Academic literature on the topic 'Italian East Africa'

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Journal articles on the topic "Italian East Africa"

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Burdett, Charles. "Memories of Italian East Africa." Journal of Romance Studies 1, no. 3 (2001): 69–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.3828/jrs.1.3.69.

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Choate, Mark I. "From territorial to ethnographic colonies and back again: the politics of Italian expansion, 1890–1912." Modern Italy 8, no. 1 (2003): 65–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1353294032000074089.

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SummaryFor Italy, unprecedented mass migration in the late nineteenth century overshadowed the European Scramble for Africa. To secure Italy's place in the new imperial order, Francesco Crispi proposed to harness emigration for colonial expansion, by settling Italy's East African colonies with the surplus Italian population. Defeat at Adwa in 1896 shattered Crispi's project, and turned attention to colonial possibilities elsewhere. Luigi Einaudi and other Liberals trumpeted the value of Italian collectivities or colonie across the Atlantic, where Italy exerted only indirect influence. In theory, these ‘spontaneous colonies’ would boost the Italian economy at little expense. Italian colonialist societies turned from Africa to the Americas, working to make Italian migration more prestigious, successful and profitable. After 1908, however, Enrico Corradini and the Italian Nationalists mocked these initiatives, and called upon the Italian state to return to traditional imperialism in Africa.
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Polezzi, Loredana. "Imperial reproductions: the circulation of colonial images across popular genres and media in the 1920s and 1930s." Modern Italy 8, no. 1 (2003): 31–47. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1353294032000074061.

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SummaryThe Fascist phase of the Italian colonial experience was characterized by the diffusion of colonial discourses and imagery across Italian culture. Significantly, it was frequent for the same people to produce texts belonging to diverse genres, often cutting across different media and irrespective of distinctions between elite and popular audiences. Concentrating on representations of the East African territories which were eventually to constitute the Africa Orientale Italiana (AOI), the article analyses the way in which a selected number of images of the colonies spread across different genres and media, arguing in favour of an interdisciplinary approach to colonial processes of representation. Textual and visual mappings of Africa inscribed its territories with European symbols, value systems and signifiers. Geographers and travel writers, in particular, had a fundamental role in creating not only the physical but also the mental space for colonization. They enacted the transformation of East Africa from the dangerous and unmapped setting of the heroic acts of individual explorers to the stage for a collective colonial effort. In their footsteps there followed the discourse of tourism and the tourist industry, which was meant to integrate the image of the colonies with that of the peninsula.
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Turtur, Noelle. "Radical Mercantilism and Fascist Italy’s East African Empire." Business History Review 98, no. 1 (2024): 165–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0007680524000138.

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AbstractThis article traces the evolution of Italian strategies for imperial expansion from the decades after unification—when many came to believe that imperial conquest would more advantageously position Italy in the liberal capitalist global economy—to the height of the fascist colonial project in the Horn of Africa—when the fascists tried to break with the liberal global economy and construct a new, radical mercantilist and corporatist empire. Taking inspiration from their predecessors, the fascist regime extracted capital, resources, and labor from Africans and Italians to finance its war against the Ethiopian empire and its colonization of the Horn. While the war temporarily stimulated Italian industry, employed hundreds of thousands of work-hungry Italians, and consolidated the regime’s many corporatist institutions, it drained Italy’s reserves and alarmed the Duce’s allies among Italy’s industrial and financial elite. The regime, thus, shifted strategies, focusing on reducing the cost of the empire by exploiting African workers, eliminating inefficient small enterprises, and creating vast concessions for Italian industrialists. Conquering new territories and markets, acquiring a variety of primary resources, and empowering industry, Mussolini and the radical mercantilist-corporatists aimed to resolve Italy’s perceived under-development, by placing Italy at the center of a great fascist Eurafrican empire that could dictate the terms of its engagement with the rest of the world.
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Mavropoulos, Nikolaos. "Italy in East Asia: Colonial Ambitions, Power Politics and Failures." China and the World 03, no. 02 (2020): 2050004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1142/s2591729320500042.

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The demographic-migration issue was to become a key alibi in Rome’s effort to take colonies, in which Italians were promised cultivable land, opportunities, social stature and advancement. The channeling of the surplus population in other areas constituted one of the pillars of Italian colonial policy and, by extension, reinforced the rhetoric linking the demographic issue with the quest for colonies. This justification of Italian colonialism as an alternative solution to the population problem had a more logical basis compared to the potential economic and raw material benefits of Africa or Asia.
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Kleynhans, Evert. "The South African Offensive Operations in Southern Abyssinia, 1940–1941." International Journal of Military History and Historiography 38, no. 1 (2018): 34–66. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/24683302-03801002.

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The Italian declaration of war in June 1940 placed the British possessions in East Africa under threat of invasion from the neighbouring Italian colonies. In July 1940, the Italians launched limited offensives towards the frontiers of Kenya and the Sudan, and completely overran British Somaliland by August. By November 1940 the First South African Division (1st sa Div) deployed to the Northern Frontier District (nfd) of Kenya, ready to launch offensive operations into Southern Abyssinia against the Mega-Moyale complex. The South African belief in mobile warfare found expression in the ensuing operation, where Maj Gen George E. Brink, the Division’s commander, essentially manoeuvred to fight during the offensive operations. This article critically discusses the objectives allotted to Brink for his offensive operations in Southern Abyssinia. The objectives allocated to the Division are measured against the overall successes of the South African operations in the south of Abyssinia during 1941.
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Rifkind, David. "Gondar." Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 70, no. 4 (2011): 492–511. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/jsah.2011.70.4.492.

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Gondar, Ethiopia, expanded dramatically in the late 1930s as a colonial administrative center for Italian East Africa. David Rifkind shows how urban design and architecture functioned in Gondar between 1936 and 1941 as key tools of Italian colonial policy. Italian urbanism throughout the fascist era illustrates the disquieting compatibility of progressive planning and authoritarian politics, and in Gondar modern urban design was used to define imperial identity for both Italian settlers and African colonial subjects. Gondar: Architecture and Urbanism for Italy's Fascist Empire documents the striking sensitivity to topography and historical preservation that Italian designers brought to their colonial mission as well as the skill with which they adapted to the material and political challenges of working in Italy's overseas dominions.
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Garvin, Diana. "Paper Soldiers on the March: Colonial Toys for Imperial Play." Design Issues 38, no. 3 (2022): 55–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/desi_a_00691.

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Abstract Under the Fascist regime, young Italians amused themselves by practicing the war games of adulthood. Paper soldiers marched across board games set in the newly established empire of Italian East Africa. To reveal how these vicious lessons worked, this article examines three types of toys. It starts with the design and deployment of paper soldiers: Italian Alpinisti, Eritrean Ascari, and Somali Dubat. Next, a playbook for The Conquest of Abyssinia boardgame provides a guide to military conquest. Finally, I examine where these toys come from, revealing the financial structures that underpinned colonial propaganda for Fascist government projects. Ultimately, toys wrote scripts for adult violence in the colonies.
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Kane, Noreen. "Embodying colonial ghosts in postcolonial Italian women's writing." Boolean 2022 VI, no. 1 (2022): 172–78. http://dx.doi.org/10.33178/boolean.2022.1.28.

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While Italian colonialism in Africa is an aspect of Italy’s history that has started to receive academic attention in the last three decades, it remains outside the collective memory of many Italians. In opposition to this lack of mainstream cultural awareness, a proliferation of literary works has been produced, predominantly by female writers with origins in Italy’s former colonies in East Africa, filling in the historical omissions and, importantly, providing a transnational voice to gendered experiences of colonial trauma. Many of these authors foreground the female corporeal experience of colonialism and its legacy. My PhD thesis explores the representation of gendered colonial trauma and its intergenerational transmission through the female body. I examine a range of literary texts by women writers with origins in Somalia and Ethiopia, dating from 2007 to the present. Their work ranges across contexts and languages (Italian and English), yet each narrates colonial history in a highly embodied way, providing an alternative discourse to the nostalgic, mythologising historiography offered by mainstream Italian literature from the post-war period to the present.
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Burdett, Charles. "Journeys to Italian East Africa 1936–1941: narratives of settlement." Journal of Modern Italian Studies 5, no. 2 (2000): 207–26. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13545710050084359.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Italian East Africa"

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Latessa, Amy K. "Fascism, Imperialism, and the Reclamation of Italian Masculinity From Ethiopia, 1935-1941." University of Cincinnati / OhioLINK, 2019. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=ucin1563271975300552.

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SCARSELLI, ALDO GIUSEPPE. "Truppe coloniali di Italia e Regno Unito in Africa Orientale: una comparazione (1924-1939)." Doctoral thesis, 2019. http://hdl.handle.net/2158/1151823.

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L’obiettivo di questa ricerca è quello di confrontare i dispositivi di sicurezza militare delle colonie italiane e inglesi in Africa Orientale nel periodo 1924-1939. Oggetto della ricerca saranno le truppe coloniali indigene, gli ascari/askari, di Eritrea e Somalia per quanto riguarda l’Italia, e di Somaliland, Kenya, Uganda, Nyasaland, Tanganika e Sudan per quanto riguarda la Gran Bretagna. Tale contesto cronologico e geografico non ha ricevuto molta attenzione dalla storiografia se lo si guarda da un’ottica regionale e trans-coloniale. Inoltre, alcuni corpi militari sono stati letteralmente trascurati da entrambe le storiografie, nella fattispecie quelli delle due Somalie. The objective of this research is to carry on a comparison between the military security devices deployed by Italy and Great Britain in East African Colonies during the period 1924-1939. This research focuses on the indigenous African troops – the askari/askari - recruited and employed by Italians in Eritrea and Somalia, and by the British in Somaliland, Kenya, Uganda, Tanganyika, Nyasaland and Sudan. At the present, this chronological and geographical context has been scarcely investigated from a comparative and trans-colonial perspective, not to mention the fact that some of these colonial corps have received little attention from both national historiographies, especially the Somali askari/askari.
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Books on the topic "Italian East Africa"

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Sutherland, Jon. Air war, East Africa 1940-41: The RAF versus the Italian Air Force. Pen & Sword Aviation, 2009.

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Giordano, G. The utilisation of woodlands in Italian East Africa with regard to conservation and improvement of the region's forests. Research Section, British Forestry Project Somalia, 1989.

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Mario, Di Salvo, ed. Middle Eastern and Venetian glass beads: Eighth to twentieth centuries. Skira, 2007.

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Battistelli, Pier Paolo. East Africa Campaign 1940–41. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2024. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781472860729.

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A fascinating study of one of the often overlooked World War II campaigns as British/Commonwealth, Indigenous and Italian forces battled for control of the Horn of Africa. In mid-1940, Italy’s East African colonies posed a significant threat to the British Empire, and in particular to the flow of supplies through the Red Sea to Egypt. British High Command feared moves from Italian East Africa and so sent reinforcements to its positions in Kenya and Sudan. Thus began a series of clashes across East Africa, with the British attempting to keep the Italians isolated and unable to threaten British supply lines. In March 1941, British theatre commander General Archibald Wavell opted for a lightning campaign to eliminate the Italian threat for good. Italian military historian Pier Paolo Battistelli provides a fresh account of this campaign, from the initial Italian attacks to the Allied counter-offensive into Eritrea, Ethiopia and Italian Somaliland. Among the actions covered are Addis Ababa, Amba Alagi, Gondar, Tug Argan, and Keren. This work presents an assessment of the forces involved of both sides, including Orde Wingate’s Gideon force, pro-Selassié Ethiopian irregulars and Eritrean and Somalian troops, as well as Indian, South African, British and Italian regular forces. With colourful artwork, detailed maps and diagrams, this book highlights an overlooked World War II campaign and the bloody fight for the Horn of Africa.
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Afiero, Massimiliano, and Ralph Riccio. Italian East Africa, Birth and Fall of an Empire: Italian Military Operations in East Africa 1941-43. Helion & Company, Limited, 2023.

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Gastrofascism and Empire: Food in Italian East Africa, 1935-1941. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2024.

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East Africa 1940-1941: The Italian Army Defends the Empire in the Horn of Africa. Independently Published, 2020.

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Moderns Abroad: Architecture, Cities, and Italian Imperialism in the Mediterranean and East Africa. Routledge, 2006.

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Sutherland, Jon, and Diane Canwell. Air War in East Africa 1940-41: The RAF Versus the Italian Air Force. Pen & Sword Books Limited, 2009.

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Sutherland, Jon, and Diane Canwell. Air War in East Africa 1940-41: The RAF Versus the Italian Air Force. Pen & Sword Books Limited, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "Italian East Africa"

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Garvin, Diana. "Imperial wet-nursing in Italian East Africa." In The Routledge Companion to Sexuality and Colonialism. Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429505447-12.

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Zoppi, Marco. "Looking for East Africa in Italian Newspapers." In Contested Heritage in Europe and Africa. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781032706122-4.

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De Donno, Fabrizio. "Rereading Italian Travellers to Africa: Precursors, Identities and Interracial Relations in Narratives of Italian Colonialism." In Rereading Travellers to the East. Firenze University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36253/978-88-5518-579-0.05.

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This essay considers a number of travellers’ writings about Africa which are reread to construct and deconstruct Italian colonial identity. It focuses on Cesare Cesari’s Viaggi africani di Pellegrino Matteucci (1932), which deems Matteucci a precursor of Fascist colonialism and contributor to Fascist “colonial science”. The essay then moves on to explore the more recent rereading by Angelo Del Boca and Igiaba Scego of respectively Indro Montanelli’s XX Battaglione Eritreo (1936) and Errico Emanuelli’s Settimana nera (1961). By bringing together and rereading these texts, the essay maps the transformations of Italianness from colonial to postcolonial times and reveals how colonial identity relied on a series of gender, racial and sexual tropes of exploration and conquest.
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Simon, Reeva Spector. "German and Italian Middle East policy." In The Jews of the Middle East and North Africa. Routledge, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429276248-4.

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Pesarini, Angelica. "Making visible the invisible: Colonial sources and counter body-archives in the boarding schools for Black “mixed race” Italian children in fascist East Africa." In Intersectional Italy. Routledge, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003464709-5.

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Stewart, Andrew. "War Comes to East Africa." In The First Victory. Yale University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300208559.003.0003.

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This chapter analyzes how the militarization of East Africa increased dramatically during May and June 1940 as British and Commonwealth forces continued to assemble in anticipation of war breaking out with Italy. The policy of ambiguity and confusion which had existed since before the war had led to British Somaliland effectively being offered up for occupation. The prospect of taking advantage of the dramatically changed strategic position became too great for the Italian General Staff to ignore. They concluded that an attack against this territory and a quick and spectacular success could strengthen the flanks of Italian East Africa and raise the morale of Italian people everywhere. In a territory larger than England and Wales, defended by fewer than 3,000 British and Commonwealth troops, the scene was set for the first major battle of the East Africa campaign.
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Denning, Andrew. "Acceleration and Crash in Italian East Africa." In Automotive Empire. Cornell University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501775369.003.0009.

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This chapter explores Italy's ambitious yet unprepared rush towards empire-building in Ethiopia following the Italo-Ethiopian War. It details how Italy formed Africa Orientale Italiana (AOI) after declaring victory in May 1936 and embarked on extensive infrastructure projects to entrench its rule and integrate the economy with Italy. Governor Alfredo Guzzoni's road plans in Eritrea highlighted Italy's dramatic shift from a beggar's empire to one of extravagant colonial spending, with road projects costing more than all public works over the previous twenty-five years. The chapter highlights Fascist Italy's view of modern roads as crucial to its colonial ambitions, aiming to transform AOI into a self-sufficient empire. Italy's automotive empire in AOI represented both the peak and downfall of their colonial ambitions, reflecting a uniquely Fascist approach to colonialism.
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"8. Acceleration and Crash in Italian East Africa." In Automotive Empire. Cornell University Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781501775383-010.

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Agbamu, Samuel. "The Fall of Italia Risorta: Ethiopia, Roman Africa, and the Invention of Italy." In Restorations of Empire in Africa. Oxford University PressOxford, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/9780191943805.003.0002.

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Abstract This chapter explores Italian discourses about Roman imperialism in the context of the Italy’s first colonies in East Africa, and its defeats in Ethiopia in the 1880s and 1890s. It begins by setting Italian imperial classicism in this period within the context of the classicizing imperialisms of other powers. First, it examines British and Egyptian imperial ambitions towards Ethiopia, framed with reference to ancient history. Next it charts Italy’s early colonial endeavours in East Africa, culminating with the defeat at the Battle of Dogali in 1887. This was commemorated in classical style, two significant instances being an obelisk in central Rome, and essays by Alfredo Oriani. The chapter suggests that, from the very beginning of the existence of the Italian nation state, colonialism in Africa, modelled on ancient Roman imperialism, was central to Italian national self-understanding.
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Stewart, Andrew. "Triumph in the Mountains." In The First Victory. Yale University Press, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.12987/yale/9780300208559.003.0008.

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This chapter follows the British and Commonwealth troops as they passed through Keren. This town was important to both the Italian and British and Commonwealth forces as road and rail routes through it afforded access to Asmara, the capital of Eritrea, and to Massawa, the main port in the southern Red Sea. To capture it, Major-General William Platt's two Indian divisions would have to confront the best Italian troops remaining in East Africa. The chapter shows how the attack on the Keren position had been the pivotal point in the East Africa campaign as it delivered the decisive blow to the Italians and allowed Platt the opportunity to accomplish what Wavell had asked him to do: secure the Sudanese border and then clearing the Italians from the coast beyond.
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Conference papers on the topic "Italian East Africa"

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Dainese, Elisa. "Le Corbusier’s Proposal for the Capital of Ethiopia: Fascism and Coercive Design of Imperial Identities." In LC2015 - Le Corbusier, 50 years later. Universitat Politècnica València, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/lc2015.2015.838.

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Abstract: In 1936, immediately after the Italian conquest of the Ethiopian territories, the Fascist government initiated a competition to prepare the plan of Addis Ababa. Shortly, the new capital of the Italian empire in East Africa became the center of the Fascist debate on colonial planning and the core of the architectural discussion on the design for the control of African people. Taking into consideration the proposal for Addis Ababa designed by Le Corbusier, this paper reveals his perception of Europe’s role of supremacy in the colonial history of the 1930s. Le Corbusier admired the achievements of European colonialism in North Africa, especially the work of Prost and Lyautey, and appreciated the results of French domination in the continent. As architect and planner, he shared the Eurocentric assumption that considered overseas colonies as natural extension of European countries, and believed that the separation of indigenous and European quarters led to a more efficient control of the colonial city. In Addis Ababa he worked within the limit of the Italian colonial framework and, in the urgencies of the construction of the Fascist colonial empire, he participated in the coercive construction of imperial identities. Keywords: Le Corbusier; Addis Ababa; colonial city; Fascist architecture; racial separation; Eurocentrism. DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/LC2015.2015.838
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Ferrari, A., M. Cola, L. Sasset, et al. "P54 HIV infection in migrants from Sub-Saharan Africa in the North East of Italy." In Abstracts from the 17° Italian Conference on AIDS and Antiviral Research. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd, 2025. https://doi.org/10.1136/sextrans-icar-2025.135.

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Ibrahim, OMAR Yehya Abou Elseoud, Waleed Gabr, Mostafa Mahmoud Kortam, Mahmoud Abdelrahman, Mahmoud Moawed, and Hossam Elmasry. "Alternatives to 28% Chrome for Production Tubing in Super-Giant Mediterranean Deep Water Gas Field, Zohr Field, Eni–Petrobel." In ADIPEC. SPE, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.2118/211418-ms.

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Abstract Zohr field was discovered in 2015 by the Italian energy company Eni and is the largest ever natural gas found in the Mediterranean Sea, with around (30 trillion cubic feet) total gas in place. Belaim Petroleum Company (Petrobel) (JV with ENI) is the Egyptian Petroleum Corporation arm and the owner of the project. Production started in December 2017 and since then 18 wells have been drilled for production. This paper describes the criteria for material selection of the production strings for Zohr’s deep-water gas producers and how pre-tested and approved cost-effective alternatives are available for such a top-class project. The paper details the qualification and deployment of glass reinforced polymer (GRP) Lined Tubing as an alternative to 28%Chrome tubing, including the testing work that has been performed, and the operational aspects of running the referred-to alternative in several deep-water projects. The choice of Duoline lined tubing results from the need for a cost-effective solution delivering the same operational requirements of 28% Chrome production strings. And since the Duoline GRE system will be integrated with the steel tubing therefore this system has to be previously fully approved and certified by the manufacturing mill of the lined tubing so there would be not even minor modifications to the specifications and the sealing performance of the premium connections and tubing body. The paper indulges into describing the laboratory tests and the field experiences of the Duoline Lined tubing system in various fields globally, where this system has been tested in severe operating conditions with elevated levels of H2S, CO2, Salinity, dissolved Oxygen conditions to investigate the capability and service limits of the fiberglass liner at different temperatures. In addition to mentioning the erosion tests that were performed, mechanical tests such as pressure loop and make & break tests, how these various tests ended with good results and its comparison to the exotic high chrome joints performance. This fiberglass lined tubing system has been applied in gas production wells since the 1980s, and ENI has been utilizing this technology in their production and water wells since 2005 in the north Africa, middle east, Kashagan regions and Norway offshore wells. On the other side, the technology has been successfully used world-wide in more than 55,000 wells since 1960s in various applications besides gas production strings. The paper will present the past experience of ENI with fiberglass lined tubing, the laboratory tests, the field experiences, the economic evaluation of implementing this system in such a high-profile project, In addition to the pre-qualifications performed on this system by the OCTG mills and approvals granted to integrate this technology with the patent premium connection joints.
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