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  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_558...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_566...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_565...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_564...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_562...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_561...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_561...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_559...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_565...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_564...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_563...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_563...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Roberto Di Bella, the President of the Court for Minors of Reggio Calabria who started a program limiting or suspending parental responsability for incriminated families of the ‘Ndrangheta (the organized crime centered in the Souther Italian region of Calabria), poses for a portrait in his office in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.<br />
<br />
After years of work with Mr. Di Bella and other prosecutors, the Justice Ministry is now ready to standardize the procedure. Once local authorities sign the protocol, it'll become effective.<br />
<br />
“Sons follow their fathers,” he said. “But the state can’t allow that children are educated to be criminals.”<br />
<br />
In his project, Mr. Di Bella hoped to see the “future of the fight against mafias,” he said.<br />
<br />
But he admitted that the project is now based on his judges’ work and on volunteers who lend their professional skills almost for free.<br />
<br />
“We need specialists,” he said referring psychologists, host families and specialized judges. “We need norms, fund
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_558...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (R-L) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (R-L) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_573...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_573...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_570...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_569...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_568...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_567...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • CHIETI, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Dario Marrocco (49), the first lawyer to successfully use Right To Be Forgotten to have an article removed from a news website in Italy, poses for a portrait in his studio in Chieti, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Paolo Sardini (50), the attorney representing Vittorio Pecoraro - who successfully sued Alessandro Biancardi to have an article removed about a stabbing incident between him and his brother at his restaurant Positano -poses for a portrait in his studio in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A man is seen here walking back from the beach in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: An elderly man is seen here riding his bike in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: An elderly man is seen here riding his bike in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A boat is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A mural of the Italian poet Gabriele D'Annunzio, originally from Pescara, is seen here in the historical center of Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Matteo Cavallucci (46), lawyer of Alessandro Biancardi - who closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law - poses for a portrait in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Resident of Pescara are seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: Resident of Pescara are seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 18 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of Pescara, Italy, on September 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190918_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: A view of the restaurant Positano, the site of the stabbing episode that helped contribute to Mr. Biancardi's downfall, is seen here in Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (R-L) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • PESCARA, ITALY - 17 SEPTEMBER 2019: (L-R) Alessandro Biancardi (47), former editor of "Prima di Noi", and his wife Alessandra Lotti (39) pose for a portrait in front of the courthouse of Pescara, Italy, on September 17th 2019.<br />
<br />
Alessandro Biancardi closed down his website last year amid mountain legal costs and demands that he remove old articles by individuals citing the Right To Be Forgotten law.<br />
<br />
The closure of  the Italian news webbsite "Prima Da Noi", as a result of the European privacy law Right To Be Forgotten provides a cautionary about challenges of internet regulation.
    CIPG_20190917_NYT-RightToBeForgotten...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_573...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_572...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_572...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_570...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_569...jpg
  • REGGIO CALABRIA, ITALY - 15 NOVEMBER 2016: Enrico Interdonato, a 32-year old volunteer psychologist and founding member of the anti-racket association Addio Pizzo in Messina, the Sicilian town across the strait from Reggio Calabria, poses for a portrait in Reggio Calabria, Italy, on November 15th 2016.<br />
<br />
In 2013, after a decade-long work with street boys, Mr. Interdonato started tutoring a 15-year old boy who came from an ‘Ndrangheta family. They spent time together in the disco and with other young men and women in the city, and later also with associations and mafia victims’ families, elaborating together the real impact of reckless criminal actions.<br />
<br />
We are a bit like David against Golia,” he said referring to the two judges on juvenile cases in the city with the highest criminal concentration in Italy.<br />
“But the ’Ndrangheta infiltrates our community and we try to infiltrate them culturally, making their children free to choose,” he said.<br />
<br />
Since 2012, judges from Reggio Calabria court for minors have started a program limiting or suspending parental responsibility for incriminated families, moving children to a different Italian region and trying to create the conditions for an ordinary childhood there. Once they turn 18, they can choose whether to go back to Calabria or not.<br />
<br />
When evidence shows that children are physically or psychologically endangered by their families’ Mafioso behavior, judges apply the same legislation used in Italy against abusive parents to parents from the ‘Ndrangheta.<br />
<br />
So far, the program has involved more than 40 minors, boys and girls aged 12 to 16, and out of those who have already returned to their lives, none has committed a crime.<br />
<br />
Calabria has a very high criminal concentration. Since the early 1990s, Reggio Calabria juvenile court sentenced about 100 minors for mafia association and 50 for murder—or attempted murder.
    CIPG_20161115_NYT-Ndrangheta_5M3_568...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: A fathers and his daughter are seen here together with climate activists marching in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Mario Cioci (center), an activist with the Fridays for Future movement, is seen here with other climate activists marching in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: A passerby photographs climate activists marching in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Climate activists march in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • ROME, ITALY - 30 OCTOBER 2021: Mario Cioci (center), an activist with the Fridays for Future movement, is seen here with other climate activists marching in Rome to demand action from the G20 leaders to  to take action to prevent climate change, in Rome, Italy, on October 30th 2021.<br />
<br />
As the 2021 G20 Summit in the Italian capital this weekend, climate activists marched in Rome to urge the Group of 20 leaders to act urgently amid a time of unprecedented interest in climate change and social justice. The environmentalist march was joined by workers’ unions and factory workers who are seizing the opportunity to voice anger at the elites.<br />
<br />
The Fridays for Future movement started by Greta Thunberg's School Strike For Climate protest said the young people will make their voices heard against "the same powers, the same interests, the same injustices that led us to the climate crisis". Their statement pointed out that 75% of global greenhouse gas emissions come from G20 countries.
    CIPG_20211030_NYT-Italy-G20-Climate-...jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39), an activist working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, poses for a portrait in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019.  In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190118_NYT_Palermo_M3_0537-BW.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39), an activist working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, poses for a portrait in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019.  In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190118_NYT_Palermo_M3_0518-BW.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39), an activist working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, poses for a portrait in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019.  In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190118_NYT_Palermo_M3_0503-BW.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39), an activist working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, poses for a portrait in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019.  In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190118_NYT_Palermo_M3_0497-BW.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39, center) and Rosa Guida (center-right), activists working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, give advice to Bangaldeshi migrants in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019. In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190116_NYT_Palermo_M3_8134-BW.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39), an activist working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, poses for a portrait in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019.  In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190118_NYT_Palermo_M3_0537.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39), an activist working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, poses for a portrait in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019.  In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190118_NYT_Palermo_M3_0518.jpg
  • PALERMO, ITALY - 16 JANUARY 2019: Alessandra Sciurba (39), an activist working for CLEDU - Legal Clinic for Human Rights of the University of Palermo, poses for a portrait in Palermo, Italy, on January 16th 2019.  In Italy, legal clinics are an initiative in jurisprudence universities to allow students to practice law while by  offering a free legal counseling service promoting social justice, including working with migrants.<br />
<br />
The historic market Ballarò of Palermo, in the neighbourhood known as Albergheria, is the oldest and biggest among the markets of the city.<br />
For about half a century, after World War II, Ballarò was increasingly depopulated as families moved to airier suburbs. Today there are over 14 ethnicities in Ballarò and more than 25 languages spoken: migrant communities, students, professionals, historic merchants and new entrepreneurs coexist.
    CIPG_20190118_NYT_Palermo_M3_0503.jpg
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