropolitan area, the development of social economy in a lagging region and the upscaling of local government in a medium-sized city. The case studies investigate the conditioning factors that encourage or obstruct the local level to implement effective place-based policies that can contribute to spatial justice. On this basis, the paper evaluates the capability of the current policy and institutional setting to generate spatial justice and provides policy recommendations that will empower the local level in confronting socio-economic challenges and unbalanced spatial growth. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Damages and Failures of Structures in İzmir (Turkey) during the October 30, 2020 Aegean Sea Earthquake.
- Author
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Gurbuz, Tuba, Cengiz, Abdullah, Kolemenoglu, Sener, Demir, Cem, and Ilki, Alper
- Subjects
EFFECT of earthquakes on buildings ,EARTHQUAKE magnitude ,GROUND motion ,EARTHQUAKE damage ,EARTHQUAKE hazard analysis ,EARTHQUAKES ,REINFORCED concrete buildings - Abstract
On 30.10.2020, a Mw = 6.6 magnitude earthquake occurred at the offshore Aegean Sea, hitting the western coast of Turkey and Samos Island of Greece, causing loss of lives and properties. In the scope of this study, a site investigation was conducted at the earthquake-hit area of İzmir (Turkey), where 17 buildings (7 partially, 10 totally) were collapsed and many of them were heavily damaged. The impact of the Aegean Sea Earthquake on structures in the İzmir region, as observed during this site investigation is presented in this paper. The seismic vulnerabilities of structures, by referring to the observed typical damages caused by the earthquake, are discussed and preliminary analyses were also conducted in two reinforced concrete buildings to investigate the causes of seismic damages. The damage mechanisms are explained to highlight the causes and defects that led to failure of structures and recommendations are made for preventing such failures and life losses in the future. In additional to the structural damages, widespread non-structural damages which can make buildings non-functional are investigated. This paper also outlines seismological aspects of the region and characteristics of the recorded strong ground motion. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. 'Tomorrow we make it better': an art therapist's reflection on a community mural in a refugee camp in Greece.
- Author
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Hollingsbee, Emily
- Subjects
CAMPS ,SOCIAL support ,ART therapists ,DRAWING ,REFUGEES ,CASE studies ,MEDICAL practice ,REFLECTION (Philosophy) ,MEDICAL needs assessment - Abstract
This paper will explore an art therapist facilitated mural within a refugee camp in Greece. It will present literature regarding a 'psychosocial' frame of art therapy and its considered relevance when working with refugee populations, drawing particular attention to theory on working cross culturally, outside the art therapy room, and the art making process. It will describe the context and present a vignette that reflects on the author's own challenges and discoveries within the mural project that may indicate its significance within the art therapy field. The discussion will explore the possible benefits and value of art mural practice, including thoughts on symbolism within the process and final image. Limitations and further recommendations will be explored and considered. The paper will conclude that a psychosocial approach provides an appropriate framework for art therapists working with refugees and that community murals may hold therapeutic value that could be further explored with primary research and data gathered from participants to expand the discussion of its relevance as a practice within the field. The implications of this paper are that future research into art therapist facilitated community murals is possible within a similar framework and can be used when working with a community of people who have experienced displacement in order to address some of the psychological and social needs. Plain-language summary This paper is an art therapist's reflection on a community mural co-facilitated by a team of art therapists in a refugee camp in Greece. The paper will examine a 'psychosocial' approach within art therapy, whereby the psychological and social needs of a person/s are considered, it will also discuss ideas on working outside the art therapy room and theories relating to the healing elements in a therapeutic art making process. A vignette will describe the personal experiences of an art therapist facilitating a mural within a refugee camp in Greece. The paper will then discuss the possible therapeutic value of the mural, and the benefits of art therapist facilitated community art making that could be drawn from the vignette. The paper will conclude that further research is needed into art therapist facilitated community murals to enhance the discussion and that it would benefit from participant's voices to understand how they experience the practice and to determine any therapeutic value. The paper implies that community murals are a relevant practice to consider within the scope of the art therapy profession and that within a similar framework it can be employed to address the psychological and social needs of a displaced community. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2019
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Extract, Datafy and Disrupt: Refugees' Subjectivities between Data Abundance and Data Disregard.
- Author
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Tazzioli, Martina
- Subjects
GOVERNMENTALITY ,POLITICAL refugees ,DATA extraction ,REFUGEES ,SUBJECTIVITY ,INFORMATION sharing ,PETITIONS - Abstract
This paper deals with data extraction and data circulation that are at stake in refugee governmentality with a focus on the Cash Assistance Programme in Greece. It focuses on the data extraction activities which are part of the cash Assistance Programme and on the ways in which data is shared and not shared among the actors involved. It starts by critically engaging with debates on techno-humanitarianism in refugee governmentality, and it moves on by drawing attention to the constitutive dynamics between data abundance and data disregard. Then, it analyses the extent to which different actors can access and act upon the data. The second part of the article centres on the peculiar modes of subjectivation that asylum seekers are shaped by, as cards beneficiaries and techno-users. It shows that asylum seekers are both passive surfaces of data extraction and, at the same time, are object of a request to speak and to produce data and feedback about their use of the card. The paper concludes with a section about the injunction imposed on asylum seekers to act as autonomous and responsible techno-users and, at the same time, to comply with multiple spatial restrictions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. Transnational spirituality and healing: an ethnographic exploration of alternative medicine in Lisbon and Athens.
- Author
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Roussou, Eugenia
- Subjects
FIELD research ,SPIRITUALITY ,CULTURAL pluralism ,CREATIVE ability ,SPIRITUAL healing ,ETHNOLOGY research ,FIELDWORK (Educational method) ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,ALTERNATIVE medicine - Abstract
In contemporary Portugal and Greece, the number of individuals who resort to alternative medicine continues to rise. From yoga, meditation and energy therapies to healing based on various religio-spiritual traditions, there is a variety of therapeutic practices one can choose from. The main objective of this paper is to show how a therapeutic and spiritual pluralism is produced through the implementation of transnational influences on spirituality and healing. It investigates the diverse ways in which the practice of spirituality through healing leads to a better understanding of how current processes of globalisation, transnationalism and multiculturalism affect, develop and negotiate one's individual, social, spiritual and medical identity. Based on ethnographic fieldwork in Lisbon and Athens, the Portuguese and Greek capital equivalently, the paper explores the pluralistic and transnational character of alternative medicine and the spiritual creativity with which such therapies are practised. Taking the role of the (spiritual) holistic practitioner as healer as a point of departure, it provides an empirical account of the shifting status of both religiosity and healthcare in two southern European countries that are still followed by the stereotype of being predominantly linked to Christianity as the denominational religion, and to biomedicine as the predominant healthcare system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. Fiscal reforms in the EMU: the Greek response.
- Author
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Liargovas, Panagiotis and Psychalis, Marios
- Subjects
ECONOMICS ,STRUCTURAL frames ,REFORMS ,IMPLEMENTATION (Social action programs) - Abstract
The common fiscal rules in the EMU constitute one of the main economic integration pillars, with the fiscal governance framework in the eurozone having been significantly reformed over the economic crisis period. Changes focusing on creating fiscal stability conditions, such as the national Fiscal Councils, the European Semester, the national Medium-Term Budgetary Frameworks (MTBFs), the debt brake and the automatic fiscal correction mechanism (budget cutter) were adopted through the legislative measures introduced by the Six Pack, the Two Pack and the Treaty on Stability, Coordination and Governance in the EMU (TSCG). This paper examines both the formal and actual response of Greece to the eurozone fiscal governance reforms. Greece seems to promote the formal implementation of these reforms by transposing them into its national law, but the paper's conclusions confirm that there is a deviation between reaching the defined goals and actually implementing the reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. Together and apart: using Plasticine as a sensory therapeutic intervention for a service user diagnosed with severe learning disabilities.
- Author
-
Chaidemenaki, Loukia
- Subjects
SOILS ,SOCIAL support ,DUAL diagnosis ,PSYCHODYNAMIC psychotherapy ,REHABILITATION of people with mental illness ,TREATMENT effectiveness ,CONCEPTUAL structures ,SEVERITY of illness index ,ART therapy ,DISEASE prevalence ,RESIDENTIAL care ,PEOPLE with intellectual disabilities ,PSYCHOTHERAPY - Abstract
The prevalence of mental illness among people diagnosed with severe learning disabilities is well documented, however limitations in verbal, cognitive, emotional and social skills are often used as reasons to withhold referrals for psychotherapeutic interventions within this client group. This paper describes the one-year art-therapy informed psychotherapeutic work carried out with Ioanna, a 61-year-old lady with a dual-diagnosis that took place in a Residential Unit providing psychosocial support for people with severe psychiatric disorders and/or learning disabilities in Athens Greece during 2018. Within the case-vignette the use of Plasticine as a therapeutic medium is presented. Concepts from psychodynamic and object-relations theory are also used as a framework for understanding the course of this therapeutic intervention. The contribution of sensory materials appeared valuable in this psychotherapeutic intervention with an apparently 'untreatable' institutionalised service user, helping to build a trusting psychotherapeutic relationship, and enable Ioanna to regulate some of her challenging behaviours. The use of Plasticine and play, and the development of a 'together and apart' game within a psychotherapeutic intervention, appeared to modify Ioanna's challenging behaviour, and improve her ability to relate and communicate with the therapist and her carers. Research into the use of Plasticine as part of an art therapy programme for people with severe learning difficulties, would provide a useful addition to the knowledge in this area. A review of the current psychiatric services in Greece and of what constitutes 'clinical progress' also seems necessary. This paper describes the one-year art-therapy informed psychotherapeutic work I undertook with Ioanna, a 61-year-old lady with a diagnosis of severe learning disabilities and mental illness. This took place in a Residential Unit providing psychosocial support for people with severe psychiatric disorders and/or learning disabilities in Athens Greece during 2018. At this time, I was also undergoing my art therapy training. The practice description in this paper describes the contribution of Plasticine as a sensory, therapeutic medium. Theories related to the relationship that a baby or child develops with its primary care giver are used as a framework for understanding the course of this therapeutic intervention. The relationship between learning disabilities and mental illness is well documented in clinical literature, however people with dual diagnosis or severe learning disabilities are often overlooked where referrals for psychotherapy are concerned, as it is believed that they cannot take part due to a perceived lack of communication skills. This paper describes how the use of Plasticine and playing a 'together and apart' game appeared to contribute to Ioanna's development of a trusting therapeutic relationship, the modification of challenging behaviour, and improved communication through the medium of Plasticine and play. Research into the use of Plasticine and the 'together and apart game' with this client group is recommended. It is also important to rethink and reflect on the provision of psychotherapeutic services within the current psychiatric services in Greece for this client group, and consider what constitutes clinical 'progress' from the client's perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Counter-mapping the techno-hype in migration research.
- Author
-
Tazzioli, Martina
- Subjects
- *
MASS migrations , *HIGH technology , *NETWORK governance , *IMMIGRANTS - Abstract
This paper deals with the techno-hype in migration research and argues that this latter reproduces a state-gaze on migration and technology. It contends that instead of focusing exclusively on the surveillance exercised on migrants through technology, it is key to investigate how migrants are affected by technologies and which struggles they engage over these. The paper develops a counter-mapping approach to the techno-hype which involves taking migrants' struggles as a standpoint, challenging presentism, and investigating the assemblages of low-tech and high-tech in migration governance. The paper moves on by illustrating these two points. First, focusing on Greece, it interrogates what it means to see technology like a migrant, by considering how technologies obstruct migrants' access to asylum and by analysing migrants' claims over technology. Second, it undoes presentism by tracing the genealogy of border technologies, and explores the entanglements between low-tech and high-tech at the border. The paper concludes explaining that a counter-mapping approach conceptualises mobility not as a by-product of technologies of control but, rather, as what states try to bridle, channel and manage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. Innovation in the Public Sector: Insights into the Job Design that Enhances Public Servants' Innovative Behavior.
- Author
-
Tsamantouridis, Kyriakos, Bellou, Victoria, and Tsameti, Angeliki
- Subjects
CIVIL service ,WORK design ,PUBLIC sector ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior ,JOB descriptions - Abstract
The purpose of this paper is to examine the distinct role of every core job characteristic for public servants' innovative behavior, taking also into consideration the type of job position (front-line versus back-office). Evidence from 358 Greek public servants suggests that autonomy, task significance, feedback from the job itself, and skill variety do significantly impact employee innovative behavior. Moreover, significant differences regarding these relationships between front-line and back office public servants were revealed, as the former's innovative behavior is mostly affected by skill variety while the latter's by task significance. In addition, feedback and skill variety affects only the innovative behavior of Greek front-line public servants. Practical implications focus on redesigning jobs, as a means for improving innovative behavior in public organizations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Unnoticed introductions, a silent threat for biodiversity: island endemic Ladigesocypris ghigii (Actinopterygii, Leuciscidae) translocated to continental Greece.
- Author
-
ZOGARIS, S., CHARMPILA, E. A., VUKIĆ, J., GIAKOUMI, S., BARBIERI, R., ZOGARIS, D., AŠENBRENEROVÁ, E., VIÑUELA RODRÍGUEZ, N., TARKAN, A. S., and ŠANDA, R.
- Subjects
ACTINOPTERYGII ,CYTOCHROME b ,ANGUILLA anguilla ,BIODIVERSITY ,ISLANDS ,ECOSYSTEMS - Abstract
Morphological similarity between an intruder and a native species can hinder the detection of the intruder. The undetected non-native species will thus have more time to affect the local ecosystem and spread. This paper describes an instance of unnoticed introduction of a fish species morphologically resembling a native endemic species. We report on the first established population of the Rhodes minnow, Ladigesocypris ghigii (Actinopterygii: Leuciscidae), endemic to Rhodes Island, which has been recently introduced to a river near Athens, mainland Greece. When it was first noticed, in 2017, the species was misidentified due to its morphological similarity to Pelasgus marathonicus, the only native leuciscid of the streams and rivers around Athens, until it was subject to genetic and detailed morphological examination. Genetic analyses based on both mitochondrial (cytochrome b) and nuclear (recombination activating gene, RAG1) markers unambiguously identified the collected individuals and provided information on the relationships of Ladigesocypris at both the species and generic level. Our investigation supports that L. ghigii was recently established near Athens, and that the population probably originated from Rhodes Island, an eastern Aegean island. In 2021, a high-density thriving mainland population coexisted solely with the native European eel (Anguilla anguilla) along at least 9.7 km of river habitat. It was assessed as being of high invasive risk for the region where it was established by the Aquatic Species Invasiveness Screening Kit (AS-ISK) screening tool. We propose a feasibility study be undertaken to investigate the application of measures that may include actions to exterminate or contain the population. Special attention is required since the species is considered vulnerable in its native range, while the translocated population coexists with native biota within a stream ecosystem of outstanding local conservation value. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. No national plans. Tackling radicalisation and discrimination with the effort of civil society in Greece and Romania.
- Author
-
Shangoyan, Markar, Aposkiti, Christiana, Pirlogea, Isabella, and Herki, Norina
- Subjects
- *
GOVERNMENT policy , *SOCIAL cohesion , *THREATS of violence , *SOCIALIZATION , *CIVIL society , *CITIES & towns , *GOVERNMENT information , *SUFFERING - Abstract
This paper looks at the two case studies of Greece and Romania where national policies and strategies for Prevention and Countering of Violent Extremism (P/CVE) are non-existent or suffer from a deficiency in implementation. The analysis begins with a diagnosis of each country's history and reaction to different types of violent extremism and attempts to highlight the ways in which each of them has dealt with this phenomenon. Both in Greece and Romania, the task has fallen into the hands of civil society to lead and develop local, regional, and national P/CVE programs. This is examined in this article, followed by an in-depth analysis of local action against radicalisation and VE in two cities in Greece and Romania. The paper also takes the perspective of education and social cohesion in analysing the issues at hand. The results of the analysis showcase that both countries lag in realising effective P/CVE strategies, with Greece having the institutional infrastructure – relevant agencies and local actors – albeit remaining inactive, and Romania still struggling to recognise the potential threat of radicalisation and violent extremism in the country – exemplified by the lack of open conversation at the level of government and public information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. China's 'Silky Involvement' in the Eastern Mediterranean: A geopolitical upper hand for Greece and Cyprus?
- Author
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Kahveci-Özgür, Hayriye and Duan, Jiuzhou
- Subjects
CHINESE people ,BELT & Road Initiative ,GEOPOLITICS ,WENCHUAN Earthquake, China, 2008 ,FINANCIAL crises - Abstract
The paper argues that Chinese involvement in the Eastern Mediterranean is primarily motivated by increasing the country's economic role within the region through Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). The paper uses case study analysis methodology dwelling on the evolution and content of Chinese involvement in Greece and Cyprus. Primarily focusing of the nature of the Chinese investments in strategic sectors of the two cases in question the role that that China plays in Eastern Mediterranean is described as a 'silky involvement'. China's policy choices are also perceived to be an opportunity for Greece and Cyprus to combat the negative effects of 2007–2008 economic crises and to increase their geopolitical stronghold in the post-Cold War geopolitical environment of the Eastern Mediterranean. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Moving between worlds: border women in narratives of forced displacement in Greece.
- Author
-
Tamboukou, Maria
- Subjects
FORCED migration ,BOUNDARY disputes ,WOMEN refugees ,POLITICAL geography ,BORDERLANDS ,GEOPOLITICS - Abstract
In this paper I look at refugee women's narratives of border crossings and inhabiting borderlands. Following tracks and traces of feminist geopolitics, the paper unfolds in three parts: first I explore borders as political, cultural and material practices, particularly focusing on the sea borders of the Aegean islands as gateways to 'the fortress Europe'. Then I consider border situations within symbolic and imaginary spaces inspired by feminist critical poetics. Finally, I turn to women's stories, which were not so much about understanding borders and their contested politics, but rather about the risks and joys of crossing them at any cost, as well as about surviving the borderlands. My argument is that refugee women's stories of forced displacement challenge abstract theorization of borders and illuminate the importance of embedded and embodied practices in understanding the borderlands as liminal and marginalized spaces of transition, thus contributing to a wider project of charting feminist political geographies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Between escalation and détente: Greek-Turkish relations in the aftermath of the Eastern Mediterranean crisis.
- Author
-
Grigoriadis, Ioannis N.
- Subjects
REFUGEES ,TURKS ,CONFLICT management ,EUROPEAN Union membership ,INTERNATIONAL relations ,CRISES - Abstract
This paper aims to evaluate the state of Greek-Turkish relations in light of recent developments in the reconfiguration of Turkish foreign policy. Following twenty years of détente and relative calm in bilateral relations, the year 2020 witnessed two escalations in Greek-Turkish relations, one in March involving refugees and immigrants on the Greek-Turkish land border and another in August involving military vessels of the two countries. The refugee crisis and potential military conflict regarding energy exploration in the Eastern Mediterranean have raised tensions at a moment the political and institutional tools for the promotion of conflict resolution between Greece and Turkey linked to Turkey's EU membership perspective appear to be obsolete. This paper seeks an answer to the question of whether structural or ideational factors played the most prominent role in the recent escalation of the Greek-Turkish disputes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. Sephardic longshoremen at the Haifa Port (1933-1936): dynamics of skill-selective labor immigration from Thessaloniki to mandatory Palestine.
- Author
-
Srougo, Shai
- Subjects
- *
STEVEDORES , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FOREIGN workers , *ZIONISM - Abstract
This paper focuses on the Zionist challenges regarding "Jewish labor" through the micro-history of the Salonikian longshoremen on the eve of their emigration from Greece (early 1930s), and during the first period of integration in the Haifa Port (1933–1936). To date, the hegemonic perspective on Salonikian longshoremen has emphasized the immigrants' crucial role in overcoming the Arab-dominated port labor market. However, while tending to paint a romantic picture of national fervor, this Zionist view obscured the economic, ethnic, and cultural confrontation involved in realizing "Jewish labor". These multiple forms of confrontation occurred not only between ethnic groups (Jewish-Arab struggle) but also within the local Jewish labor community. Re-visiting the Zionist agenda from the vantage point of both the Salonikian longshoremen and the Zionist establishment enables to present largely neglected aspects of the complex relations between the Sephardic Salonikians and the Ashkenazi/Eastern European-dominated Jewish labor establishment. Due to heavy doubts about the Salonikian commitment to the uphill battle for "Jewish labor," the Haifa Labor Council excluded the latter from the labor community. Consequently, the cultural marginality of the Salonikians weakened the Zionist vision of uniting all Jewish wage earners into a cohesive working class in the middle of the 1930s. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Returns to education in Greece: adjusting to large wage cuts.
- Author
-
Cholezas, Ioannis and Kanellopoulos, Nikolaos C.
- Subjects
- *
HOUSEHOLDS , *RATE of return , *WAGE decreases , *PARENTING education - Abstract
This paper estimates returns to education during a period of sharp wage cuts in Greece, considering both the endogenous nature of education and women's self-selection. Findings suggest that dramatic wage declines were followed by sharp decreases in returns to education, while the documented convergence of returns between genders is an added benefit. Once endogeneity is examined, using parental education and number of siblings in the household as instruments, and self-selection is accounted for, returns to education almost double compared to OLS. These findings are verified using several robustness tests and alternative specifications. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. On not staying put where they have put you: mobilities disrupting the socio-spatial figurations of displacement in Greece.
- Author
-
Papatzani, Eva, Hatziprokopiou, Panos, Vlastou-Dimopoulou, Filyra, and Siotou, Alexandra
- Subjects
REFUGEES ,IMMIGRANTS ,POLITICAL refugees ,INTERNALLY displaced persons - Abstract
The reception and protection system in Greece in the aftermath of the so-called refugee crisis produces a geography of specific mobility restrictions and accommodation types for migrants, asylum-seekers and refugees. These restrictions create a multi-layered landscape of displacement, dominated by three socio-spatial figurations: the forced containment of displaced people in 'hotspots' on eastern Aegean islands; staying in isolated and segregated camps in the mainland; and the accommodation of the most vulnerable in urban centres. At the same time, the mobility practices of displaced people often disrupt the above figurations, stemming from their survival practices and life aspirations, and largely relating to their translocal social connections. These mobilities include, but are not limited to, unregistered movements from hotspots to the mainland, mobilities from camp to camp, mobility negotiations between camp and city. This paper explores the figurations of displacement related to the impact of governance regimes on the livelihoods and mobility of displaced people in Greece. Within this frame, it focuses on the ways through which migrants and asylum-seekers negotiate, resist or transcend the geography of multiple restrictions, through translocal mobility practices that intervene and therefore reshape dominant socio-spatial figurations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Farmers' networks and the quest for reliable advice: innovating in Greece.
- Author
-
Koutsouris, Alex and Zarokosta, Eleni
- Subjects
AGRICULTURAL innovations ,ADVICE ,FARMERS ,INNOVATION adoption ,TECHNOLOGICAL innovations - Abstract
This paper seeks to better understand the dynamics of farmers' innovating processes by focusing on their sources of advice at various stages of their innovation process, specifically within the weak and fragmented Greek Agricultural Knowledge and Innovation System (AKIS). The study employed a mixed-method approach, drawing data from interviews with 112 farmers engaged in three innovation cases in Greece. Some farmers, despite the lack of advisory services, are engaged in innovating processes. They thus seek advice from various sources through networks which vary between farmers and stages of the innovating process. However, networking is not always successful and the knowledge acquired is not always valid. The study points to the need for advisory and innovation support services and facilitated networks in the quest for successful innovating paths. The paper underlines the complexity of farmers' sources of knowledge. Thus, the paper highlights the importance of untangling the innovating processes' stages and farmers' information and advice networks that underpin decision-making in each of these stages. Τhe paper points to the diversity of configurations of advice pertaining to complex farmers' innovating processes, especially under adverse circumstances in terms of provision of innovation support services. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Nativism and second-generation migrants in Greece: differentiating between ethnic and civic elements of citizenship.
- Author
-
Mavrommatis, George
- Subjects
NATIVISM ,CHILDREN of immigrants ,IMMIGRANTS ,CITIZENSHIP ,ETHNICITY ,IMMIGRATION status ,IMMIGRATION law - Abstract
The Greek citizenship model, for its biggest part, has been on the ethnocultural path. In 2010, the ethnocultural character of Greek citizenship became antagonized by Law 3838/2010. According to the law, migrant children born or schooled in the country had an automatic right to the acquisition of Greek citizenship. This paper investigates parliamentary and legal debates on citizenship during the period 2009–2015. It brings to the fore a nativist (ethnicized) discourse and other linked stories, which were voiced by certain political actors and promoted a clear differentiation between ethnic and civic elements of Greek citizenship. Accordingly, migrant children born or schooled in the country could acquire the civic elements of Greek citizenship but not the ethnic ones. The enactment of these discourses can be seen as a manifestation of nativism within an increasingly nationalistic political landscape under conditions of intense economic crisis. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Inter-sectoral analysis of the Greek economy and the COVID-19 multiplier effects.
- Author
-
Mariolis, Theodore, Rodousakis, Nikolaos, and Soklis, George
- Subjects
ECONOMIC history ,COVID-19 pandemic ,SUPPLY & demand ,MULTIPLIER (Economics) - Abstract
Using a multi-sector model, with joint-products and heterogeneous labour, and data from the Supply and Use Tables, this paper analyses the inter-sectoral structure of the Greek economy and estimates the COVID-19 multiplier effects on this economy. It is found that the economy is heavily dependent on imports of industrial commodities, while significant multiplier effects are concentrated, primarily, in services and, secondarily, in the primary production. Furthermore, using these estimations and the available facts and figures about the COVID-19 impact on the elements of autonomous demand in 2020, we estimate a decrease in GDP in the range of 5.67–7.16 per cent, a decrease in the levels of employment in the range of 5.32–7.20 per cent, and a decrease in total imports in the range of 10.40–15.53 per cent, respectively. The evaluation of the results of our analysis indicates that, on the one hand, a short-term demand management recovery programme could be implemented, mainly, through the Public Sector and, secondarily, the Tourism Sector, while, on the other hand, a long-term growth-oriented policy should be directed towards industrial production and implement policies of import substitution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. 'A window to knowledge is a window to the world': socio-aesthetics, ethics and pedagogic migrant youth journeys in crisis-shaped educational settings in Greece.
- Author
-
Christou, Anastasia and Michail, Domna
- Subjects
UNIVERSITIES & colleges ,POLITICAL stability ,IMMIGRANTS ,LEARNING communities ,CRITICAL pedagogy ,SOCIAL justice - Abstract
This paper explores the processes, tensions, opportunities and constraints that migrant youth in Greek higher educational institutions experience at the present time which are characterised by social crises, economic austerity and political instability. In doing so, we also put forward an agenda of critical and feminist pedagogies in developing inclusive spaces of educational citizenship and social justice. Building on a larger collaborative study on youth and migration, this paper draws on a sample of 130 interviews with women and men second generation migrants who are currently, or have been in the past, university students at various institutions in Greece. Migrant youth expanding on their aspirations and capacities harness a developmental pathway of cosmopolitan pedagogies which alter their circumstances and social possibilities. The paper advances alternative discourses in crafting spaces of anti-oppression in the academy through a feminist lens which will cultivate learning communities of equity, justice and reflexivity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. Craftmanship, Operation, and the Configuration of Social Space: The Case of the Middle Neolithic Pottery Workshop Site of Imvrou Pigadi, Thessaly, Greece.
- Author
-
Kalogiropoulou, Evita, Saridaki, Niki, Roussos, Dimitris, and Kyparissi-Apostolika, Nina
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL space , *POTTERY , *NEOLITHIC Period , *MICROSCOPY , *SOCIAL structure , *POTSHERDS , *ARCHAEOLOGICAL geology ,THESSALY (Greece) - Abstract
This paper examines, in parallel, two key archaeological material groups: the kilns and the ceramics from the exceptional tell site of Imvrou Pigadi, the first known and systematically excavated Middle Neolithic pottery workshop in Thessaly. The study forms an all-encompassing, material-based, and scientifically integrated framework based on macroscopic and microscopic analyses, including typological classification and geoarchaeology with an emphasis on micromorphology, as well as an examination of spatial organization. Direct and indirect evidence for standardization and specialization in technology and production practices points to advanced pyrotechnological knowledge and expertise in pottery manufacture at the site. Moreover, the paper examines the social interplay developed around pottery production by discussing cooperation and the organization of social space within the community. Overall, this analysis touches upon the discussion of the wider community of pottery manufacturing centers in Neolithic Thessaly and places the site within its cultural context, offering new insights into craftsmanship and social reciprocity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Love thy (Middle Bronze Age) neighbor: A network model for central and northern Greece.
- Author
-
Hale, Christopher Mark
- Subjects
BRONZE Age ,SCHOLARLY method ,CLUSTER analysis (Statistics) ,NEIGHBORS ,ARCHIPELAGOES - Abstract
A century of archaeology has identified hundreds of potential sites north of the Corinthian Isthmus on the Greek mainland and in the northeast Aegean contemporary with the Middle Helladic-Late Helladic I Period (MH-LH I, ca. 2100-1550 BC). This paper presents an exploratory nearest neighbor network model to examine connectivity in a scenario where maritime movement included widespread access to the sail (known from the wider Aegean). Analysis of clustering and centrality in the modeled network shows that nodes along the Euboean Gulf were the most important for overall connectivity, and that seemingly geographically isolated sites in the Sporades archipelago and Chalkidiki were crucial for integrating the northern Aegean with central Greece. The later Late Bronze Age palatial centers of Thebes, Orchomenos, and Dimini/Volos on the other hand do not score highly on any centrality measure in this scenario, suggesting that their inherent position on the modeled network did not greatly contribute to their eventual success. This observation is in line with recent scholarship, increasingly pointing to an important endogenous aspect to emerging complexity in central Greece. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Primary education stakeholders' views on the European Union during the Greek economic crisis.
- Author
-
Giouroglou, Charitomeni
- Subjects
PRIMARY education ,FINANCIAL crises ,EUROPEAN citizenship ,QUALITY of life ,SOCIAL innovation ,SOCIAL institutions - Abstract
The paper presents Greek primary education stakeholders' views regarding their quality of life and EU-related issues before and during the euro crisis. The study took place in 2016, and the population was primary education teachers and parents of Eastern Macedonia and Thrace region. Respondents answered sets of questions for two different years: 2009, before austerity measures were applied, and 2016, during the crisis. Responses denote dissatisfaction with their quality of life and the EU in 2016. The findings show significant shifts of views between 2009 and 2016 regarding the institution of the EU, the euro, the relationship of Greece with the EU and European citizenship. 2016 statements reveal increased euroscepticism in teachers and parents' views and a large proportion of undecided respondents. However, it seems that more respondents adopt a pro-European attitude regarding the common future of Greece and the EU in 2016. All in all, findings show that, in 2016, respondents are divided into pro-European and eurosceptic, which denotes diffuse attitudes towards the European construct and weak identification with European citizenship. Change during crisis can serve as an opportunity for social innovations and education initiatives that will restore trust on the institution of the EU. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. The Historical Bridge of Konitsa-Epirus, Greece: Documentation of the Structural System.
- Author
-
Palieraki, Vasiliki, Oikonomopoulou, Erato, Nikolopoulou, Vasiliki, Vintzileou, Elizabeth, and Giannelos, Chris
- Subjects
STONEMASONRY ,PRESERVATION of monuments ,DOCUMENTATION ,BRIDGE bearings ,TOMBS ,ARCH bridges - Abstract
The arched stone masonry bridge near the town of Konitsa, over Aoos river (1869 A.D.), was damaged and repaired in 1913 by using concrete. The RC jacket at the intrados is in critical state, exhibiting advanced concrete disintegration and reinforcement corrosion, with minor damage in the original structure of the bridge. In order to provide an intervention scheme for the preservation of the monument and to check whether the reconstruction of the RC jacket needs to be part of the intervention scheme, an overall study of the bridge was undertaken. In this paper, the in-situ and in-lab documentation is presented. To this purpose, non-destructive techniques were applied, along with material sampling and laboratory testing, whereas photogrammetric survey and geotechnical investigation were performed. The collected data serve the purpose of documenting the bearing structure of the bridge and interpreting construction peculiarities revealed during in-situ work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Arch Stone Bridges: Procedures for Evaluation of Structural Integrity.
- Author
-
Dimitrios, Nikolaidis, Souzana, Tastani, and Stavroula, Pantazopoulou
- Subjects
ARCH bridges ,ARCHES ,STONEMASONRY ,INFRASTRUCTURE (Economics) ,FIFTEENTH century ,WISDOM ,EVALUATION methodology - Abstract
In the Balkan Peninsula, the single-arched stone masonry bridge has served for centuries as an essential part of transportation infrastructure. Being exposed to the natural elements and to aging, several of these structures are in a state of disrepair that is accelerated by neglect. Nevertheless, these are important samples of the built heritage encapsulating historical materials, methods of construction and ancient craftsmanship. Still standing for over half a millennium, such bridges testify the wisdom by which the masons chose the location and form of the arch to span over torrents minimizing the wear from water scouring and floods. Preservation of the bridges that are still standing is a priority. With increasing number of bridge collapses reported in the past years under extreme flood, an immediate need emerges for methods of evaluation of the structural vulnerability and measures to enhance their resilience. Using as a case study a bridge built in fifteenth century in Greece, this paper unfolds the essential attributes of a comprehensive assessment framework that combines non-destructive evaluation techniques to reveal information about technologies and details, with a numerical investigation of the resilience of the structure to floods and seismic hazards in order to identify risks of bridge integrity. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. When Children with Disabilities "Meet" Artists with Disabilities in a Museum: A Platform for Creativity and Cultural Dialogue.
- Author
-
Kanari, Charikleia and Souliotou, Anastasia Zoi
- Subjects
CHILDREN with disabilities ,DISABILITIES ,CREATIVE ability in children ,ART exhibitions ,EDUCATIONAL programs ,CREATIVE ability ,MUSEUMS - Abstract
This paper presents an educational program for children with disabilities implemented in conjunction with a temporary exhibition of visual artists with disabilities in a museum in Greece. Through the description of the exhibition, the design and implementation of the educational program, and the creative activities offered, the authors identify benefits for the children and stress the importance of developing more collaborations between museums, artists with disabilities, and schools to move towards a more inclusive society. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The Greek Australian neuropsychological normative study: tests & norms for Greek Australians aged 70-85 years.
- Author
-
Staios, Mathew, Kosmidis, Mary H., Kokkinis, Nikolaos, Papadopoulos, Alexandra, Nielsen, T. Rune, Kalinowski, Pawel, March, Evrim, and Stolwyk, Renerus J.
- Subjects
EXPERIMENTAL design ,REFERENCE values ,IMMIGRANTS ,EXECUTIVE function ,RESEARCH evaluation ,RESEARCH methodology ,AGE distribution ,REGRESSION analysis ,NEUROPSYCHOLOGICAL tests ,SEX distribution ,MULTITRAIT multimethod techniques ,AUSTRALIANS ,RESEARCH funding ,STATISTICAL sampling ,TRANSLATIONS ,EDUCATIONAL attainment - Abstract
Access to valid and reliable neuropsychological measures for use with culturally diverse groups in Australia is limited. The aim of this study was to adapt and translate a selection of English language neuropsychological tests, employ several existing standardised Greek language tests, and provide specific reference group normative data for Greek Australian older adults. A convenience sample of 90 healthy older Greek Australians (M = 77.14 ± 4.46; range = 70–85), with a primary school level of education (M = 5.60 ± 0.68; Range = 4–6), was recruited throughout the Melbourne metropolitan area. Several neuropsychological measures were administered which assessed domains such as verbal and visual memory, confrontational naming, and executive functions. Regression modelling revealed that age, education and sex predicted between 5% and 35% of the variance of test scores, with age being the most significant predictor of performance across a majority of measures. Therefore, the normative data for all tests were stratified according to three age bands (70–74, 75–79, 80–85). The use of culture-specific tests and norms for assessment of older Greek-Australians with limited education may facilitate accuracy of assessment findings, improve diagnostic outcomes, and reduce misclassification. What is already known about this topic: The use of English language tests with migrant populations and tests developed in nations of origin can lead to misclassification when applied to long-term immigrant peers. The use of test content derived from English language tests has been found to be inappropriate for use with culturally diverse groups. Access to norms and tests for assessment of culturally diverse groups in Australia are limited. What this topic adds: This paper provides a template for translating and adapting existing English language tests for use with culturally diverse groups. This is the first study to provide a set of comprehensive norms for Greek Australian older adults. Utilising culturally appropriate and specific reference group norms for Greek-Australians may improve the accuracy of assessment findings and reduce misclassification. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Reflections on the hierarchy of the spatial planning system in Greece (1999–2020).
- Author
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Asprogerakas, Evangelos and Melissas, Dimitris
- Subjects
SPATIAL systems ,DECISION making - Abstract
The hierarchy of planning tools allows for rigorous guidance of decision-making at the local level driven by a broader purpose determined at a higher level of policy formulation. The aim of this paper is to challenge the concept of hierarchy examining the structure of the Greek spatial planning system as derived from the basic institutional framework and through its legal principles. Hierarchy is explored as a result of a consensual process in decision making while case-law is used as a methodological tool in order for special parameters in framing spatial planning to be recognised. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Networks of culture creatives in Patras: the relevance of cultural lag.
- Author
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Koutsobinas, Theodore and Michalopoulou, Panagiota
- Subjects
EUROPEAN Capital of Culture ,URBAN planning ,SOCIAL evolution ,CAPITAL cities ,ARTISTIC creation - Abstract
This paper addresses the challenges posed by the early discourse of the creative city in the case of Patras, a regional city of Greece and European Capital of Culture in 2006 before the prolonged economic crisis in Greece. We focus on the relevance and the forms of cultural creation and artistic networking for the creative city rather than on innovation hubs and technological creativity. We develop a qualitative study of culture creatives in the city to examine the potential of local cultural and artistic agents, social groups and institutions to enhance networking and clustering in the urban milieu, which is also influenced or distorted by city planning capacities and politics. The culture management study identifies several constraints and frictions related to the potential transformation of cultural networks to clusters and analyzes the relevance of cultural lag in the literature of creative cities and urban regeneration. The constraints are discussed within a framework of cultural and institutional lag, which characterize city stakeholders. The study identifies practices that enable organizational facilitation and capacity for proactive culture creation, creative networking and potential clustering. Those activities support culture-led socio-economic urban regeneration planning and inspire the potential making of a creative city. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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