Sei sulla pagina 1di 25

1

CAPABILITIES AND COMMUNITY BUILDING:


TWO CASE STUDIES OF SOCIAL INNOVATION IN NAPLES
Pasquale De Muro
Dipartimento di Economia
Universit degli Studi Roma Tre, demuro@uniroma3.it
Ph. +39 0657374076 / Fax +39 0657374093
Paola Di Martino & Lucia Cavola
Iter srl centro ricerche e servizi, itersrl@tin.it
Ph. +39 081418596 / Fax +39 081406866
Abstract We present two case studies of social innovation against deprivation and social exclusion in Naples.
The two cases have been studied within the SINGOCOM research project. The first case refers to the
neighbourhood Quartieri Spagnoli, where a voluntary-based association started in the Seventies to fight the
widespread human poverty by fostering the capabilities of deprived citizens, especially women and their
children. The initiative succeeded in activating basic functionings and awareness, thus the association became a
reference for the inhabitants of the neighbourhood. In the Eighties and Nineties the association got the attention
of public institutions and started new projects of neighbourhood development funded by central and local
government, and EU. The second case is located in Scampia, a neighbourhood in the outskirts, and started more
recently. A network of civic associations is trying to build a piazza (square), that is a place where the local
community can meet and live collective initiatives in order to (re)construct social relations, especially among
young people, that are blocked and corrupted, on one side, by criminality and, on the other side, by a neglectful
city planning. The civic network succeeded in enhancing local social capital and fighting social exclusion;
furthermore, they developed a planning project for the piazza. The use of ICTs had a relevant role in the
community networking. Notwithstanding, local government has still not paid any tangible attention to those
bottom-up initiatives in Scampia.
Keywords social innovation, community building, capabilities, governance, Naples
1. Introduction
In this paper we present the results of two cases of social innovation in neighbourhood development in the
municipal area of Naples, that have been studied within the Social Innovation, Governance and Community
Building (SINGOCOM) research project funded by the European Union.
The first study refers to the Quartieri Spagnoli neighbourhood, in the old part of Naples, an area with a high
level of physical and social decay. Here, at the end of the 1970s, a voluntary-based initiative that was
predominantly inspired by the philanthropic solidarity of critical and dissenting Christian movements started
with the intention of supporting the resident population and helping them meet needs for social assistance,
housing and solidarity. Formally established in 1989 as Associazione Quartieri Spagnoli (AQS), its main aim
was to support the population residing in one of the most run-down area in the old part of Naples, in a situation
characterized by insufficient municipal social services and local and national governments inertia. Over a period
spanning more than twenty years, the AQS has built a new identity for the area by establishing new institutions
and social relations. From its outset until 1990, activity was centred on rebuilding the social tissue and trust-
based relationships. This has allowed the Association to become firmly embedded in the context, intervene in the
area by working from inside and establish itself as a constant presence and place to turn to when experiencing
anxiety and hardship.
Subsequently, after a period of fertilisation, the second stage began and continued throughout the 1990s. In this
period, the Association played an important role in outlining municipal social policy. It participated in urban
requalification programmes, closely collaborated with municipal, national and European institutions, received
European funding and established links with the university and other extended networks. This was a period of
true institutionalization in which its intervention in the area became stronger and more stable and continuous.
2
As far as results are concerned, the AQS has played an important role in improving the standard of living and
bringing about changes in attitude, mentality and culture shown by some of the resident population. The
inhabitants of the area who have taken part in the Associations projects have not only attended training courses,
found jobs and satisfied other needs that had previously not been met but have also become protagonists and no
longer consider themselves as passive and disheartened onlookers. Encouraged by these results, municipal
government has adopted some of the intervention models conceived by members of the Association and has also
used them in other areas of the city.
The study of AQS experience has, above all, contributed to recognizing and describing the elements and
dynamics of social innovation as defined in the SINGOCOM project. It has also been useful in pinpointing the
factors that have outlined the context in which the AQS has worked and identifying the conditions that have
contributed to the success of the project and shaped the dynamics of social innovation.
The second case study concerns the recent experience of Piazziamoci, a network of groups, associations, schools,
joint owners that was set up in 2001 in the neighbourhood of Scampia, an extremely distressed area in northern
outskirts of Naples. The aim of the network is to create a Piazza for Young People in the area through direct
participation of the civil society in its planning. The initiative was a reaction to top-down urban development
planning that did not meet citizens needs and consisted predominantly of building with very little concern for
social problems. Its intention is to affirm an active citizenship model and begin participatory urban planning as
part of the Urban Redevelopment Plan.
The Piazza represents a goal in a physical sense since the network is trying to include the project in the urban
plan and the municipal budget and also in a figurative sense as a virtual place where the community, and young
people in particular, can meet and play a role in neighbourhood development in an innovative way.
In the study of Piazziamoci, firstly we present two closely related factors in the area, urban development and the
complex socio-economic background. We then attempt to understand the circumstances that have led to the
establishment and development of local grassroots organizations beginning with civic commitment through
traditional forms of political representation through to discussion with the local public institutions and the
creation of the Piazziamoci network and its work. Our main objective is to assess the socially innovative content
of the Piazziamoci project that has yet to be finalized and its impact on social exclusion and urban planning.
Relations, on the one hand, between intolerable living conditions in the neighbourhood and solutions that the
network of associations has tried to find and, on the other, the difficult relations between the network and local
public administration will be analyzed. Finally, we will try to assess the effect that the voice that Piazziamoci
has given to the neighbourhood residents needs for social relations and security has had on local governance.
The two studies have been conducted mainly through a series of meetings and interviews with the local actors
related to the initiatives: leaders and members of civil society organisations and neighbourhood associations,
stakeholders, volunteers, civil servants, representatives of local government, university researchers, parsons and
religious groups.
2. Expanding human capabilities in the Quartieri Spagnoli
2.1. The scenario in which the Associazione Quartieri Spagnoli operates
2.1.1. Quartieri Spagnoli: a history of hardship and poverty
The Quartieri Spagnoli area is part of the city of Naples situated behind the town hall and the centrally located
via Toledo. Building work began in the Viceroyalty period in about 1550 when the Spanish Viceroy decided to
divide the area into lots to provide accommodation for his troops. Work continued until 1750 when the quarter
assumed its present-day form. It soon became home to negative military-related activities including prostitution
and smuggling.
The area covers just over 500.000 square metres and at present accommodates roughly 3,000 families and 15,000
people. It has always been a run-down difficult area but is also known for its vitality and wide range of activities.
At present, there are approximately 250 workshops, 360 shops and many other businesses, 196 yards and 223
3
garages
1
. The building heritage of the area, that includes buildings of special historical and artistic importance,
has rapidly deteriorated over the years. The buildings have been subjected to dramatic changes, for the most part,
without planning permission and maintenance and restoration work has been carried out only recently.
Due to its physical structure, the Quartieri Spagnoli have always suffered from a shortage of areas where
residents can meet and socialize. The few places that exist include Church premises, social clubs and the
headquarters of two political parties. Other new meeting places have been set up by enterprising immigrants. In
this type of situation, the streets become the only alternative. Although they provide an opportunity for peaceful
and positive coexistence, they can also encourage deviance particularly among young people and family
dissolution. At present, the criminal organizations are less powerful than they have been in the past but in the
1980s they were involved in recruiting, aggregating and controlling human and financial resources. Many
families have young member who are still in prison or were killed in fights between rival bands. Young
pregnancies are commonplace and for decades prostitution has been one of the most widespread activities in the
area although now it has almost disappeared. Usury is often resorted to as a way of tackling financial difficulty
albeit involuntarily when it is initially disguised as an act of solidarity.
However, behind the neighbourhoods often falsified image as a symbol of urban decay, a number of social
styles and models can be outlined. One of the most recent sociological studies performed on the Quartieri
Spagnoli area has identified the presence of at least five social groups of which three predominate and have
always been present and two are marginal and have recently appeared in the area (Laino, 2001a):
1. lower middle income group, consisting of "healthy" households, affected only occasionally by social
deviance. Its members have low education levels but are engaged in honest employment (often irregular, or
low-level jobs in the public sector).
2. marginalized proletariat, consisting of families at high risk of deviance whose members actively participate
in informal, precarious and illegal networks on which the area economy is predominantly based. Although
this is not the largest group, it is the most noticeable part of the population because it tends to impose its
own style. In these families, symptoms of social exclusion often become chronic: truancy, unemployment,
juvenile pregnancies, welfare dependency, experiences in custody, promiscuity, abuse.
3. workers in white collar and services sectors in lower middle classes, the smallest group consisting of lower
and middle class families that live in the area but consider themselves and live as outsiders. They tolerate the
behaviour of the other groups and although the members of the first two groups of families are unwilling to
leave the area, the young members of the lower middle class see emigration towards other areas or cities as
a social promotion (Laino, 2001a).
The earthquake in November 1980, that caused many buildings in the area to be declared unsafe, has also
affected its social fabric. Some of the population has migrated towards other areas whereas new members have
taken up residence in the area. Two other social groups who are currently establishing themselves have appeared
in the area:
4. immigrants, both legal and illegal, on the increase who have already established small communities with
more civilized and dignified living conditions. They are not yet fully integrated in the local community;
5. a few upper middle classes families who manage to buy and renovate apartments or buy them already
renovated at low prices by taking advantage of the declining building heritage. They tolerate the hardship in
the area because of the advantages of living in the centre of the city or because they love the vitality of the
old town.
Obviously, there are also many families with members belonging to at least two of the groups described.
Irrespective of the social group they belong to, the residents in the area lead a style of living characterized by
informal relations and intense economic transactions that keep the characteristic social and functional variety of
this area alive. Although this social model constitutes a territorial resource with its strong identity, vitality,
mutual help and sense of belonging, it has also given rise to a new system of rules of living and coexistence.
Neighbourhood livelihood strategies have controlled behaviour and influenced lifestyle in the Quartieri Spagnoli
for hundreds of years and as a result have fuelled social exclusion dynamics for children, particularly young

1
These statistics are recorded directly by the AQS and updated at regular intervals. They are obviously subject to variations in use (Laino,
2002).
4
people and women.
Many young children live in a state of abandonment since one or both parents are often in prison or in hiding and
they are frequently left in the care of an older sister or relative. They are often absent from school and learn little.
Training is inadequate or suspended without warning and many employment paths lead young people towards
precarious situations and illegal employment. Young people know that only the "Camorra" (the Neapolitan
Mafia) can provide them with an income.
Young girls, in particular, learn the facts of life at a very young age with ill-timed sexual experiences and early
childbearing. They are often grandmothers before they reach the age of forty and are excluded from any training
or work programmes.
2.1.2. Main evolutions in the political, institutional and governance context
On a purely administrative level, the Quartieri Spagnoli area lies within an area covering two separate districts
(San Ferdinando, Montecalvario) and their district councils. These institutions do not have part in decision
making and play a mainly advisory role. The City Council is responsible for urban policies.
Until the beginning of the 1970s (when administrative decentralization was introduced in Italy and the Regions
were set up) the few social policies that were implemented by Naples City Council were ineffective and
consisted mainly of financial aid to keep underprivileged members of the population in care or paid directly to
the deprived family units.
Even the Third sector was very weak and almost inexistent in this period. It consisted also entirely of closed
institutions run by the Catholic Church that provided care and assistance (rest homes for the elderly, care homes
for the mentally disturbed and the disabled, boarding schools).
In the mid 1970s, the Italian health reform pressed for services that were no longer confined to hospitals but
linked to the area. The first left-wing city council (under the mayor, Maurizio Valenzi) encouraged more
extensive health and social services aimed at specific categories of underprivileged members of society (women,
drug addicts, the mentally ill, the elderly), supplied at info points and/or advisory centres run by the City Council
(Sportello Donna and the Progetto Animazione Infanzia). These initiatives were implemented by increasing the
municipal staff (social workers) and linking them with the few voluntary ventures that was starting up in some
problem areas including the Quartieri Spagnoli. In fact, the problems that afflicted this area had attracted the
attention of voluntary movements and organizations who found an ideal situation in which to implement social
initiatives and welfare work.
As a result, at the end of the 1970s in the Quartieri Spagnoli, members of a wide range of state and private
organizations and institutions were involved in providing assistance and tutoring to deprived families. They
include municipal social service workers, the parishes, the more dynamic workers in the five schools attended by
the local student population and members of a few non-profit organizations. However, the flourishing of
innovative social activities came to a standstill when the earthquake struck in November 1980.
Until the mid 1980s, there was no progress in social policies in Naples because of the post-earthquake
emergency situation that hit the areas in the old part of the city. Only since 1985, Naples City Council has
resumed its social policies motivated by funding from national laws and has encouraged the development of
social services in all districts in the city.
The range of intervention tools was extended and initiatives began to combine financial support with
socialization and community activities (laboratories, cinema) with collaboration from private social
organizations. The municipal social services and organizations in the Third sector began a period of close
collaboration. The Third sector had become more active and specialized and was no longer confined to the
Catholic voluntary sector or religious charity organizations but encompassed left-wing associations and
cooperatives of lay origins. The Associazione Quartieri Spagnoli (AQS) is the neighbourhood actor in the
Quartieri Spagnoli that has established the closest links with public institutions in order to promote new social
policies. It played a leading role as main agent in promoting neighbourhood development. Its constant
involvement in planning and trying out intervention models in the area has helped to activate social and
institutional policies and attract considerable human and financial resources for social innovation and inclusion
to the area.
5
Collaboration between different private and state groups became particularly intense in the Quartieri Spagnoli
because of the willingness for networking shown by the people involved in social work. Here, an innovative
form of partnership between the social operators in the area, a sort of neighbourhood welfare network in which
local actors could discuss local policies, was experimented upon. At the beginning of the 1990s, the Council
established neighbourhood committees (CTI, organizations formally set up with a Mayors decree) that area
social services, advisory centres, schools, parishes and local organizations in the Third sector participated in.
These Committees held regular meetings (every 15 days) to try and find solutions to problems in the area. They
began as part of a pilot scheme in 5 areas (Quartieri Spagnoli, Barra, Soccavo, Scampia and Poggioreale) and
have been extended to all the neighbourhoods in the city. They mark a new direction in social policies that aims
at social networking and shifts the focus from the quantity to the quality of intervention.
During the 1990s, there was a radical change in municipal social policies with the election in 1993 of the mayor,
Antonio Bassolino, and the establishment of the Department of Dignity and Respect that was responsible for
social policies until 2000. The new policies were based on granting rights of citizenship to underprivileged
classes and groups with a territorial approach based on partner strategies. Institutional activity developed through
intense relations with organizations in the Third sector and the state training and research sector (Faculty of
Sociology, Relational Sciences, Istituto Suor Orsola).
The Pic Urban project began in the Quartieri Spagnoli in this climate (in 1995). Much of the project was
dedicated to social projects and services and close links with local groups that revolved around the AQS and had
been involved in social activities for some time. The City Council (under the mayor, Bassolino, a strong
advocate of the culture of decorum) integrated the Pic project with some physical intervention with greater
visual impact for the population including new paving, lighting and new bus lines. In short, collaboration
between the AQS and the Naples City Council meant that a significant part of the Pic Urban project was devoted
to social intervention.
In 1996, a willingness to listen and cooperate led to the City Council setting up a Comitato cittadino di lotta
allesclusione sociale (Citizens' committee for the fight against social exclusion) that representatives of state
institutions (Local Health Authorities, Local Education Authorities, the Chamber of Commerce, the Regional
Employment Agency) and private organizations (Industrialists Association, trade unions and associations in the
Third sector) took part in. They offered consultation and guidance in the form of permanent work commissions
(integrated socio-health intervention, social and financial programming, social public-private integration and
socio-educational prevention).
In 1997, a three-year pilot scheme for Childhood and Adolescence began thanks to Act 285/97. This national law
states that the scheme must be the result of consultation with other local institutions and organizations in the
Third sector. Naples City Council had already begun similar pilot schemes through the neighbourhood
committees (CTIs) and was therefore the first to approve the 1997/1999 three-year scheme and identify the Plan
Agreement between the Department of Dignity and Respect, the Department of Education, the Local Health
Authority, the Ufficio scolastico regionale (formerly the Local Education Authority) and the Juvenile Justice
Centre as the means for implementing the scheme. The Scheme and its projects were defined in meetings with
organizations in the private social sector with collaboration from the same experts and consultants used in the Pic
Urban project including one that is closely linked to the AQS. In this way, the Scheme continued trends and
projects that had already been experimented on or were being experimented on in the Urban project.
In 1999, there was an important change in power at the municipal government that led to a change in the style of
government and planning in Naples City Council. Bassolino stood as Governor of the Campania Region and left
the mayors office. Once he was elected, Incostante, the Councillor for Dignity and Respect also left the Council
for the Region.
In 2000, the latest policies conceived in previous years were defined. In January 2000, the Social Planning
Scheme that dictated a series of conditions and regulations for intervention in all the weak social groups was
approved and the second three-year Plan 2000-2003 of Act 285/97 for childhood and adolescence began.
Motivated by Act 229/99, Naples City Council signed a Plan Agreement with the Local Health Authority for
socio-health intervention for weak members or members at risk.
From that moment, a gradual reduction in the municipal governments level of receptivity of local actors was
perceived and the innovative content of the dynamics of interaction and participation of the civil society in
governance was stifled by the re-emergence of a bureaucratic culture and administrative routine.
6
In 2001, Naples City Council approved the first three-year area social plan and put Act 328 passed by the
Government in 2000 into effect. It involved structural changes in the way social services were provided. The
three-year social plan for the district became the main programming tool for social policies; its aim was to
identify objectives and priority of intervention, ways of organizing services and resources and ways of
integrating and coordinating the services system and intervention in the area. It involved a great deal of
consultation and the drawing up of a Plan agreement. With a view towards the future, the Plan for Childhood and
Adolescence and the Area Social Plan were merged in a single plan agreement.
Despite apparent continuity with policies in the previous decade, the most recent social policies are characterized
by a top-down approach with much attention given to image rather than relationships with the citizens and local
networks. There is no longer the same willingness to listen to the suggestions of local actors and try out
partnerships and co-planning.
This trend can also be seen in institutional evolution and the organizational decisions made for effecting Act
328/00: Naples City Council has set up a central plan office and has divided up the city area into 10 Basic
Territorial Units based on the existing health division in 10 districts
2
. For each unit the City Council will
activate two bodies that discuss action to be taken: a neighbourhood committee (consisting of the president of the
municipal district, municipal social assistants, representatives of the social services and health offices and
representatives of the district schools) that supports central planning and is responsible for assessment and
monitoring; a Third Sector territorial council that includes all the persons in charge of organizations operating in
this field in the area.
This organizational set-up that relegates local actors to an institution with a purely advisory role, indicates the
intention to leave all authority and power to make decisions to its traditional and natural political and
administrative place (department or service) to avoid discussion and conflict with local actors (Lepore,
2002a).
2.2. Associazione Quartieri Spagnoli: from group of volunteers to neighbourhood development
agency
2.2.1 Cultural and ideological origins
AQS is based on a project that was spontaneously launched towards the end of the 1970s by a group of people
who were determined to find new forms of civic commitment that were different from the traditional
involvement in political parties and groups. The approach was predominantly inspired by the philanthropic
solidarity of critical and dissenting Christian movements established between the 1950s and 1960s. The
promoters, a group of friends consisting of students, clerical workers, teachers, were linked to the religious
communities who based their work on Charles de Foucaulds experiences. At the end of the 1970s, they decided
to live and work in the area in close contact with needy or vulnerable groups of inhabitants who risked social
exclusion or were already in a deprived position.
On a social philosophical level, similarities can also be found with the Movimento di Cooperazione Educativa
(MCE) inspired by the Popular Pedagogy of Clestin and Elise Freinet, whereas on an organizational level, its
work is similar to that of militant neighbourhood groups belonging to Left-wing parties that were establishing
themselves in the suburbs or run-down areas in the same period.
In the beginning, the promoters did not focus on doing something for the local residents but on being with
them and creating a place where they could be together, drink coffee and exchange stories and survival
strategies. They describe themselves as a group of dissenting Catholics enrooted in an area of hardship and
poverty that represents a privileged place for developing a horizon of sense. They chose civic commitment
because they were unable to identify with traditional political commitment with its parliamentary and extra
parliamentary parties, codes and protocols.
The style of intervention and methods have been dictated by this cultural and ideological inspiration from the
very beginning: a low threshold work made possible by the territorial embeddedness, skill and constant
commitment of the people dedicated to the mission. Activities were channelled towards offering inhabitants, and

2
The Spanish quarter area does not fall into one unit because the two districts of San Ferdinando and Montecalvario belong to two different
units.
7
especially young people, the opportunity to gain the rights of citizenship that had not been granted by the state.
To achieve this objective, social bonds had to be developed and the community rebuilt by reformulating the
ways of living, social roles and value frameworks, restoring and redefining the sense of legality and spirit of
solidarity and activating forms of active citizenship and associative local democracy. Its aim was to develop the
citizens ability to pass from a passive state to one of mobilization when confronted with specific activities
(Stanco, Stanco & Laino, 1994). Work involved the creation of social and educational activities and training and
the revival of economic activity and artisan activity in particular.
2.2.2. AQS 1st stage: fertilisation and experimentation (1978-1990)
During its first year of activity, the group was exclusively involved in becoming a part of the residents lives,
listening to their problems and consolidating its knowledge of social exclusion dynamics in the area. It focused
its attention on the difficulties faced by children and young people who had abandoned compulsory education or
interrupted their studies early and spent most of their time in the streets. It then became involved in the problem
of hidden work that is widespread throughout the small factories in the area, and low employability of young
people due to poor training and lack of qualifications. Over the past years, a tightly-knit web of personal
relations has been formed and the headquarters of the voluntary group (a small "basso", a single-room ground
dwelling leading directly onto the street) has become a well known meeting place for families in the area.
Initially, activities were mainly self-financed. The promoters worked free of charge and also had to cover
overheads. They sometimes benefited from small external contributions from several different sources including,
above all, private supporters. However, the most important mobilized resource consists of the close web of
relations with the external world, an extensive informal network that has grown over the years and involves the
University and research institutes with similar experiences that other individuals belonging to the same religious
movement have begun in other parts of Naples, Italy and worldwide. At the same time, the AQSs projects did
not have any competitors and the main obstacle it faced was the cultural, professional and political inertia of the
government institutions who were willing to listen but achieved little on a practical level.
The Association was formally established in 1986 when the informal group of friends decided to provide a
formal legal structure for the voluntary service. The work that was based on the euphoric yet relaxed spontaneity
of the early period was gradually being transformed into activities, ideas and projects that required a more solid
organization.
Despite the formal transformation, the partners continued to work free of charge although the Association's
activities began to receive financial support from the State and Naples City Council. It then acquired use of
municipal premises that became the base for the AQSs first social economy project. A multi-purpose youth
centre called Via Nova became a social centre where educational and socialization projects and pre-learning
activities for children and young people in the area (playschools, scholastic support, creativity labs, photography,
music, pottery, sports activities) were organized. At the same time, a project on the emersion of hidden
employment went ahead with cooperation from young workers and local artisans. The Parco del Lavoro was
conceived as a complex project involving the training and insertion of young people in local businesses and for
the first time in Naples courses for Street Teachers were proposed.
All the initiatives undertaken up to this point and the ideas and innovative projects developed in this period were
the result of painstaking and determined networking by the partners. Its aim was to strengthen relations and
cooperation with organizations and institutions worldwide and also to create a real development coalition with
the other local associations. The AQS therefore played a major role in the intense regeneration and development
of the area that led to substantial new resources being mobilized in the years that followed.
2.2.2. AQS 2nd stage: transformation into neighbourhood development agency (1991-1999)
In 1991 the AQS began a period of major development and underwent progressive institutionalization in which it
took on the more permanent role of an agency promoting neighbourhood development and playing an active part
in outlining social policies in the Municipality. Changes in social and institutional relations and changes in the
AQSs role as development agency have already been described in 2.2 on the development of social policies in
Naples. During the 1990s, extensive collaboration and interaction between social mobilization and the city
government prevailed in the citys political arena and was assisted by the arrival of competent administrators on
the scene who were particularly sensitive to social integration. Civil society expressed stronger pressure from
below and the AQS played an active role along with other associations and groups embedded in the municipal
territory and proposed projects that, after experimentation at a neighbourhood scale, stimulated innovative
8
municipal social policies
3
.
Until then, the AQS had based its activity on a strong territorial embeddedness and a firm commitment to
listening and speaking to the population in the area. It now began to develop a special ability to link people,
experiences and resources at different spatial scales. The Association became a member of the CNCA
(Coordinamento Nazionale delle Comunit di Accoglienza). It also came into contact with European
organizations such as the Ufjt, (Union Nationale des Foyers et Services pour Jeunes Travailleurs), specialized
prevention groups and the European network of the Rgies de Quartier. Its participation in European networks
promoted intense exchanges between organizers, teachers and social workers and the area and its social
workshop were publicized on an international level.
Through these channels and the people it came into contact with, it became aware of the new opportunities that
national and European policies offered for innovative projects.
The fact that one of its founder members who has embarked on a university career, worked from 1995 to 1999 as
a consultant for the Municipalitys social policies managed by the Department of Dignity and Respect has meant
that the strategies and style of the AQS have had a significant effect on neighbourhood and urban planning and
actions (Pic Urban, Municipal Plan for Children, Minimum Income Category). Due to these dynamics and
changed social relations in this period, the Pic Urban project is particularly attentive to the social dimension of
public space rather than only physical requalification. In line with the philosophy and methods of intervention
developed by the AQS, the Pic Urban project in Naples has done much more than other projects to promote
small scale economic activity and has conceived training, co-financed by European Social Funding, as socio-
educational services that are basically stable, receptive to the area and based on involvement of the local
population.
The projects funded as part of the Pic Urban scheme and other numerous initiatives related to protection,
prevention and social inclusion for which the AQS has received national and European (Integra, Povert,
Horizon, Now) funding are conceptualized as modules in a single integrated project called C.Ri.S.I. (Cantiere
per la Riqualificazione Sociale Integrata), featuring a first example of what were known as cantieri sociali
(social yards) in other contexts. This involves a series of interventions that established innovative social figures
and tools such as street teachers, mothers crches, social points, job centres, foster care tutors, training
programmes for job socialization and services for the employability of young people. Some of these projects
were then adopted as models in other areas and cities and have been considered first-class projects by the
national training authority, ISFOL (Istituto per gli Studi sulla FOrmazione ed il Lavoro).
At this stage, the Association's budget had improved significantly. It organized many well-structured activities
and developed strong roots in the community where it earned a trusted reputation as a reliable source of
assistance to people in need. In addition to financial resources, other types of resources contributed to the success
of the AQSs initiatives. They included strong leadership, constant commitment from people who are dedicated
to the mission, many highly skilled development agents working on the project, motivation, relational skills,
creativity, planning skills and listening, mediating, experimenting and negotiating skills. By the end of this stage,
the AQS had become the main agent promoting neighbourhood development in the area and had several ongoing
projects where it could put its considerable experience to use. However, these projects needed to be closely
followed and defended from tough competition.
2.2.4. AQS 3rd stage: assessment and revision (2000-2003)
The year 1999 marked a turning-point and the beginning of a downhill trend for the AQS caused by important
changes in municipal social policy, as described in par. 1.2. In addition to the political climate, the third sector
had also changed considerably
4
. The social market had changed and the economic interest at stake had
increased. There was now strong competition for projects from other actors in the non-profit sector who were not
as competent and forward-looking but were experts in fund-raising and appeared on the scene to take advantage
of the situation. Social yards no longer featured and were replaced by social market niches where the competitive
companies mission was increasingly geared towards company consolidation rather than community building. As
a result, the Association now had to reconsider its role as a development agency and search for new ways to

3
The AQS is at the centre of the local network that formed at the beginning of the 1990s the Quartieri Spagnoli neighbourhood committee
ahead of similar experiences in other districts and subsequent institutionalization (see par.1.2)
4
With a skilful play on words when referring to the interaction between civil society organizations and public policies, protagonists of the
AQS define the 1990s as a stage in which projects led to policies whereas the current stage is seen as a stage in which policies lead to
projects. (Laino, 2001a).
9
pursue its mission.
Since then, the AQS has always complained of local government's loss of strategy in social policy. Despite its
apparent continuity, it does not seem to consider an increase in social capital really important. In the new
administrative scenario, the Pic Urban project will be filed away as a past experience along with the style of
intervention and philosophy that went with it.
As already stated, when the City Council drew up the three-year social Plan that was approved in 2001, it
changed the relations and institutional balances in the bureaucratic structure (among politicians, civil servants,
executives) and delegitimized the unofficial team of experts, consultants and representatives of the associations
that had cooperated with the previous administration.
For the members of local associations, the current social services policy is the result of a traditional approach to
systematic planning in which the activity of listening to the area and its specific nature is grossly underestimated
and in which the indiscriminate institutionalization of the social services that ignores the differences between the
areas risks damaging social innovation rather than promoting it. This opinion is a result of reassessment of the
role of civil society that is currently only assigned an advisory role, if it is involved at all
5
.
In addition to changes in social relations and policies, the AQS explicitly deplores the reappearance of non-
transparent behaviour, alliances based on opportunism, power games and policies of favouritism in the political
arena.
As a result, the Association has been facing a strategic, financial and structural crisis for some years involving a
drift of control where attention is focused on finding financial backing for ongoing activities rather than
devising new intervention models. A new source of funding came from the Fondazione Banco Napoli that
decided to support a Children Parking project in 2002. However, compared with previous years, there is a lack
of project continuity and renewal of financial sources that has led to a sense of precariousness and uncertainty.
Nevertheless, the AQS is continuing the activities consolidated over a period of time and is one of the major
suppliers of social services in the area. Two recent results that are important in socially innovative terms need to
be mentioned.
First, the co-operative Passaggi promoted by the AQS in Sviluppo Italias Fertilit project that brings together a
group of social workers who had been collaborating with the AQS for some time. The advancement of the co-
operative Passaggi and its insertion in the AQSs activities is an attempt to revive the initiative. It should
assume responsibility for operational management in the future and leave the AQS the task of regaining its role
as a small but productive and prophetic development agency. The strategy it has adopted involves rediscovering
the sense and aims of the social project with plans for a new training period for its workers.
Secondly, the Associazione Nidi di Mamme (Mothers Crche Association), founded in the wake of an AQS
project conceived in the middle of 1990s by the AQS and "adopted" and funded by the City Council in the Piano
Territoriale per l'Infanzia e l'Adoloscenza (Territorial Plan for Childhood and Adolescence). The mothers
involved in the project have followed a training programme and have helped to set up and organize small crches
in the area by remaining with their children and cooperating with the teachers. The women have shown
considerable interest in the project and have dedicated a great deal of time and effort to the Crches that are
concrete proof of their personal commitment to the project and the trust shown by the Institutions. The
experience has given them a sense of social freedom and an alternative to welfare dependency (all the mothers
belong to the minimum income category). Their social role and working identity have gained recognition and
allowed them to improve their self esteem and show their potential. Recently, a group of these women decided to
form an association to make the undertaking official, also in light of new funding that the City Council has
allocated to these activities. Other Crches for Mothers have been promoted by the City Council in other areas
using the same model as the Quartieri Spagnoli and funding that has more than doubled compared with 2002 has
been allocated (approximately 600,000 Euros).
These two new organizations are the result of the AQSs experience and demonstrate particularly the second
one that embodies civil society the empowering effects of the AQS's projects more visibly than the hundreds of
cases in which the overall increase in working and socio-political ability has only been experienced at an
individual level.

5
The Third Sector Territorial Councils specified in the Area Social Plan have been formally established in "bureaucratic" procedures that did
not involve the associations.
10
3. Fostering participation in Scampia: lets make a Piazza
3.1. Neighbourhood profile
3.1.1. Birth and urban development of Scampia
The Scampia district has been labelled a fringe area, a dormitory area, an ex 167 area (referring to the law of
that name) or an agglomeration of council houses, the Vele estate, that indicate how much Neapolitan planning
has influenced its physical and social characteristics.
Until the beginning of the 1960s, Scampia was a rural area (the Scampie were an area of scrubland in open
countryside) on the northern edge of the city. It was chosen as the site for a new council estate to meet the
growing demand for new housing in Naples. The plan for subsidised low cost housing, drawn up to implement
Italian law no. 167/1962, was approved by the Minster of Public Works in 1965 and an important national
architecture competition was held. In 1968, the City Council approved the Vele project, so-called because the
shape of some of the buildings (lots) resembled sails (in Italian vele). The project consisted of 8 blocks
(reduced to 7 in the final plan) to be built on a rectangular area of 13 hectares providing 945 new homes and
6345 rooms.
The project was part of the new Naples City Master Plan approved by the City Council in 1972. It shared a basic
philosophy that involved the construction of infrastructures, office districts and council housing lots as well as
private estates thus introducing a new way of conceiving fringe areas that was supposed to favour inter-class
socialization (Treanni, 2001). Unfortunately, only the low-cost council housing was completed, i.e. an estate
with a vast road network but no facilities or offices that was poorly connected to the rest of the city. Next to the
council housing, subsidized housing was also built because of the low cost of land, that is to say, private housing
managed by cooperative housing associations who owned their own homes.
During the 1970s, the district began to be populated with people from Naples and its hinterland who had been
assigned council housing. They mostly had single-incomes or were very poor and middle class members of the
cooperative housing associations. However, in 1980, while the City Council was assessing the possibility of
launching a new plan for the recovery and redevelopment of the outskirts of Naples, an earthquake struck
Naples, Campania and Basilicata regions. The plan for the fringe areas was therefore transformed into the
Extraordinary Building Plan (Programma straordinario per ledilizia residenziale) whose aim was to recover
existing housing by revalorizing old town centres (casali) but did not necessarily include the building of new
housing (20,000 in the Naples area with 13,000 in Naples itself). In Scampia, the Extraordinary Building Plan
involved completion of facilities that were planned but had never been completed. Much of the council housing
that had just been built and was not yet completed (especially lots L and M) was illegally occupied by families
made homeless by the earthquake and homeless people from other fringe areas and the old part of Naples who
had been living in temporary prefabricated units. The illegal occupation even included areas that were initially
intended as basements thus substantially modifying the social make-up of the area that was affected by the
presence of different types of building (Laino, De Leo, 2002). Housing was at this time occupied by a varied
though small middle class of cooperative housing association members, people who had been assigned council
housing, squatters in unfinished council housing, squatters in areas not suitable for housing (the so-called
basement dwellers) as well as gypsies in a camp that was then moved in the 1990s.
The poor distribution of the lots, the road layout, the large number of buildings that were left uncompleted and
were therefore vandalized and the lack of up-keep of public areas were all characteristics that contributed to
forming an anonymous area that was difficult to use and did not have the necessary components to create a city
effect (Laino, De Leo, 2002), surrounded by large buildings that were used for purposes that were totally
unrelated to the area (barracks, production activities and the prison that was built in the 1990s). After a few
years, symptoms of unrest and decay appeared in the area including petty crime, drug dealings, mass
unemployment and widespread truancy (De Lucia, 1998).
In the 1980s, the story of Scampia, that had in 1987 become the twenty-first municipal district in Naples
(encompassing the bordering districts of Miano, Piscinola and Secondigliano), became the story of its
redevelopment due in part to the establishment of a neighbourhood committee (Comitato di Lotta per le Vele)
consisting of families who lived on the estate and were feeling the effects of the premature urban and social
decay that characterized the area. The Committee asked for the Vele estate, now considered to be beyond repair,
11
to be demolished. The City Councils reply came in 1989 when a technical Commission was set up with a
Mayors decree (30/1/1989) to assess whether the buildings were suitable for housing and to define a course of
action aimed at urban recovery. In 1989 Scampia was declared a reclamation area.
At the beginning of the 1990s, Scampia became a national issue and the attention it received, as its inhabitants
protests became louder, is shown by a series of events. First, a decade after the earthquake the district received
visits from two important people: the Pope came in November 1990, followed by the President of the Republic,
Francesco Cossiga, the year after. Secondly, at the end of 1991, the Government intervened by promoting a
programme agreement between the Ministry of Urban Areas, the Region, Province and City Council to plan a
strategy for the northern outskirt of Naples and setting up a technical Committee responsible for studying ways
of drawing up the agreement. Thirdly, at the end of 1992, the City Council contacted the University and
commissioned the Faculty of Architecture to draw up a feasibility study for the redevelopment of the Vele estate
and the neighbourhood.
In 1993, discussions began on the solutions offered by the University and several Commissions and Committees.
There were several options including: demolition of the top storeys of the Vele blocks with a reduction in the
number of floors, total demolition of some buildings to make space for new blocks of flats, the recovery of some
buildings for state use or renting to private individuals. However, while the various possibilities were being
assessed, the City Council was hit by the Neapolitan tangentopoli scandal. Several councillors were arrested
and the mayor, Arturo Polese, was forced to resign.
Following the administrative elections in November 1993, Antonio Bassolino became the new mayor of Naples
sustained by a left/centre majority. One of the new municipal governments first moves was to present an urban
plan with which the City Council intended to reassert its right and responsibility to control urban planning in the
city.
In the meantime, the new prison became operative in Scampia. Its location on the edges of the neighbourhood
had been decided several years earlier and became another barrier that limited relations and the possibility of
development in the area alongside other large buildings such as barracks that surrounded the area. Moreover, a
park was opened to the public but proved to be difficult to maintain and was soon vandalized along with other
facilities that were built as part of the Extraordinary Building Plan by gangs of hooligans and thieves searching
for building materials.
In 1994 the District Council of Scampia approved a document that asked the Mayor to bring the Feasibility
Study drafted by the University to the attention of the Municipal Council so that it could spend national funding
available for recovery of the area. After a series of meetings with local companies, trade unions and civil society,
the municipal government instructed its Department of Territorial Planning to draw up a final study and in July
1995, with collaboration from the inhabitants of the Vele estate, approved Resolution no. 240 with which the
Urban Redevelopment Project for the Scampia area was launched. The project involved rehousing the Vele
estate residents substitutive ERP (Public Residential Building) Project, social and economic revival and
refunctionalization of the area through a series of interventions. The Projects main objective was that of
functional integration, i.e. encouraging the establishment of several important urban level facilities to stop the
decline of an area with approximately 50,000 inhabitants that consisted almost entirely of council homes (De
Lucia, 1998). The Project was part of the proposal for amendment of the City Master Plan, already funded by the
Minister of Public Works, and for it a special office had been set up at the City Council. Basically, it involved:
the demolition of some of the Vele blocks (F and G) and rehousing of their inhabitants in 926 new homes to be
built in Scampia; the restructuring of one Vela block (H) for use by the Civil Defence and the sale and non-
residential use of other Vele blocks with private investors intervening to establish urban scale tertiary activities
and services to diversify use and presences in the area; the rationalization of road system and transport.
The Project also involved agreements between several institutions, first, the agreement between the Ministry of
the Interior and the City Council to build a Civil Defence Centre on an interregional scale and secondly, the
Memorandum of Understanding drawn up between the City Council, the Region and University Federico II of
Naples to establish university structures in the central part of Scampia, an understanding that today has come to
nothing.
The Urban Redevelopment Project began in 1997 in the same period that the new underground railway station
was opened in the neighbouring district of Piscinola linking Scampia with the rest of the city. At the same time,
several other projects began. Some of these were completed including the urban pilot project co-funded by the
European Union to develop Telematic Piazzas, one of which was situated in Scampia and was launched at the
12
beginning of 2004. Other projects such as the proposal for an neighbourhood contract were conceived but not
examined and funded by the Minister of Public Works. It was to involve members of the private and third sectors
in the context of a plural mobilization for redevelopment of the central part of Scampia
6
.
At present, the Urban Redevelopment Plan in Scampia is in progress. It uses public funding from predominantly
national but also regional and municipal sources for a total of almost EUR 108 million. Some work has been
completed: 3 Vele blocks have been demolished, most of the new housing has been completed and inhabitants
are being transferred to new homes, sports facilities have been rebuilt and open spaces allocated and the
Telematic Piazza and National Social Welfare Institute offices have been set up. Other work is in progress
(building stage) including additional housing, green areas and sports facilities. Some projects have been
approved but not contracted out such as the building of a Piazza della Socialit with several functions (cinema,
theatre, housing, banks, business activities) to be conceded to private parties, work on roads, car parks and green
areas and the construction of the Civil Defence Centre. Other projects are nearing completion or are awaiting
approval.
3.1.2. Current social framework
The events and urban planning projects summarized above and the difficulty experienced by successive local
governments in managing such a large and ambitious project in which homes were built while adequate social
service systems and places for socializing capable of strengthening the urban fabric were neglected shave most
certainly contributed to constructing a complex and problematic social profile albeit one that is currently
undergoing transformation.
Synthesis and comparison of data for Scampia and Naples related to the Census of the population 2001
processed by the Naples City Council and the Istat (Central Statistics Institute) figures for 1991 (see table 1)
highlight some significant points.
Table 1. Main demographic characteristics
1991 2001
NAPLES SCAMPIA NAPLES SCAMPIA
Surface area (hectares) 430 430
Resident population 1,067,365 43,980 1,004,500 41,340
Number of families 312,376 9,741 337,786 10,612
Population density (inhabitants/km
2
) 9,102 10,397 8,566 9,773
Average family size 3.42 4.51 2.97 3.9
Old age index 62.7 24.3 91.1 53.2
Dependency ratio 45.3 41.8 48.6 45.9
Ratio of males to females 92.8 100.7 91.7 102.1
Percentage of young people (15-29 years) 27.9 33.8 21.8 25.4
Percentage of juveniles (<15 years) 19.2 23.7 17.1 20.5
Percentage of old people (!65 years) 12.0 5.8 15.6 10.9
Percentage of large families 23.7 46.0 14.9 32.0
Source: processed by ITER with data from ISTAT and Naples City Council
First, in only 30 years, Scampia has become the most densely populated area and population density is
significantly higher than the whole city of Naples (9,773 inhabitants/km
2
compared with 8,566 inhabitants/km
2
)
which is already the highest population in Europe. Secondly, Scampia is a young neighbourhood not only in
physical but also demographic terms as shown by the old age index that is much lower than the whole city of
Naples (53.2% compared with 91.1%), and the higher percentage of young people (15-29 years) and juveniles
(<15 years) here compared with the city as a whole (young people: 25.4% compared with 21.8%; juveniles:
20.5% compared with 17.1%) whereas the percentage of old people is significantly lower (10.9% compared with
15.6%). Thirdly, the size of an average family and the number of large families (with 5 members or more) are
much higher in Scampia than the average figure for Naples: 3.90 compared with 2.90 and 32% compared with
14.9% respectively.

6
The private sector that the City Council is relying on to participate in the Urban Redevelopment Plan has not made any investment in
Scampia to date.
13
Although the above figures are official, according to some they should be considered with caution since they
depict a situation that is better than the real one. According to a survey performed by Censis in 1998, many local
observers think that the official figures for the population in the area has been significantly underestimated and
that the real figures are approximately 80,000 inhabitants because of widespread illegal occupation of housing
and areas illegally used as homes (basements, landings) in Scampia.
In any case, the area shows clear signs of social unrest that convey the idea of a fringe area that has recently been
urbanized, with a predominantly lower-middle class population with serious problems of school attendance,
truancy and abandonment of compulsory education, lack of acculturation (illiteracy is higher than average
figures in Naples), high unemployment particularly among young people (approximately 67%), a lack of work
culture and the predominance of activities connected with a statalist economy (Censis, 1998). Exclusion and
marginality are the basis for illegality, social unrest and violence making Scampia one of the flourishing markets
for Neapolitan criminal entrepreneurial activities with widespread drug trafficking, smuggling and illegal betting.
However, the area must not be considered uniform from a social point of view. An analysis of the social identity
of Scampia highlights the presence of different social groups that is closely correlated to the type of buildings
present (Morlicchio, 2001). Briefly, at least three different social groups can be identified (Laino, De Leo, 2002):
1. the middle class with greater economic stability estimated to be roughly 12% of the areas population who
mostly own their own homes through subsidized housing (cooperative housing associations) on separate
estates, most of whom have little to do with events in the area although a small percentage is involved in
active citizenship;
2. the lower-middle class of employees estimated to be approximately 30% of inhabitants who live in rented
council housing of medium degradation and who are on the margins of social exclusion and often suffer the
drama of youth unemployment in large often single-income families;
3. the large marginal working class, drop outs, calculated as roughly 58% of the districts population in rented
council accommodation (or squats) of medium and high degradation with serious problems of shortage of
social and relational capital that often live off illegal work and irregular practices that are also linked to
organized crime.
In other words, the utopian city-garden that was first conceived is now an urban and social archipelago (Laino,
De Leo, 2002) where different classes live in isolation and are in turn isolated from the rest of the city.
The factors that prevented social and cultural cohesion and favoured extensive social fragmentation are complex
but it seems fairly logical to accept that these trends have been aggravated by some of the urban planning
features present (Censis, 1998) including large road networks that separate the housing lots, the architectural
characteristics of the first council houses in particular (the Vele) that divide the urban area into a series of
concrete islands, the lack of collective areas for relaxing such as parks, gardens, piazzas, the shortage of places
for socializing and public institutions and the half-hearted efforts to improve infrastructures and collective
services.
The Urban Redevelopment Project currently under way in Scampia includes projects that may represent a U-turn
and compensate for some of the most obvious shortcoming in functions, objects (piazzas, meeting places),
socializing and integration in daily life. However, it still seems to be characterized by a basically physical
approach in which architectural and urban design are used instead of social planning. Indeed, the last should be
the direction that needs to be taken so that the increasingly pressing social emergencies mentioned above can be
resolved and conflict and social fragmentation in the area do not extend.
The district is not uniform from a social point of view and this is a resource but in some ways it is also a
possible source of conflict and fragmentation if ways of co-operation cannot be found (Andriello, 2001).
3.1.3. Dynamics of civil society
Due to the serious problems facing the neighbourhood and despite its social and economic decay, a number of
committees, associations and organizations that reflect the needs and motivation that drive the local population
towards resolving their problems have always been active in Scampia. The associative fabric has changed
considerably over the years but the individual proposals present certain similarities and are present even today in
an area where the traditions of the Catholic and lay voluntary sectors are well embedded and these actors
contribute to the social and civil development of the neighbourhood in a variety of different ways.
Some of them have been involved for the most part in cultural and social promotion and regeneration of the
14
neighbourhood as well as increasing awareness of a number of issues such as the environment, social solidarity,
peace and development of a civic conscience especially among young people. Others (Comitato di Lotta per le
Vele) were set up to defend specific rights of certain categories of citizens; still others, particularly Christian
religious groups (Jesuits, Catholic organizations, Christian communities) are involved in organizing and offering
the resident population a wide range of services and support for needy families and children, in particular.
Schools also play an important role and are a positive force in the area.
All these civil society organisations have shown that they are competent in their field of action (advocacy,
producing services, organizing cultural activities and entertainment, involving residents in social events), but
they have not always been successful in communicating with each other and coordinating their projects and
ventures. The 1990s period was the most productive phase of wide cooperation between the civil forces but at
the beginning of this decade this phase came to an end and the local civil society is at present rather disjointed
with only a few surviving alliances in which a small number of local actors are united by common objectives.
These networks of actors show their intention to contribute to defining the neighbourhood redevelopment
program and fuel discussion with the City government on proposals for urban intervention in the area. However,
with the exception of the Comitato delle Vele that has taken on a leading role even if it does not represent the
interests of the whole neighbourhood, they have put little effort into their relations with the public and have poor
powers of negotiation (Uspel, 2003).
The dynamics of civil society in the last decade demonstrate the increasing fragmentation of the associative
fabric. This is one of the main barriers to the success of the projects undertaken to define the role of the
associations in the redevelopment of Scampia.
In 1993, several more cultured and committed representatives of society in Scampia who had been involved in
social regeneration in the area proposed the Solidariet e Partecipazione civil list that stood for the
administrative elections for the new District Council. Catholics, environmentalists, pacifists and social militants
in the area came together for the first time on the same hierarchical level to support the same values and the same
project, that of promoting urban development with regard to social relations, through direct involvement of
citizens in administrative decisions.
7
.
The actors involved in this venture formed a solid network of collaboration, sometimes at a personal level but
often through associations and organizations in civil society, to promote several cultural and civil initiatives in
the area by transforming the political activity of the earlier years into active participation in the regeneration of
the neighbourhood, the construction of social capital and the community building.
In the wake of this experience, the Forum of associations was set up in 1994. This was an informal spontaneous
organization with participation from several associations, local health authorities and public social services. Until
1998, it coordinated the initiatives of all the local actors involved in local development and social regeneration of
the area.
In 1997 the Forum actors decided that they needed a base. They took over some school classrooms that were no
longer used and these became the Cittadella delle Associazioni. Although they had political consensus and
support also at central administration level, the project failed because of irresolvable differences within the
Forum that was dismantled the following year. From then on, the associations and groups operating in the area
have not shared common interests and the ability of work together and only a few (including those in the
Piazziamoci committee) have based their work on cooperation.
The spontaneous bottom-up development of innovative organizational models like the Forum and the Cittadella
has been frustrated by the limited ability or willingness of local government to listen to and involve local
inhabitants. Although civil society has not succeeded in creating a strong local partnership, the public
institutions, including a district council that does not seem representative of the neighbourhood, have not
assessed the proposals made by local citizens and have certainly not supported the participation of local actors in
decision-making and influencing plans for development.
It was only at the end of the 1990s, a period in which the municipal government was more widely disposed
towards the participation of civil society in defining urban policy, that the City Council set up a inter-

7
The civil list received support from traditional left-wing parties and obtained two councillors in 1993-1997 and one in 1997-2001. The
alliance with the traditional political forces then fell apart and the list was dissolved. As an association under the same name it existed until
the end of the 1990s without political involvement but an active interest in social problems.
15
department pilot committee that was responsible for drawing up a new integrated approach strategy that moved
the redevelopment project away from measures that involved only physical recovery. However, the different
sectors of administration represented on the committee were unable to come to an agreement and in 2002
discussion was centred on the views of the municipal office that was responsible for the Redevelopment Plan in
which predominantly architectural resources were mobilized. The office became the "Servizio Valorizzazione
delle Periferie Urbane" (Revalorization of Urban Fringes Office), obtained full technical and administrative
autonomy and took responsibility for completion of the Plan.
At the beginning of the year 2000, within the scope of its specific responsibilities, the District Council began to
look at the role of the associations and voluntary sector in the neighbourhood and expressed its intention to
create and assume a new role as legitimizer, coordinator and controller of individuals and groups in the third
sector operating in the neighbourhood. It set out standards and organizational models to be used in grass-roots
participation in urban planning. This regulatory process culminated in the establishment of the Council of
Associations (Consulta delle Associazioni).
Although motivated by a just cause (supporting citizen participation in the redevelopment of Scampia), the
process was marked by a decidedly top-down approach. In September 2001, the elected district council
established grass-roots councils and applied the internal regulations of the district council that favoured the
involvement of the local population in the growth and development of the neighbourhood. In the discussions that
followed, several members expressed their worries over clashes and conflicts between the Council of
Associations and the District Council and others their willingness to create the Council of Associations provided
that it had no political power. The District Council has therefore stated the requirements that the associations
must fulfil to belong to the Council of Associations and has drafted the regulations and statute. Local actors in
the third sector have been consulted in order to draw up a list of associations and their activities and check that
they have the necessary requirements.
Whereas the ventures promoted in the previous decade from within the neighbourhood civil society intended to
give the Forum a base for expressing grass-roots participation (Cittadella), the Council of Associations did not
have a physical base, was created according to rules dictated by the State and was only involved in issues that
had been unilaterally established. On a practical level, the Council of Associations, representing top-down
institutionalization, does not seem to have played an important role in policy administration in the area.
Considering the way that it was set up, it is hardly surprising that several important local agents do not know that
is exists or do not consider it an effective form of grass-roots participation in the area.
3.2. Piazziamoci: a participatory planning proposal for a Piazza for Young People in Scampia
3.2.1. Promoters
Among the neighbourhood actors involved in social requalification and community building projects there is a
group of individuals who have consolidated privileged relationships of collaboration and cohesion based on
similar values and objectives over a period of time. They are citizens living in Scampia in the private
condominiums and the Vele estate, of a higher social and economic status who for some time have tried directly
or through the associations that represent them to intervene or put forward proposals for local development.
In November 2001, these actors worked towards establishing the Piazziamoci network and were later joined by
other voluntary associations, the local CGIL trade union branch, schools in the area, sports associations,
condominiums and the local media (the press and on-line periodicals)
8
.
The La GRU association, one of the projects main promoters, represents the national environmental
association "Legambiente" (1995) in the area. Through the MLAL (Lay Movement for Latin America), the
association is twinned with Jaboatao-Recife in Brazil and is a member of Lilliput, a national network of
associations, groups and citizens who work in the voluntary sector.
The GRIDAS (GRuppo RIsveglio dal Sonno) is an association that has been active in Scampia since 1981. It is
involved in cultural promotion and organizes creativity workshops in order to develop a sense of civic
awareness. It has involved citizens in painting multi-coloured murals in the area, also in that proposed by

8
There are no political parties in the Committee and it is basically left-wing. The more politicized Comitato di Lotta dei Residenti nelle Vele
did not join the committee. For years, it has been supporting the rights of the families of Scampia and has been involved in relocalization and
the allocation of housing.
16
Piazziamoci for the Piazza for Young People, as a way of stating repossession of the area by its direct users with
the slogan: colour the grey walls of the outskirts against sadness, remove the black parts to release freedom.
For over 20 years it has organized the Carnival in Scampia in collaboration with schools and associations
using masks as a form of social criticism.
The Forum Infanzia association, of Catholic extraction, began to operate in Scampia in 1996 to defend the rights
of children and young people in need. It organizes publicity campaigns and is also involved in small projects that
help children (support in schools, nursery schools).
La Scuola di Pace is the neighbourhood branch of a wider movement (Coordinamento Ecumenico per la Pace e
il Disarmo) that was set up in Naples in the spring of 1989 as a protest against plans to extend and move the U.S.
Navy base from Bagnoli to Capodichino.
The Arci Scampia Uisp is a football school that has been the only sports facility for young people in the area for
years. Sports activities have always been integrated with social activities and games involving the families of the
young athletes as a means for developing solidarity and participation.
Many of the associations described above are linked more or less formally to the Cassano Community, a
Catholic community that was set up in Scampia in 1968. Since then, it has been embedded in the social and
political fabric of the area and has contributed to developing the civil awareness of the population with its own
projects, exhibitions and debates on issues of social marginalization, peace and respect for the environment.
The Piazziamoci group benefits from the participation and support of two editorial initiatives: the "Fuga di
notizie", a monthly neighbourhood magazine that was first published roughly 15 years ago by the Jesuit priests
in the area and the on-line periodical www.fuoricentroscampia.it created in 2001. Both are an important source
of information for the area, a tool for reporting situations of social unrest in the area it serves and a means of
publicizing important cultural, civil and institutional initiatives. In Piazziamoci these two periodicals report on
the conflict between the institutions and the citizens on the projects for Scampia and contribute towards weaving
new social relations by supporting participation of the resident population and the development of democracy.
All the organizations in the Committee had always operated independently in the area until they decided in
November 2001 to form a special alliance to coordinate their actions.
The University of Naples has an important role in the development of the local network and in particular, a group
of lecturers and researchers who have spent the last twenty years studying the society in Scampia and have
helped the civil society to draft participatory ideas and proposals. This collaboration has meant that recently
Scampia has on many occasions found itself at the centre of debate and involved in institutional and cultural
initiatives and events where the results of numerous sociological and urban studies performed by the University
and other groups (Censis, Ocse) have been presented.
3.2.2. Factors determining start of project
The Department of Urban Planning at the Federico II University in Naples (DUN) has undoubtedly played a
central role since it was involved in the Piazziamoci experience from the very beginning, although its
involvement has never been officially recognized.
At the end of the 1990s, the Naples City Council had financed a sociological study on Scampia with its own
funds and assigned it to a group of researchers from the Department of Urban Planning at Naples University
(consisting of Vincenzo Andriello, Federica Palestino and Daniela Lepore). The research project was centred on
problems of public safety in Scampia and involved intense consultation with the resident population; during
2001 numerous meetings (Focus groups, seminars, public meetings) were held with representatives of the local
civil society. Once it was completed, the study was published but in April 2001 the first results were already
disclosed at a seminar (public debate at the University) on "Regeneration and problems linked to public safety in
the Scampia Area", in which the need to provide the neighbourhood with continually supervised piazzas and
meeting places as a safeguard against criminality and decay was stressed.
This proposal was inspired by theories based on Crime Prevention Through Environmental Design, or CPTED
(first developed by Jane Jacobs at the beginning of the 1960s), in which the opportunities for crime to occur are
reduced by employing physical design features that discourage crime but at the same time encourage legitimate
use of the environment. In line with these theories, the group of researches stress two basic concepts: the need
17
for natural control of the territory by who lives there (eyes on the street) and the need to guarantee an intense and
continuous presence throughout the day. In conclusion, it clearly emerged from the studies effected that for
presence to be transformed into supervised monitoring, there is a need to develop territorial behaviour, i.e. a
sense of belonging between people and space (Andriello, 2001).
Recolonizing the area would encourage the repossession of areas used by organized crime and illegal activities
by building piazzas where young people can meet in safety. It would satisfy the need for places and areas for
living in, promote human relations and create opportunities for socializing and leisure so that the
neighbourhood gains a positive identity, the society deficit is eliminated and a sense of community and
belonging is re-established.
Based on the university researchers suggestions, the local actors already involved in the informal network of
associations working on social regeneration in the area developed the idea of putting forward a project for a
piazza with these characteristics in order to give meaning and continuity to the work of the University. In
November 2001 they decided to make the network official by setting up a committee of associations, whose
main aim was to create, in a material and social sense, a Piazza for Young People in the area, to be actively
monitored (DUN, 2002).
This project also represented the Committee of Associations response to another piazza project that the
Municipality had already initiated as part of the Urban Redevelopment Plan, called "Piazza della Socialit". This
"piazza" was to be built on a different site with different characteristics and no access to other places where
young people already spend their time: schools, sport facilities and meeting places. In the Piazzamoci
Committees opinion, the City Councils project is excessively onerous and far removed from the populations
real needs and social life in the area and it is worried that a piazza will be built that is destined to remain empty.
The neighbourhood has a long history of top-down investment, which has proved to be completely
useless (E. Mostardi, Piazziamoci network, key person).
As far as economic resources are concerned, the promoters would like to stress how inexpensive the project for a
Piazza for Young People is compared with the considerable resources needed for the Urban Redevelopment Plan
and therefore justify the request made to the City Council for the funds needed to furnish the Piazza.
The associative network is trying to impose a new participatory planning model based on understanding the
citizens real needs and using the facilities that already exist in Scampia (especially schools and sports facilities).
They stress two main advantages offered by their project for a Piazza for Young People: first, the limited amount
of construction work required and, secondly, the existence of a full agenda of social activities and events that
they already organize in the area that would guarantee regeneration and development for the piazza.
3.2.3 Action taken
The Committee was not legally established with a deed of partnership but at an informal meeting with a report
that had been signed by all those present at the meeting. The Planning Department at the University of Naples
has offered full technical support by promoting and formulating participatory planning that is open to schools,
associations and inhabitants active in the neighbourhood with an decidedly bottom-up approach.
The promoters of Piazziamoci have been working with great enthusiasm for roughly two and a half years to
achieve its objectives. The organization chart of the Committee is informal and straightforward. A coordinator
has been nominated and meetings open to all those who are interested are held weekly although usually only a
small group of associates who are more involved take part. Since the Committee does not have its own premises,
meetings are held at associations with suitable facilities on a rotational basis.
The activities that the Committee have been involved in to date extend in two different directions with two
common objectives: participatory planning and making the piazza animated and lively. The following steps have
been taken in the first direction:
! existing structures and potential areas for building the Piazza for Young People were examined; an area
with schools, sports facilities and other structures where young people spend time (Piazza Telematica)
was identified;
! several meetings and debates were held with institutions (District Council, City Council), experts
(DUN) and local organizations to assess the viability of the project and support for it;
! a campaign involving local schools was organized to heighten the populations awareness and
18
understanding of the needs and ideas of young people; the schools reacted by actively collaborating and
appealing to the young peoples imagination. Results were publicized at a series of events (end of
2001/2002 school year event with projects, plays and shows on the theme of the piazza), local media
and an on-line periodical;
! all items and material collected was processed by the University and then brought to the attention of the
City Council (June 2002).
The associative network is striving to fulfil the second objective by developing a sense of social awareness that
has always been suppressed in the area and establishing the areas own identity and collective historical memory.
It encourages the inhabitants to express their own needs and creates a movement of opinion and democratic
pressure so that these needs are met. In order to achieve these objectives, innovative tools are used to intensify
social relations in the area.
There are basically two new institutions: the Neighbourhood Diary and a Network Communication System. The
Neighbourhood Diary is drawn up by the Committee in September of each year and includes all the activities
that the associations will organize throughout the year. Since they have formed a network, the associations have
sealed a pact of mutual support in which each party will undertake to help promote, organize and publicize the
activities on the diary. The cultural and social activities promoted by the members of the network include street
festivals, cultural exhibitions and events, environmental rallies and demonstrations, door-to-door fund
collections for projects of solidarity and aim to instil a sense of integration, tolerance, peace and respect for
differences in the young people in the area as well as correct use of the environment in general and the public
areas in Scampia in particular.
The Piazzas social activities are currently organized there or in other parts of the neighbourhood and are directly
financed by the associative network and occasionally sponsored by the City Council. Work is exclusively
voluntary.
The new Communication System between the local community and the rest of the world consists of: 1. the local
magazine Fuga di notizie, 2. on-line periodical www.fuoricentroscampia.it, 3. ITIS (Istituto Tecnico Industriale
Statale) Galileo Ferraris web site (www.ferraris.org), 4. regular bulletins.
The on-line periodical Fuoricentroscampia, in particular, is used by members working in Scampia to exchange
experiences, news and ideas with members in a wider area. The Web site is a window where the social and
cultural activities promoted by the members of the Piazziamoci network are displayed. It has publicized
exhibitions, theatre, music, poetry readings and sport in the area as well as in-depth studies on the suburbs and
covered political testimonies and experiences in a wide range of contexts (including: the World Social Forum
held in Porto Alegre in 2002).
The presence of expertise and interest in computing and telematic technologies has focused the Committees
attention to the Piazza Telematica located in a building next to the Piazza for Young People. The Piazza
Telematica is already partially operative and will be officially opened in July 2004. Public administrators
initially involved the Piazziamoci committee associations in promoting the project and listened to their views. In
July 2003 a group of representatives of associations in the area met Naples City Council technicians at the
Piazza Telematica. The associations themselves had requested the meeting. They wanted to know if the City
Council intended to involve local associations in using the telematic piazza areas and its facilities for young
people. However, as work progressed and decisions were made concerning organization of the structure, the
associations were no longer given opportunities to participate. Now that the Piazza Telematica is almost
operative, the Piazziamoci committee complains that it has been excluded from decision-making and
involvement in a project that is very important for the neighbourhood.
2.2.4. Results achieved
For almost a year after June 2002, when participation in planning the Piazza had been formally brought to the
attention of the City Council, the Piazziamoci Committee waited for the Piazza to be included in the Councils
budget in order to proceed with the actual planning. During this year of inactivity, local (municipal and district)
government did not openly oppose the associative network but neglected it and has never established a proper
negotiating table involving the participation of the neighbourhood civil society in planning the Piazza.
We have always contacted the City Council separately, we have never been able to contact them through
the district council. Although district councils do not have true power to make decisions, they have never
19
even planned let alone held a meeting to listen to and discuss our requests. They seem to be afraid of
being side-stepped (F. Maiello, Piazziamoci network, key person).
At the end of 2003, however, a Municipal project was included in the works to be completed in Scampia as part
of the Redevelopment Plan (and included in the Three-year Plan of Public Works) to be built on exactly the same
site as the one indicated by the Piazziamoci Committee with a similar name: Piazza Giovani An open
workshop for renewable energy
9
.
Although the name is similar, the Piazza conceived by the City government (according to the wishes of the
Director for Fringe Areas, P. Caputi, in particular) has different features and philosophy from the piazza
proposed by the network of associations: the plan involves providing the area with street furniture and public
lighting based on technologies for the use of renewable energy, a theme that favours connection with the nearby
schools, the Piazza Telematica and the voluntary sector.
The Municipality's project does not correspond to the idea developed by the network of associations that wants
active participation of young people in the planning and construction of a piazza that is a liveable and safe place
for socializing. Apart from the name (Piazza dei Giovani), there is no reference in the Councils project to use of
this area by this specific category of users; at the same time, the intention of the inhabitants to re-conquer and re-
colonize the area by actively supervising it are frustrated.
The Piazziamoci Committee does not agree with and support the Councils project. It considers it to be far
removed from the needs expressed by the residents in the area and it does not take into account any of the
indications that Piazziamoci has offered after two years work and civil mobilization. To give an explicit
demonstration of the Committees detachment from the Councils project, the movement organizers have
recently decided to call a public meeting to renounce the objective of the Piazza although they intend to continue
social promotion and regeneration in the area.
The participatory planning method proposed by the Committee of associations has therefore clashed with the
top-down culture and mentality of government institutions that resist pressure from below to adopt forms of
democratic participation in territorial management. This does not detract from the fact that the Piazziamoci
projects can be an excellent occasion for empowerment for the local population. By mobilizing young people in
the area, Piazziamoci has helped to expand the socio-political capabilities of members of one of the groups who
need the most help and develop awareness of their right to meet their needs and participate.
We cannot be certain that the Piazza for young people will be built in the near future () However, we believe
that this committee can also operate beyond the scope of the piazza project and there are many places and
situations where it can intervene. While they wait for the real piazza, young people are creating a virtual area
where they can begin to communicate and discuss neighbourhood liveability and transformation from a young
perspective (Piazziamoci Committee).
If the public institutions have been undoubtedly ill disposed towards co-planning ventures, the Committee has
succeeded in mobilizing limited economic, political and organizational resources that were not sufficient to
arouse a positive response from the public. Indeed, the Committee has no clearly defined leadership, limited
organizational skills and is politically weak. All mobilized economic resources are used for social regeneration
of the area whereas a rather negative attitude is adopted towards the institutions and local government.
4. Conclusions: main dynamics of social exclusion, inclusion and innovation
In the case of Quartieri Spagnoli the type of social exclusion is not directly linked to the crisis and the
subsequent gradual reorganization of the welfare state since the 1970s. It involves social groups that have
historically been emarginated even if they live in the city centre. Their marginality, seen in their exclusion from
formal economic circuits and involvement in informal and/or illegal and/criminal circuits, essentially derives
from a lack of capabilities that are both basic (access to economic resources and education) and relational
(agency, empowerment) and are reciprocally reinforced to complete the circuit of exclusion.
The crisis and reorganization of the welfare state have highlighted the inadequacy of traditional monetary-based

9
The estimated cost is EUR 1,549,370, included in the Councils budget for 2004. Although work should be completed by 2005, the City
Council has for now requested funding that only covers planning costs and there are strong doubts that the Piazza will be completed by the
scheduled date.
20
assistance in the fight against social exclusion.
AQSs innovative contribution has been above all to make the stakeholders responsible for their own
emancipation. This was done by listening and sharing and then offering targeted support for the collective
construction of basic capabilities. Rather than community building, it involved capability building since a
sense of belonging to the community and solidarity were already well established. It was innovative because
social occasions were provided in which stakeholders could find a way out of informal, illegal and criminal
circuits rather than primary goods and services. In other words, the foundations were laid for self-sustainable
social inclusion.
A second innovative aspect is the AQSs role as agency where it represents the citizens interests and acts as a
political mediator. The association has been able to gather and interpret unexpressed needs of the resident
population and channel them into community development projects. Through its leadership, it has been able to
represent these interests at different political levels (local, national and European) and attract the attention of
several government bodies to the neighbourhood. This has certainly been helped by the political situation at the
City Council (the years with Antonio Bassolino as mayor) in which local government was favourably disposed
towards and supported bottom-up development projects.
In its role as agency, the association also served as a catalyst for resources. It not only attracted, directed and
organized intellectual and human resources in civil society and public financial resources but also stimulated the
state institutions by supporting the regeneration of social policies. Recently, this regeneration has led to the
creation of a real local market of social policies as in other Italian cities. As far as offer is concerned, the AQS
now has to compete with a growing number of politically strong organizations in the Third Sector in Naples
whereas outsourcing (and privatisation) of the municipal social policies generate the demand.
In the second case, Scampia, the deep social unrest in is the result of a series of demographical, urban planning
and social processes that affected Naples in the period between the 1950s and the 1990s. The first is the rapid
growth in population in the city in the first two decades (+21.4%). This process has been handled inefficiently
and inadequately by municipal government, generating urban expansion that is disorderly from a territorial point
of view, speculative from an economic point of view and unsustainable from an environmental point of view.
Urban expansion has lead to the creation of new dormitory area on the outskirts of the city and the expulsion of
certain social groups from the residential area in the old part of the city. This expulsion has in turn broken up
existing social links and weakened or even erased the local identity of some neighbourhood communities. Last
but not least, the absence of inclusive local economic development has not only left entire groups of the
population in precarious economic conditions but has also strengthened and developed illegal and/or criminal
circuits.
Scampia is an example of a process of urban expansion in which planning is reduced to planning residential
structures without considering services, both public and private, for the population or the need to create from an
architectural point of view at least, places that favour the reconstruction of social links and a sense of belonging.
This inadequate process of territorial planning is accompanied by the difficulty (and sometimes lack of
commitment) of all levels of government (local and central) to tackle the problem of mass unemployment in
fringe areas, especially among young people (see table 2).
Table 2. Rates of unemployment
Age Province of Naples Italy
year 2001
15-24 67.1 31.1
25-29 56.0 23.6
30-64 15.5 6.5
Total 26.4 9.5
year 1995
Total 27,3 11,6
Source: ISTAT
If we then consider not only the economic and cultural diversity of the social groups in the area but also the
presence of the underproletariat belonging to or connected with organized crime, we can understand how the
reconstruction of the social links met an obstacle in Scampia that was more serious than planning, the problem of
insecurity. This is a problem, or rather a climate, that can also be seen through the absence of the rule of law.
21
There are therefore exogenous conditions (planning) and endogenous conditions (deviance) that coming from
above (lack of State) and below (social disintegration and economic marginality) compress the scope for
participation and reduce the capabilities of the residents thus making the neighbourhood unliveable.
In this context, the fact that a network of associations has emerged is undoubtedly an important social
innovation. This network is capable, on one hand, of creating opportunities and spaces for socializing and, on the
other, has stressed the importance of participation by the local community and has succeeded in inventing areas
for social use by mobilizing hidden human resources and replanning the collective use of some sites in the
neighbourhood to save them from territorial decay. A strong point of the networks strategy has been to focus on
the needs and participation of young people in the area and identify them as the group that is the most vulnerable
to deviance as well as an active resource.
The replanning of the Piazza as a symbol of youth participation, even if it represented an important strategic
element for the network of associations, clashed with municipal bureaucracy and transformism of the local
political class. Although initially the municipal government appeared to have heard the voices from the
neighbourhood, its approach has recently been predominantly bureaucratic and traditional with a reappearance of
top-down planning and only an apparent willingness to listen to proposals from the local community. From this
point of view, one of the Scampia network of associations weak points is its scarce agency capabilities towards
the public authorities. These scarce agency capabilities depend, in turn, on its lack of political leadership.
If we consider the building of the Piazza for young people as the main instrument for social inclusion started by
the network of associations, we cannot at present affirm that the project has been a political success. The role of
Scampias civil society in local governance is therefore an open book with unpredictable results. If the Piazza dei
Giovani is completed according to the City Councils project, it will not be considered a success by the
Piazziamoci movement. It sees the Councils project and the way in which it has approached the project as the
negation of a participatory role for the population in the recovery process of the neighbourhood.
As a matter of fact, the most innovative and interesting result achieved by Piazziamoci has been that of
successfully organizing a diary of cultural events, a civil network of social commitment and a series of collective
communication tools in a hostile and disintegrated social and institutional arena. These three elements diary,
network and communications have fertilised the field of social relations, helped to check social exclusion and
provided the basis for constructing a sense of local identity and belonging among young people in particular.
This is a relatively recent rather fragile process that still requires a great deal of work by the associations and is
prevented from expanding by the inability of the municipal government to perceive the innovative contribution
of local civil society to the neighbourhood development.
References
Quartieri Spagnoli
Interviews
Associazione Quartieri Spagnoli
! Giovanni Laino, founder and currently working as consultant.
! Annamaria Stanco, founder and partner in the Association.
! Enzo Pala, responsabile di progetti formativi e di tutoraggio.
Municipality of Naples
! Giovanni Attademo, Dirigente del 94 Servizio Minori, Infanzia e Adolescenza.
Publications
AA.VV. (2000), "Quindici citt in gioco con la legge 285/97", Pianeta Infanzia, Questioni e Documenti,
Quaderni del Centro Nazionale di Documentazione ed Analisi per l'infanzia e l'Adolescenza, n.14, Istituto degli
Innocenti, Firenze.
AQS (1999), "Il Progetto Peppino Girella dell'Associazione Quartieri Spagnoli nell'ambito del modello
22
C.Ri.S.I.", Pianeta Infanzia, Questioni e Documenti, Quaderni del Centro Nazionale di Documentazione ed
Analisi per l'infanzia e l'Adolescenza, n.7, Istituto degli Innocenti, Firenze.
Chianese V. (2002) "Napoli: otto nidi per volare in alto", Avvenire, 27 Giugno 2002.
D'Ambrosio R., Pala V., Triggiani I. (2003), "Un Parco dove giocarsi l'occupabilit", Animazione Sociale, anno
XXXIII n.169, Associazione Gruppo Abele, Torino.
Danza L. (1999) "Quando il lavoro tra i vicoli di Napoli", Pianeta Infanzia, Questioni e Documenti, Quaderni
del Centro Nazionale di Documentazione ed Analisi per l'infanzia e l'Adolescenza, n.7, Istituto degli Innocenti,
Firenze.
Laino G. (1999), "Il Programma Urban in Italia", Archivio di studi urbani e regionali, n.66, Edizioni Franco
Angeli, Milano.
Laino G. (2001a), "Il cantiere dei Quartieri Spagnoli di Napoli", Territorio, Rivista del Dipartimento di
Architettura e Pianificazione del Politecnico di Milano, n.19, Edizioni Franco Angeli, Milano.
Laino G. (2001b), "Condizioni per l'efficacia dei programmi di riqualificazione nell'ottica dello sviluppo locale",
Archivio di studi urbani e regionali, n.70, Edizioni Franco Angeli, Milano.
Laino G. (2002a), "Elogio della discriminazione", Animazione Sociale, anno XXXII n.166, Associazione Gruppo
Abele, Torino.
Laino G. (2002b), "Non tagliamo le politiche sociali. Servono alla citt e allo sviluppo (lettera al Sindaco di
Napoli)", Corriere del Mezzogiorno, 27 Febbraio 2002.
Lepore D. (2002a), "Napoli. Progetti di quartiere", in: Palermo P.C., Savoldi Paola (a cura di), Il programma
Urban e l'innovazione delle politiche urbane. Esperienze locali: contesti, programmi, azioni, Collana del
Dipartimento di Architettura e Pianificazione del politecnico di Milano (secondo quaderno), Franco Angeli/Diap,
Milano.
Lepore D. (2002b), "Il sostegno alle attivit economiche a Napoli: generare capitale sociale", in: Pasqui G.,
Valsecchi Elena (eds.), Il programma Urban e l'innovazione delle politiche urbane. Apprendere dall'esperienza:
pratiche, riflessioni, suggerimenti, Collana del Dipartimento di Architettura e Pianificazione del politecnico di
Milano (terzo quaderno), Franco Angeli/Diap, Milano.
Lepore D. (2002c), "Il corso di formazione per educatori di strada a Napoli", in: Pasqui G., Valsecchi Elena
(eds.), Il programma Urban e l'innovazione delle politiche urbane. Apprendere dall'esperienza: pratiche,
riflessioni, suggerimenti, Collana del Dipartimento di Architettura e Pianificazione del politecnico di Milano
(terzo quaderno), Franco Angeli/Diap, Milano.
Lepore D. (2002d), "L'attivazione e l'uso dei progetti-sponda a Napoli", in: Pasqui G., Valsecchi Elena (a cura
di), Il programma Urban e l'innovazione delle politiche urbane. Apprendere dall'esperienza: pratiche,
riflessioni, suggerimenti, Collana del Dipartimento di Architettura e Pianificazione del politecnico di Milano
(terzo quaderno), Franco Angeli/Diap, Milano.
Lepore D. (2002e), "Modello organizzativo e ciclo politico a Napoli", in: Pasqui G., Valsecchi Elena (eds.), Il
programma Urban e l'innovazione delle politiche urbane. Apprendere dall'esperienza: pratiche, riflessioni,
suggerimenti, Collana del Dipartimento di Architettura e Pianificazione del politecnico di Milano (terzo
quaderno), Franco Angeli/Diap, Milano.
Lepore D. (ed.) (2002e), "Napoli. Riflessioni sulle esperienze: Giovanni Laino, Consulente scientifico di Urban
per il Comune di Napoli", in: Pasqui G., Valsecchi Elena (a cura di), Il programma Urban e l'innovazione delle
politiche urbane. Apprendere dall'esperienza: pratiche, riflessioni, suggerimenti, Collana del Dipartimento di
Architettura e Pianificazione del politecnico di Milano (terzo quaderno), Franco Angeli/Diap, Milano.
Stanco A., Stanco L., Laino G. (1994), "Quartieri Spagnoli: Storia di un intervento", Zaz, Rivista Meridionale
23
di Cultura, n.5, Tullio Pironti Editore, Napoli.
Unpublished papers
Laino G. (1998), "Scheda sulle politiche sociali nel comune di Napoli", documento redatto per scopi didattici.
Laino G. (2003), "Le politiche sociali a Napoli in favore dei minori: qualche riflessioni e alcune proposte",
presented at Assise per l'Infanzia e l'Adolescenza. Confronto professionale tra operatori dell'istruzione,
dell'educazione, della cura basato sulle buone pratiche attivate nella citt di Napoli, 3-4 Giugno 2003.
Internet sites
http://www.urbanlav.it
http://www.a-q-s.it/et/index.html
http://www.cittasostenibili.minori.it/citta/napoli.htm
Piazziamoci
Interviews
Piazziamoci Committee:
! Ernesto Mostardi
! Franco Maiello
University Federico II of Naples:
! Daniela Lepore (Professor at DUN Planning Department)
Representatives of the social voluntary sector in Scampia:
! Enzo Di Guida (Cooperativa Obiettivo Uomo)
! Father Vittorio Siciliani, Patrizia Ciotola (Parrocchia della Resurrezione)
Naples City Council:
! Paride Caputi (Councillor for Fringe Areas)
Publications
Caputi P. G. (2003), "Napoli-Berlino: periferie a confronto", Notiziario dellOrdine degli Ingegneri di Napoli,
Settembre-Ottobre 2003.
De Lucia V. (1998), "Napoli. Cronache urbanistiche 1994-1997", Baldini&Castoldi Editori, Milano.
Laino G. (1993), "Non basta demolire due vele per cambiare rotta, Urb. Inf., No. 167/1999.
Laino G. (1995) "La riqualificazione dei quartieri degradati dEuropa: note sulle difficolt dellaffermazione di
un approccio integrato", Archivio di studi urbani e regionali, n.54, Edizioni Franco Angeli, Milano.
Laino G. (2003), "Bisogna creare un tavolo sociale, Corriere del Mezzogiorno, 12th of January.
Ecosfera e USPEL (2001), "Le ragioni della partecipazione nei processi di trasformazione urbana. I costi
dell'esclusione di alcuni attori locali", published on www.comune.roma.it/uspel/.
Morlicchio E. (2001), "Spatial Dimension of Urban Social Exclusion and Integration. The case of Naples, Italy",
Urbex Series, no 17, Amsterdam.
Piazziamoci (2002), "Diario di un'esperienza di progettazione partecipata, Premio Marco Mascagna 2002",
published on www.fuoricentroscampia.it
24
Pugliese E., Orientale Caputo G., Morlicchio E., Gambardella D., Franceschi B., Bubbico D.(1999), "Oltre le
Vele. Rapporto su Scampia", Fridericiana Editrice Universitaria, Napoli.
Treanni C. (2001), "La storia del quartiere Scampia (1965-1995)", published on www.fuoricentroscampia.it.
Reports and unpublished documents
Andriello V. (2001), "Appunti e osservazioni sul problema della sicurezza a Scampia", documento interno al
gruppo di ricerca del DUN.
Censis (1998), "Elementi per un confronto pubblico su un quartiere della citt di Napoli, Rapporto di ricerca su:
Legalit e Sviluppo a Scampia.
Comune di Napoli, Circoscrizione Scampia, Statuto della Consulta delle Associazioni di Scampia, approvato
con Delibera del Consiglio Circoscrizionale di Scampia il 21 Marzo 2002, published on www.comune.napoli.it.
Comune di Napoli, "Programmazione Triennale 2002-2004 dei Lavori Pubblici, (Legge 109/94 e s.m.i. - Art. 1 -
comma 11)".
Comune di Napoli, "Aggiornamento della Programmazione Triennale dei Lavori Pubblici 2003-2005, (Legge
109/94 e s.m.i. - Art. 1 - comma 11)".
Comune di Napoli, "Piano triennale delle opere pubbliche 2004-2006".
Comune di Napoli, Delibera di Giunta No. 1687 del 21/05/2003, Assunzione di anticipazione con la Cassa
Depositi e Prestiti per far fronte agli oneri di progettazione preliminare, definitiva, esecutiva, indagini e ricerche,
relativa allintervento Piazza Giovani Un laboratorio per lenergia rinnovabile.
Comune di Napoli, "Consiglio Circoscrizionale di Scampia, Processi Verbali delle Sedute Consiliari" (vari anni),
published on www.comune.napoli.it
Comune di Napoli, Assessorato alle Periferie, Nota illustrativa del progetto della Piazza della Socialit in
Scampia.
Comune di Napoli, Assessorato alle Periferie, La Periferia di Napoli, Relazione per il Consiglio Comunale del
17/02/2003.
Comune di Napoli, Dipartimento Informatico, Rete di Piazze Telematiche per la Citt di Napoli, Final Report
Laino G., De Leo D. (2002), "Le politiche pubbliche per il quartiere Scampia a Napoli", report elaborato
nellambito del Progetto NEHOM (NEighbourhood HOusing Models) dellUnione Europea (V Programma
dAzione 1998-2002).
Palestrino M.F. (2001), "Indagine sulla sicurezza nel quartiere Scampia", documento interno al gruppo di ricerca
del DUN, con il resoconto delle attivit di indagine sul campo realizzate nel periodo gennaio-febbraio 2001.
University of Naples "Federico II"/Planning Department Naples City Council (July 2002), (Agreement for
technical and scientific advice) "Rapporto finale della Ricerca sulla riqualificazione urbana avviata con il
programma Scampia" (Final Research report on urban redevelopment launched with the Scampia project.)
University of Naples "Federico II"/Planning Department (October 2001), Memorandum for meeting held on 25
October in Scampia, at the District Council with participation from local actors, newspapers and representatives
from institutions.
University of Naples "Federico II"/Planning Department (2001), Costruiamo insieme la Piazza dei Giovani a
Scampia!, illustrated brochure for schools on participatory planning.
25
Internet sites
http://www.fuoricentroscampia.it
http://www.legambiente.campania.it/dovesiamo/napoli/la_gru.htm
http://www.cdbcassano.it
http://www.ferraris.org

Potrebbero piacerti anche