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  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012:  The school staff of the "Federico Caffè" high scool wait for the aspiring teachers to enter the computer classroom where the pre-selection tests will take place, in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th. On 17 and 18 December there will be the pre-selection tests for the competition of recruiting aspiring teachers.  321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_11.jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3047...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3052...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3052...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3052...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3050...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3049...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3047...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3047...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Maria Notaro (44), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3037...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Maria Notaro (44), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3037...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Maria Notaro (44), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3037...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Maria Notaro (44), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3036...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3035...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3035...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3035...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3034...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3034...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3046...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3045...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3044...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3043...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3043...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3041...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3040...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3039...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3039...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3039...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3038...jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012:  The computer classroom of the "Federico Caffè" high school where the pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers will take place today in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th. On 17 and 18 December there will be the pre-selection tests for the competition of recruiting aspiring teachers.  321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_10.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: Romina De Cesaris (center), 37, a history and philosophy teacher with a temporary contract since 2000, waits her turn in front of the Federico Caffè high school for the pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th. On 17 and 18 December there will be the pre-selection tests for the competition of recruiting aspiring teachers.  321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_08.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: Romina De Cesaris, 37, a history and philosophy teacher with a temporary contract since 2000, waits her turn in front of the Federico Caffè high school for the pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th. On 17 and 18 December there will be the pre-selection tests for the competition of recruiting aspiring teachers.  321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_07.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: The entrance of the Federico Caffè high school where aspiring teachers wait before the start of the pre-selection tests  in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th for the first time in 13 years. 321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_06.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: The entrance of the Federico Caffè high school where aspiring teachers wait before the start of the pre-selection tests  in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th for the first time in 13 years. 321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_05.jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3053...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3053...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3052...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3052...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3051...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Crescenzo Sala (39), an anesthesiologist, poses for a portrrait during his shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3050...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3049...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3049...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3048...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 4 MAY 2020: Romolo Villani (58), an anesthesiologist and head physician. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 4th 2020
    CIPG_20200504_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3047...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Maria Notaro (44), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3037...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Maria Notaro (44), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3036...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Maria Notaro (44), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3036...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3035...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3034...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3033...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3033...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3033...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3031...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 3 MAY 2020: Dania Sannino (33), an anesthesiologist. poses for a portrrait at the end of her shift at the Cardarelli hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 3rd 2020
    CIPG_20200503_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3031...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3046...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3044...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3044...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Gabriele Somma (24), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3044...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3043...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3043...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3042...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3041...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3040...jpg
  • NYTVIRUS<br />
NAPLES, ITALY - 2 MAY 2020: Ilaria Sommonte (27), a nurse at the "Cotugno", Naples's main Covid hospital, poses for a portrait at the Cotugno hospital in Naples, Italy, on May 2nd 2020
    CIPG_20200502_NYT_Harm-Naples_7M3040...jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: An aspiring teacher waits her turn in front of the Federico Caffè high school before the start of the pre-selection tests  in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th for the first time in 13 years. 321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_09.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: An Aspiring teacher walks towards the classrooms of the "Federico Caffè" highschool where the pre-selection tests will take place,  in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th for the first time in 13 years. 321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_04.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: Aspiring teachers walk towards the classrooms of the "Federico Caffè" highschool where the pre-selection tests will take place,  in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th for the first time in 13 years. 321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_03.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012: Aspiring teachers walk towards the classrooms of the "Federico Caffè" highschool where the pre-selection tests will take place,  in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th for the first time in 13 years. 321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_02.jpg
  • Rome, Italy - 18 December, 2012:  A waiting room at the "Marcello Malpighi" high school where aspiring teacher wait their turn for the public pre-selection test in Rome, Italy, on 18 September, 2012. The public pre-selection tests for aspiring teachers, announced by the Italian Ministry of Education, took place on December 17th and 18th for the first time in 13 years. 321,210 candidates are competing for 11,542 available teaching jobs in primary schools, secondary schools and high schools all over Italy.
    Teachers_01.jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 18 JUNE 2019: The staff of Sfizzicariello - from left to right Simone, Lisa, Carlo, Simone and Lina - poses for a portrait in Naples, Italy, on June 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
Sfizzicariello (a Neapolitan word that in Italian means small whim, desire) is a social delicatessen that prepares traditional Neapolitan dishes and employs 10 people with mental distress. But the only two true madmen (in the sense of dreamers, idealists) are the two promoters of the project: Lina Chiariello (65) and her son Carlo Varriale (35).<br />
<br />
Lina was a hairdresser, with the dream of improving the world and helping the last. In 2005, she thought that a social enterprise could be set up, one that in some way tried to reintegrate a group of poor people into society. But above all, she  wanted people with mental distress not to be hidden, but to work with her in a real store with doors on the street.<br />
<br />
So Lina asked her son Carlo, an engineer, to help her establish a social cooperative. "You think of bureaucratic paperwork, I'll do the good things”, she said.<br />
<br />
For the past 14 years Carlo has been the president of the social cooperative. Lina is the cook and also the instructor of the staff by teach how to prepare the dishes and how to organize the work.<br />
Sfizzicariello is a place where social inclusion is made; but above all it is a place where good, genuine, Neapolitan specialties are eaten. Today it is economically self-sufficient, without any kind of public contribution.
    CIPG_20190618_CULBACK-Sfizzicariello...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 18 JUNE 2019: The staff of Sfizzicariello - from left to right Lina, Simone, Lisa, Davide and Carlo - poses for a portrait in Naples, Italy, on June 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
Sfizzicariello (a Neapolitan word that in Italian means small whim, desire) is a social delicatessen that prepares traditional Neapolitan dishes and employs 10 people with mental distress. But the only two true madmen (in the sense of dreamers, idealists) are the two promoters of the project: Lina Chiariello (65) and her son Carlo Varriale (35).<br />
<br />
Lina was a hairdresser, with the dream of improving the world and helping the last. In 2005, she thought that a social enterprise could be set up, one that in some way tried to reintegrate a group of poor people into society. But above all, she  wanted people with mental distress not to be hidden, but to work with her in a real store with doors on the street.<br />
<br />
So Lina asked her son Carlo, an engineer, to help her establish a social cooperative. "You think of bureaucratic paperwork, I'll do the good things”, she said.<br />
<br />
For the past 14 years Carlo has been the president of the social cooperative. Lina is the cook and also the instructor of the staff by teach how to prepare the dishes and how to organize the work.<br />
Sfizzicariello is a place where social inclusion is made; but above all it is a place where good, genuine, Neapolitan specialties are eaten. Today it is economically self-sufficient, without any kind of public contribution.
    CIPG_20190618_CULBACK-Sfizzicariello...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 18 JUNE 2019: Neapolitan specialties are seen here in the counter of Sfizzicariello, a social delicatessen in Naples, Italy, on June 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
Sfizzicariello (a Neapolitan word that in Italian means small whim, desire) is a social delicatessen that prepares traditional Neapolitan dishes and employs 10 people with mental distress. But the only two true madmen (in the sense of dreamers, idealists) are the two promoters of the project: Lina Chiariello (65) and her son Carlo Varriale (35).<br />
<br />
Lina was a hairdresser, with the dream of improving the world and helping the last. In 2005, she thought that a social enterprise could be set up, one that in some way tried to reintegrate a group of poor people into society. But above all, she  wanted people with mental distress not to be hidden, but to work with her in a real store with doors on the street.<br />
<br />
So Lina asked her son Carlo, an engineer, to help her establish a social cooperative. "You think of bureaucratic paperwork, I'll do the good things”, she said.<br />
<br />
For the past 14 years Carlo has been the president of the social cooperative. Lina is the cook and also the instructor of the staff by teach how to prepare the dishes and how to organize the work.<br />
Sfizzicariello is a place where social inclusion is made; but above all it is a place where good, genuine, Neapolitan specialties are eaten. Today it is economically self-sufficient, without any kind of public contribution.
    CIPG_20190618_CULBACK-Sfizzicariello...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 18 JUNE 2019: (L-R) Davide and Simone pose for a portrait at Sfizzicariello, a social delicatessen in Naples, Italy, on June 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
Sfizzicariello (a Neapolitan word that in Italian means small whim, desire) is a social delicatessen that prepares traditional Neapolitan dishes and employs 10 people with mental distress. But the only two true madmen (in the sense of dreamers, idealists) are the two promoters of the project: Lina Chiariello (65) and her son Carlo Varriale (35).<br />
<br />
Lina was a hairdresser, with the dream of improving the world and helping the last. In 2005, she thought that a social enterprise could be set up, one that in some way tried to reintegrate a group of poor people into society. But above all, she  wanted people with mental distress not to be hidden, but to work with her in a real store with doors on the street.<br />
<br />
So Lina asked her son Carlo, an engineer, to help her establish a social cooperative. "You think of bureaucratic paperwork, I'll do the good things”, she said.<br />
<br />
For the past 14 years Carlo has been the president of the social cooperative. Lina is the cook and also the instructor of the staff by teach how to prepare the dishes and how to organize the work.<br />
Sfizzicariello is a place where social inclusion is made; but above all it is a place where good, genuine, Neapolitan specialties are eaten. Today it is economically self-sufficient, without any kind of public contribution.
    CIPG_20190618_CULBACK-Sfizzicariello...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 18 JUNE 2019: A Pizza di Scarole (pizza with endives) is seen here at Sfizzicariello, a social delicatessen in Naples, Italy, on June 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
Sfizzicariello (a Neapolitan word that in Italian means small whim, desire) is a social delicatessen that prepares traditional Neapolitan dishes and employs 10 people with mental distress. But the only two true madmen (in the sense of dreamers, idealists) are the two promoters of the project: Lina Chiariello (65) and her son Carlo Varriale (35).<br />
<br />
Lina was a hairdresser, with the dream of improving the world and helping the last. In 2005, she thought that a social enterprise could be set up, one that in some way tried to reintegrate a group of poor people into society. But above all, she  wanted people with mental distress not to be hidden, but to work with her in a real store with doors on the street.<br />
<br />
So Lina asked her son Carlo, an engineer, to help her establish a social cooperative. "You think of bureaucratic paperwork, I'll do the good things”, she said.<br />
<br />
For the past 14 years Carlo has been the president of the social cooperative. Lina is the cook and also the instructor of the staff by teach how to prepare the dishes and how to organize the work.<br />
Sfizzicariello is a place where social inclusion is made; but above all it is a place where good, genuine, Neapolitan specialties are eaten. Today it is economically self-sufficient, without any kind of public contribution.
    CIPG_20190618_CULBACK-Sfizzicariello...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 18 JUNE 2019: Crocchè (fried mashed potatoes) are seen here at Sfizzicariello, a social delicatessen in Naples, Italy, on June 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
Sfizzicariello (a Neapolitan word that in Italian means small whim, desire) is a social delicatessen that prepares traditional Neapolitan dishes and employs 10 people with mental distress. But the only two true madmen (in the sense of dreamers, idealists) are the two promoters of the project: Lina Chiariello (65) and her son Carlo Varriale (35).<br />
<br />
Lina was a hairdresser, with the dream of improving the world and helping the last. In 2005, she thought that a social enterprise could be set up, one that in some way tried to reintegrate a group of poor people into society. But above all, she  wanted people with mental distress not to be hidden, but to work with her in a real store with doors on the street.<br />
<br />
So Lina asked her son Carlo, an engineer, to help her establish a social cooperative. "You think of bureaucratic paperwork, I'll do the good things”, she said.<br />
<br />
For the past 14 years Carlo has been the president of the social cooperative. Lina is the cook and also the instructor of the staff by teach how to prepare the dishes and how to organize the work.<br />
Sfizzicariello is a place where social inclusion is made; but above all it is a place where good, genuine, Neapolitan specialties are eaten. Today it is economically self-sufficient, without any kind of public contribution.
    CIPG_20190618_CULBACK-Sfizzicariello...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 18 JUNE 2019: Lina (65), founder of of the social delicatessen Sfizzicariello, prepares an Pizza di scarole (endive pizza) in Naples, Italy, on June 18th 2019.<br />
<br />
Sfizzicariello (a Neapolitan word that in Italian means small whim, desire) is a social delicatessen that prepares traditional Neapolitan dishes and employs 10 people with mental distress. But the only two true madmen (in the sense of dreamers, idealists) are the two promoters of the project: Lina Chiariello (65) and her son Carlo Varriale (35).<br />
<br />
Lina was a hairdresser, with the dream of improving the world and helping the last. In 2005, she thought that a social enterprise could be set up, one that in some way tried to reintegrate a group of poor people into society. But above all, she  wanted people with mental distress not to be hidden, but to work with her in a real store with doors on the street.<br />
<br />
So Lina asked her son Carlo, an engineer, to help her establish a social cooperative. "You think of bureaucratic paperwork, I'll do the good things”, she said.<br />
<br />
For the past 14 years Carlo has been the president of the social cooperative. Lina is the cook and also the instructor of the staff by teach how to prepare the dishes and how to organize the work.<br />
Sfizzicariello is a place where social inclusion is made; but above all it is a place where good, genuine, Neapolitan specialties are eaten. Today it is economically self-sufficient, without any kind of public contribution.
    CIPG_20190618_CULBACK-Sfizzicariello...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 24 NOVEMBER 2018: Customers and staff are seen here at Bar Gambrinus, in Naples, Italy, on November 24th 2018.<br />
<br />
My Brilliant Friend (Italian: L'amica geniale) is an Italian-American drama television miniseries based on the novel of the same name by Elena Ferrante. The series follows the lives of two perceptive and intelligent girls, Elena (sometimes called “Lenù”) Greco and Raffaella (“Lila”) Cerullo, from childhood to adulthood and old age, as they try to create lives for themselves amidst the violent and stultifying culture of their home – a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Naples, Italy. My Brilliant Friend is a co-production between American premium cable network HBO and Italian networks RAI and TIMvision
    CIPG_20181124_CULBACK_ElenaFerranteT...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 20 NOVEMBER 2018: The staff of Bar Mexico in Piazza Dante is seen here at work in Naples, Italy, on November 20th 2018.<br />
<br />
My Brilliant Friend (Italian: L'amica geniale) is an Italian-American drama television miniseries based on the novel of the same name by Elena Ferrante. The series follows the lives of two perceptive and intelligent girls, Elena (sometimes called “Lenù”) Greco and Raffaella (“Lila”) Cerullo, from childhood to adulthood and old age, as they try to create lives for themselves amidst the violent and stultifying culture of their home – a poor neighborhood on the outskirts of Naples, Italy. My Brilliant Friend is a co-production between American premium cable network HBO and Italian networks RAI and TIMvision
    CIPG_20181120_CULBACK_ElenaFerranteT...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 9 NOVEMBER 2018: Giuseppe Ruggiero (17 years old, 2nd from right), an aspiring hair stylist, waits in line together with his mother Giovanna and other unemployed citizens, to register for the first time at the Eastern Naples Job Center in Naples, Italy, on November 9th 2018.<br />
<br />
Italy’s 550 state-run job centers will be in charge of verifying that recipients of the “citizens’ wage”, a welfare policy championed by the governing 5-Star Movement designed to lift 5 million Italian out of poverty, meet an important eligibility criteria: that they are actively looking for a job.<br />
But Italians widely regard the centers as being blighted by obsolete technology and insufficient and under-qualified staff. The new populist government plans to spend 1 billion euros to modernize the centers — 10 percent of the total cost of the new policy in its first year in 2019. <br />
<br />
The “citizens’ wage” will cost 10 billion euros next year, the most expensive item in a big-spending budget which itself has raised concerns in the European Union that Italy could be sowing the seeds of a financial crisis.
    CIPG_20181109_NYT-ItalyBudget_M3_549...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 9 NOVEMBER 2018: Unemployed citizens are seen here in line waiting to be served at the Eastern Naples Job Center in Naples, Italy, on November 9th 2018.<br />
<br />
Italy’s 550 state-run job centers will be in charge of verifying that recipients of the “citizens’ wage”, a welfare policy championed by the governing 5-Star Movement designed to lift 5 million Italian out of poverty, meet an important eligibility criteria: that they are actively looking for a job.<br />
But Italians widely regard the centers as being blighted by obsolete technology and insufficient and under-qualified staff. The new populist government plans to spend 1 billion euros to modernize the centers — 10 percent of the total cost of the new policy in its first year in 2019. <br />
<br />
The “citizens’ wage” will cost 10 billion euros next year, the most expensive item in a big-spending budget which itself has raised concerns in the European Union that Italy could be sowing the seeds of a financial crisis.
    CIPG_20181109_NYT-ItalyBudget_M3_547...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 9 NOVEMBER 2018: Lucia Messina (58, center), an unemployed citizen,  registers to the Eastern Naples Job Center, accompanied by his mother, in Naples, Italy, on November 9th 2018.<br />
"I want to sign-up because I'm looking for a job, but also for the "citizens' wage"", she said.<br />
<br />
Italy’s 550 state-run job centers will be in charge of verifying that recipients of the “citizens’ wage”, a welfare policy championed by the governing 5-Star Movement designed to lift 5 million Italian out of poverty, meet an important eligibility criteria: that they are actively looking for a job.<br />
But Italians widely regard the centers as being blighted by obsolete technology and insufficient and under-qualified staff. The new populist government plans to spend 1 billion euros to modernize the centers — 10 percent of the total cost of the new policy in its first year in 2019. <br />
<br />
The “citizens’ wage” will cost 10 billion euros next year, the most expensive item in a big-spending budget which itself has raised concerns in the European Union that Italy could be sowing the seeds of a financial crisis.
    CIPG_20181109_NYT-ItalyBudget_M3_543...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 9 NOVEMBER 2018: Unemployed citizens register to the Eastern Naples Job Center in Naples, Italy, on November 9th 2018.<br />
<br />
Italy’s 550 state-run job centers will be in charge of verifying that recipients of the “citizens’ wage”, a welfare policy championed by the governing 5-Star Movement designed to lift 5 million Italian out of poverty, meet an important eligibility criteria: that they are actively looking for a job.<br />
But Italians widely regard the centers as being blighted by obsolete technology and insufficient and under-qualified staff. The new populist government plans to spend 1 billion euros to modernize the centers — 10 percent of the total cost of the new policy in its first year in 2019. <br />
<br />
The “citizens’ wage” will cost 10 billion euros next year, the most expensive item in a big-spending budget which itself has raised concerns in the European Union that Italy could be sowing the seeds of a financial crisis.
    CIPG_20181109_NYT-ItalyBudget_M3_533...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 8 NOVEMBER 2018: Gennaro Ferrillo, Head of the Eastern Naples Job Center, is seen here at work in his office in Naples, Italy, on November 8th 2018.<br />
<br />
Italy’s 550 state-run job centers will be in charge of verifying that recipients of the “citizens’ wage”, a welfare policy championed by the governing 5-Star Movement designed to lift 5 million Italian out of poverty, meet an important eligibility criteria: that they are actively looking for a job.<br />
But Italians widely regard the centers as being blighted by obsolete technology and insufficient and under-qualified staff. The new populist government plans to spend 1 billion euros to modernize the centers — 10 percent of the total cost of the new policy in its first year in 2019. <br />
<br />
The “citizens’ wage” will cost 10 billion euros next year, the most expensive item in a big-spending budget which itself has raised concerns in the European Union that Italy could be sowing the seeds of a financial crisis.
    CIPG_20181108_NYT-ItalyBudget_M3_520...jpg
  • NAPLES, ITALY - 8 NOVEMBER 2018: A janitor closes the gate of a the Eastern Naples Job Center minutes after closing time in Naples, Italy, on November 8th 2018.<br />
<br />
Italy’s 550 state-run job centers will be in charge of verifying that recipients of the “citizens’ wage”, a welfare policy championed by the governing 5-Star Movement designed to lift 5 million Italian out of poverty, meet an important eligibility criteria: that they are actively looking for a job.<br />
But Italians widely regard the centers as being blighted by obsolete technology and insufficient and under-qualified staff. The new populist government plans to spend 1 billion euros to modernize the centers — 10 percent of the total cost of the new policy in its first year in 2019. <br />
<br />
The “citizens’ wage” will cost 10 billion euros next year, the most expensive item in a big-spending budget which itself has raised concerns in the European Union that Italy could be sowing the seeds of a financial crisis.
    CIPG_20181108_NYT-ItalyBudget_M3_517...jpg
  • AGROPOLI (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018: Carmine Parisi (28), ex militante del PD cacciato dal Partito Democratico per aver denunciato le speculazioni edilizie nella zona del cilento e aver posto interrogativi sull'ex sindaco di Agropoli Franco Alfieri, ora candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania), è qui in posa per un ritratto ad Agropoli (SA) il 4 febbraio 2018.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
AGROPOLI, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: Carmine Parisi (28), former activist of the Democratic Party (PD / Partito Democratico) expelled from the party after denouncing the urban speculation in the Cilento region and questioning the actions of Franco Alfieri - former mayor of Agropoli and chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca, now running for a seat in the Chamber of Deputies in the 2018 Italian General Elections - poses for a portrait in Agropoli, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
<br />
The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • AGROPOLI (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018:  Antonio Giorno (75) passeggia lungo il Lido Azzurro prendendo a calci le alghe che periodicamente tendono a depositarsi dopo la costruzione della barriera frangi-onda, soprannominata dai cittadini "Porto Furbo". voluta dall'ex sindaco di Agropoli Franco Alfieri, oggi candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania) il 4 febbraio 2018. Antonio Giorno dice: "Era una spiaggia bellissima. Non era così 60 anni fa".<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
AGROPOLI, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: Franco Alfieri, former mayor of Agropoli chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca , in Agropoli, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
<br />
The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • AGROPOLI (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018: Vista del centro storico di Agropoli, amministrata dall'ex sindaco Franco Alfieri, candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania) il 4 febbraio 2018.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
AGROPOLI, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: A view of the historical center of Agropoli, that was governed by former mayor Franco Alfieri, now chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca and running as a candidate for the Chamber of Deputies in the 2018 General Elections , in Agropoli, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
<br />
The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • VALLO DELLA LUCANIA (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018: Sostenitori di Franco Alfieri (Partito Democratico), candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania), ex sindaco di Agropoli e capo della segreteria politica del governatore della Regione Campania Vincenzo De Luca, si radunano per l'inaugurazione del suo comitto elettorle in  a Vallo della Lucania (SA) il 4 febbraio 2018.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
VALLO DELLA LUCANIA, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: Supporters of Franco Alfieri (Democratic Party / Partito Democratico), former mayor of Agropoli chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca, gather for the inauguration of his electoral committee in Vallo della Lucania, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
<br />
The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • VALLO DELLA LUCANIA (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018: Un sostenitore ascolta Franco Alfieri (Partito Democratico), candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania), ex sindaco di Agropoli e capo della segreteria politica del governatore della Regione Campania Vincenzo De Luca, durante un suo discorso all'inaugurazione del suo comitto elettorle in  a Vallo della Lucania (SA) il 4 febbraio 2018.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
VALLO DELLA LUCANIA, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: A supporter listens to Franco Alfieri (Democratic Party / Partito Democratico), former mayor of Agropoli chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca, during a speech at the inauguration of his electoral committee in Vallo della Lucania, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
<br />
The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • VALLO DELLA LUCANIA (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018: Franco Alfieri (Partito Democratico), candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania), ex sindaco di Agropoli e capo della segreteria politica del governatore della Regione Campania Vincenzo De Luca, inaugura un suo comitto elettorle in  a Vallo della Lucania (SA) il 4 febbraio 2018.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
VALLO DELLA LUCANIA, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: Franco Alfieri (Democratic Party / Partito Democratico), former mayor of Agropoli chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca, inaugurates his electoral committee in Vallo della Lucania, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
<br />
The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • VALLO DELLA LUCANIA (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018: Franco Alfieri (Partito Democratico), candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania), ex sindaco di Agropoli e capo della segreteria politica del governatore della Regione Campania Vincenzo De Luca, inaugura un suo comitto elettorle in  a Vallo della Lucania (SA) il 4 febbraio 2018.<br />
<br />
Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
<br />
###<br />
<br />
VALLO DELLA LUCANIA, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: Franco Alfieri (Democratic Party / Partito Democratico), former mayor of Agropoli chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca, inaugurates his electoral committee in Vallo della Lucania, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
<br />
The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • VALLO DELLA LUCANIA (SA) - 4 FEBBRAIO 2018: Franco Alfieri (Partito Democratico), candidato alla Camera dei Deputati nel collegio uninominale di Agropoli (Campania), ex sindaco di Agropoli e capo della segreteria politica del governatore della Regione Campania Vincenzo De Luca, inaugura un suo comitto elettorle in  a Vallo della Lucania (SA) il 4 febbraio 2018.<br />
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Le elezioni politiche italiane del 2018 per il rinnovo dei due rami del Parlamento – il Senato della Repubblica e la Camera dei deputati – si terranno domenica 4 marzo 2018. Si voterà per l'elezione dei 630 deputati e dei 315 senatori elettivi della XVIII legislatura. Il voto sarà regolamentato dalla legge elettorale italiana del 2017, soprannominata Rosatellum bis, che troverà la sua prima applicazione<br />
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VALLO DELLA LUCANIA, ITALY - 4 FEBRUARY 2018: Franco Alfieri (Democratic Party / Partito Democratico), former mayor of Agropoli chief of staff of the governor of the Campania region Vincenzo De Luca, inaugurates his electoral committee in Vallo della Lucania, Italy, on February 4th 2018.<br />
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The 2018 Italian general election is due to be held on 4 March 2018 after the Italian Parliament was dissolved by President Sergio Mattarella on 28 December 2017.<br />
Voters will elect the 630 members of the Chamber of Deputies and the 315 elective members of the Senate of the Republic for the 18th legislature of the Republic of Italy, since 1948.
    CIPG_20180204_ELE2018_PD-Campania_M3...jpg
  • 2 December, 2008. New York, NY. Stephanie Mannat, assistant manager at the Tinto Fino wine shop, is here with other member of the staff during the sherry tasting. The Tinto Fino spanish wine shop organizes a sherry tasting. Sherry is a fortified wine made from white grapes that are grown near the town of Jerez, Spain. In Spanish, it is called Vino de Jerez.<br />
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©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    Sherry_011.jpg
  • 25 February 2011. Valletta, Malta. Ireland Counselate staff show Irish flags in order to be recognized by their citizens as they step down from the ferry that evacuated them from Libya. A U.S.-chartered ferry evacuated Americans and other foreigners out of Libya on Friday and brought them to the Mediterranean island of Malta. The Maria Dolores ferry, after three days of delays, brought over 300 passengers, including at 167 U.S. citizens, away from Libya where Colonel Gaddafi's forces continue to clash with anti-government demonstrators.<br />
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©2011 Gianni Cipriano<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +39 328 567 7923<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    malta_22.jpg
  • 18 October, 2008. New York, NY. A door with the Obama campaign signs leads to staff room at the Obama Headquarters of New York, in the Financial District. In the other room Obama volunteers are doing phone banking to Pennsylvania.  The Obama volunteers in New York have been helping the campaign for weeks organizing phone banking, fund raisings, canvas, concerts, fashion shows, etc.<br />
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©2008 Gianni Cipriano for The New York Times<br />
cell. +1 646 465 2168 (USA)<br />
cell. +1 328 567 7923 (Italy)<br />
gianni@giannicipriano.com<br />
www.giannicipriano.com
    GCipriano_20081018_OBAMA__MG_7637.jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
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When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
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Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
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When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
  • PASSO CORESE, ITALY - 22 SEPTEMBER 2020: Francesca Gemma (30), an Amazon employee and union representative, poses for a portrait by the Amazon facility where she works in Passo Corese, just outside Rome,  on September 22nd 2020.<br />
<br />
When Francesca Gemma graduated from college in 2017, Amazon was the only company hiring. “On the first day the muscles of my legs felt like I had done a marathon, I couldn’t climb up the stairs,” she said. “It’s not for everyone, but it’s a job.”  Ms. Gemma, a union representative, said that orders at her fulfillment center skyrocketed during the lockdown and have remained high. She wondered why Amazon did not provide warehouse staff more in bonuses to share in the success. “Nothing remained for workers,” she said. <br />
<br />
<br />
Amazon has been one of the biggest winners in the pandemic as people in its most established markets — the United States, Germany and Britain — have turned to it to buy everything from toilet paper to board games. What has been less noticed is that people in countries that had traditionally resisted the e-commerce giant are now also falling into Amazon’s grasp .<br />
The shift has been particularly pronounced in Italy, which was one of the first countries hard hit by the virus. Italians have traditionally preferred to shop at local stores and pay cash. But after the government imposed Europe’s first nationwide virus lockdown, Italians began shopping online in record numbers. <br />
75 percent of Italians shopped online during the lockdown. In 2020, total online sales are estimated to grow 26 percent to a record 22.7 billion euros, according to researchers from Polytechnic University of Milan.
    CIPG_20200922_NYT-Amazon-Italy_7M307...jpg
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