THURSDAY, 19 May 2016
From 8.30am:
Arrival
and registration of participants - Main Hall - ID Building
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
10.30am-11.00am: Opening
addresses
Jonathan Gabe, ESA RN16 President and Luís Baptista, Director
of CICS.NOVA
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
11.00am-12.30am:
Plenary Introduction
Key note speech: Professions, healthcare organisations and the political winds of change
Ellen Annandale,
University of York (UK)
13.00pm
- Lunch
Parallel
Sessions A, B and C
2.00pm-3.30pm:
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session
A1 - New directions in health care
work and organisations I
Organisers: Helena Serra and Tiago Correia (Portugal)
Chair: Helena Serra
1. Physician Associates in General Practice in England: a challenge to
professional boundaries?
Vari M Drennan, Kingston University & St.
George’s University of London (UK), Jon Gabe, Roayl Holloway, University of
London(UK) and Mary Halter, Kingston University & St. George’s University
of London (UK)
2. Health by the People through Comprehensive Primary Health Care:
Reimagining Global Health, Revitalizing Primary Health Care, and Reifying
Social Justice in the Neoliberal Age
Peter Lee, City University of New York Brooklyn College
(USA)
3. Healthcare providers’ perspective on the new Family Medicine Model in
Turkey
Pınar Öktem and Ayça Gelgeç-Bakacak, Hacettepe University (Turkey)
4. Social enterprise and community health services restructuring in England
Stephanie Tailby, Ana Lopes and Stella Warren, University
of the West of England (UK)
5. In the eye of the storm: when clinical managers accountable for
patientflows meet “hospital-reality”
Jeppe Gustafsson, Vibeke Byg and Janne Seemann,
Aalborg University (Denmark)
6. Health systems and inequalities in southern European countries during
the economic crisis
Mauro Serapioni, Centre for Social Studies,
University of Coimbra (Portugal)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session B1 - Emerging and
resurgent actors in health contexts I
Organisers:
Brígida Riso, Mário Santos and Violeta Alarcão (Portugal)
Chair:
Brígida Riso
1. Compromising for care: architects as designers and knowledge brokers
in the context of later life
Ellen Annandale, Sian Beynon-Jones, Christina Buse, Daryl Martin
and Sarah Nettleton, University of York (UK)
2. Pharmacist - classic actor in a new role on the Polish scene of
health care
Anita Majchrowska, Medical University of Lublin (Poland), Małgorzata Synowiec-Piłat, Wroclaw Medical University (Poland)
and Anna Pałęga, College of Management “Edukacja” (Poland)
3. Midwives, resurgence of an old profession in Quebec between health
and disease
Arnal Maud, CERMES3 / IRIS- EHESS (France)
4. Men or gods? Media and their role in creating medicine doctors
reputation
Maria Świątkiewicz-Mośny, Jagiellonian University, Kraków (Poland)
Room 0.06
(Floor 0)
Session C1 – Patient-centered care and public involvement
in health technologies: I - Public and
patient Involvement
Organisers: Cláudia de
Freitas (Portugal), Alicia Renedo (UK) and Susana Silva (Portugal)
Chair:
Tiago Correia
1.
Parental involvement in care in Neonatal Intensive Care Units
Elisabete Alves, EPIUnit,
University of Porto (Portugal), Cláudia de Freitas, CIES, University Institute
of Lisbon (Portugal); EPIUnit, University of Porto (Portugal), Mariana Amorim, EPIUnit,
University of Porto (Portugal) and Susana Silva, EPIUnit, University of Porto
(Portugal)
2.
New models of chronic illness management in Switzerland: what factors are
promoting or restricting patients’ participation?
Carla Ribeiro and
Christian Suter, Sociology Institute, Neuchâtel University (Switzerland)
3.
NICE Power: on the biopolitics of health technology appraisal in the United
Kingdom
Matthias Benzer, Department
of Sociological Studies, University of Sheffield (UK)
4.
Increasing participation of migrants in CQI measurements
Helena Kosec, Pharos -
The Dutch Centre of Expertise on Health Disparities (Netherlands)
5.
An e-Health Advance Care Planning Solution
Francesco Di Tano and Ludovica
De Panfilis, CIRSFID, Alma Mater Studiorum, University of Bologna (Italy)
3.30pm - Coffee Break
Parallel Sessions A and B
4.00pm-5.30pm
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session A2 - Maternity care in Europe: social changes and
institutional challenges I
Organisers: Ekaterina
Borozdina (Russia), Mário Santos (Portugal) and Ema Hrešanová (Czech
Republic)
Chair:
Mário Santos
1.
Natural childbirth, migrant women and moralities of maternity care in the Czech
Republic
Ema Hrešanová, University
of West Bohemia in Pilsen (Czech Republic)
2.
Maternity care experiences of Polish migrants in Barcelona and Berlin
Izabella Main, Adam
Mickiewicz University, (Poland)
3.
MRI for fetal brain abnormalities: patient and clinician perspectives
Mabel Lie, Ruth Graham
and Stephen Robson, Institute of Cellular Medicine, Newcastle University (UK)
4.
Production of Care in Maternity Care Services
Marta Benet Blasco, University
of Vic - Central University of Catalonia (Spain), Margarida Pla Consuegra, University
of Vic - Central University of Catalonia; University of Barcelona (Spain)
5.
Meeting the maternal health needs of immigrants mothers in access to healthcare
in Portugal: challenges and opportunities
Alejandra Ortiz and Beatriz
Padilla, CIES-IUL (Portugal)
6.
Maternity care in Italy and France: a comparison
Elena Spina,
Università Politecnica delle Marche (Italy) and Beatrice Jacques, Université de
Bordeaux II (France)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session B2 - The Challenges of the Assisted Reproductive
Technologies: Gender, Medicalization, Inequalities I
Organisers: Lia
Lombardi (Italy) and Alice Sophie Sarcinelli (France)
Chair: Lia
Lombardi
1.
Assisted Reproductive Technologies, Inequality and Cross-border reproductive
care: politics of inclusion or exclusion of same-sex couples depending on
national contexts
Catarina Delaunay,
CICS.NOVA – Interdisciplinary Centre of Social Sciences da Universidade Nova de
Lisboa (Portugal)
2.
Different models of regulating egg donation: case of Russia and Great Britain
Alexandra Kurlenkova
and Maria Vasekha, Institute of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of
Sciences (Russia)
3.
Clinical expertise in kinship. Learning relationships through medicalised
conception
Giulia Zanini, University
of Padova (Italy)
4.
The Imperative of Conjugal Communication:
Assisted Reproduction, Gender Dynamics and Support in a Dutch Fertility
Clinic
Trudie Gerrits, University
of Amsterdam, Amsterdam Institute of Social Science Research (Italy)
5.
Remaking the reproductive body: professionals and visual technologies in action
Manuela Perrotta, Queen
Mary University of London (UK)
5.30pm - Coffee Break
Parallel Sessions A and B
6.00pm-7.30pm
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session A3 - New directions in health care work and
organisations II
Organisers: Helena Serra and Tiago Correia (Portugal)
Chair: Tiago Correia
1. The hospice as a
non-liminal space: evidence from a qualitative study with Portuguese terminally
ill patients, family members and staff
Ana Patrícia Hilário, CIEG - Centro Interdisciplinar
de Estudos de Género, ISCSP-UL (Portugal)
2. Does social class affect the
way we die? Socially structured diversity of experience with terminal illness
in the Czech Republic
Lenka Slepičková, Palacky University Olomouc,
Olomouc University Social Health Institute (OUSHI), (Czech Republic)
3. Unsociable, uncontroversial
and embedded: the unseen role of social media in caring and health practices
Jo Hope, University of Southampton (UK)
4. The involvement of citizen
“expert by experience” in health care work
Silvia Clementi, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore
di Milano (Italy)
5. What’s in an individual care
description? Textual Technologies and the Coordination of Care Work
Kjetil G. Lundberg, University of Bergen (Norway)
6. The standardization of
General Practice and Family Medicine? Reconfigurations in the nature of medical
work – a case study from Portugal
Hélder Raposo, Lisbon School of Health Technology (Portugal)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session B3 - Working time arrangements, work-life-balance and
health of health care professionals
Organisers: Johanna Muckenhuber (Austria)
and Hannah Volk (Austria)
Chair:
Johanna Muckenhuber
1.
Quality of service and working times at times of austerity: Italy and Greece
compared
Angela Genova, University
of Urbino; Fondazione Giacomo Brodolini, Roma (Italy);
Platon Tinios and
Panos Xenos, Piraeus University (Greece)
2.
The contemporary work situation and health promotion of professionals in the
long term care in Czech Republic
Blanka Jirkovska, Czech
Technical University, Prague (Czech Republic)
3.
Work-life-balance and wellbeing for young physicians
Giovanna Vicarelli,
Micol Bronzini and Elena Spina, Università Politecnica delle Marche (Italy)
4.
From one working time arrangement model to another, or from sexism to ageism?
Questioning evidences and interpretations on general practitioner’s work-life
balance in the French context
Geraldine Bloy, Université
de Bourgogne (France)
5.
Government Employees and Depressive and Anxiety Disorders: A systematic review
Marcos Antonio dos Santos
(Portugal)
6.
Unemployment, Mental Disorders and Suicide: A Systematic Review
Marcos Antonio dos Santos
(Portugal)
FRIDAY, 20 May 2016
Parallel Sessions A and B
9.00am-10.30am
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session A4 - New directions in health
care work and organisations III
Organisers: Helena Serra and Tiago Correia (Portugal)
Chair: Helena Serra
1. The perspective of social
exclusion in the analysis of chronic illness experience
Eglė Večorskytė, Faculty of Social sciences,
Vytautas Magnus University (Lithuania)
2. From Negotiations to
Compromises, the Interaction between Homeless People and Healthcare
Professionals
Laureline Coulomb, Université de Strasbourg
(France)
3. Surgeons and Marketization of
Health: The Case of Turkey
Gülşah Başkavak, Middle East Technical
University (Turkey)
4. Professional and Market
Logics of Price Setting in Health Care: The Case of Commercial Dentistry in
Moscow, Russia
Elena Berdysheva, National Research University –
Higher School of Economics (Russia)
5. Distribution of vacancies
in public tender in Brazil: Human Resources
Management in Dentistry
Mariana Gabriel, GHTM
(Portugal); University of São Paulo (Brazil), Mariana Murai Chagas, University
of São Paulo (Brazil), Gilles Dussaulta, GHTM (Portugal), Gilberto Alfredo
Pucca Junior, University of Brasília (Brazil), Maria Ercilia de Araujo,
University of São Paulo (Brazil) and Fernanda Campos de Almeida Carrer,
University of São Paulo (Brazil)
6. New direction in the
EU: cross-border dental care. How does
it work?
Pia Blomqvist and Anneli Milén, National
Institute for Health and Welfare (Finland)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session B4 - Maternity care in
Europe: social changes and institutional challenges II
Organisers: Ekaterina
Borozdina (Russia), Mário Santos (Portugal) and Ema Hrešanová (Czech
Republic)
Chair:
Ema Hrešanová
1.
Empowerment through Intimacy: The case of Czech Homebirth Controversy
Anna Durnová, Lenka
Formánková and Eva M. Hejzlarová ((Czech Republic))
2.
Shortening gestational age at term and organisation of maternity care in the
Czech Republic
Martina Štípková, University
of West Bohemia in Pilsen (Czech Republic)
3.
The religious factor in the choice for “natural” childbirth in Russia (New Age,
Neopaganism and Orthodoxy)
Anna Ozhiganova, Institute
of Ethnology and Anthropology, Russian Academy of Sciences (Russia)
4.
Home births in Poland – the method of demedicalizationof births or
professionalization of midwifery?
Antonina Doroszewska,
Medical University of Warsaw (Poland)
5.
Labour pain and labour suffering: politics and affectivities around the
labouring woman
Francesca De Luca, Universidade
de Lisboa - Instituto de Ciências Sociais (Portugal)
6.
Natural Care in pregnancy, childbirth and child care: old and new practices,
motivations and actors in Portugal and Spain
Dulce Morgado Neves,
CIES-IUL (Portugal)
10.30am - Coffee Break
Parallel Sessions A and B
11.00am-12.30pm
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session
A5 - The Challenges of the Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Gender,
Medicalization, Inequalities II
Organisers: Lia
Lombardi (Italy) and Alice Sophie Sarcinelli (France)
Chair:
Alice Sophie Sarcinelli
1.
Assisted Reproductive Technologies in Portugal: debates and key players
Amélia Augusto, University of Beira
Interior; CIES-IUL (Portugal)
2.
The medicalization of infertility. Social logics of couples candidates to in
vitro fertilization
Aicha Benabed, Oran
University (Algeria)
3.
The assisted reproduction law and the social perception of infertility in Italy
Barbara Cordella, Francesca
Greco, Katia Carlini, Alessia Greco, Renata Tambelli
4.
Rationalizing ‘cultural anomaly’: public and private discourses of surrogate
motherhood in Russia
Natalia Chernyaeva, Ural
Federal University (Russia)
5.
Assisted reproduction and its challenges: insights into aspects of access and
provision of infertility treatment in Maputo
Inês Faria, University
of Amsterdam (Netherlands)
6.
Precarious Labor: Trading Ukrainian Eggs Across Borders
Polina Vlasenko, Indiana
University (USA)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session
B5 - The active ageing policy framework in Europe: challenges and
potentialities for health care organisations
Organisers: Angela Genova
(Italy) and Micol Pizzolati (Italy)
Chair: Micol Pizzolati
1.
A lack of Social Capital affects health of older individuals more strongly than
younger ones health
Johanna Muckenhuber,
University Graz (Austria)
2.
Portuguese elderly nutritional status surveillance system (PEN-3S): Creating a
value-based health care delivery
T. Madeira, C.
Peixoto-Plácido, V. Alarcão, O. Santos, N. Santos, B. Goulão, N. Mendonça, P.
J. Nicola and Clara Gorjão, Faculty of Medicine of Lisbon (Portugal)
3.
Gender-related healthy ageing in Switzerland: subjective and objective health
evaluations
Valentina Shipovskaya,
University of Zurich (Switzerland)
4.
Doctors and Nurses in the Final Paths of Their Professional Lives
Marianela Ferreira,
Institute of Public Health of University of Oporto (Portugal)
5.
Active aging in Poland in the context of cancer. How to increase the
effectiveness of strategies in the fight against cancer?
Małgorzata
Synowiec-Piłat, Wroclaw Medical University (Poland), Anna Pałęga, College of
Management “Edukacja” (Poland) and Anita Majchrowska, Medical University of
Lublin (Poland)
6.
Active ageing regional strategies in comparative perspective: challenges and
potentialities for health care organisations
Angela Genova, University
of Urbino, Fondazione Giacomo Brodolini (Italy)
12.30am - Lunch
Parallel Sessions A and B
2.00pm-3.30pm
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session
A6 - Emerging and resurgent actors in health contexts II
Organisers:
Brígida Riso, Mário Santos and Violeta Alarcão (Portugal)
Chair:
Violeta Alarcão
1. Can a social health insurance
system serve as a context for medicalisation?
Sarah Van den Bogaert and Piet
Bracke, Ghent University (Belgium)
2. Looking for plural trajectories
of care: social meanings and efficacies of old and new care strategies in
mental illness
Joana Zózimo, Faculty of Economics and Centre for Social Studies – University of
Coimbra (Portugal)
3. Cross-border Healthcare
Trajectories via Patient Advocacy Organisations
Pierre Nikolov, Stockholm University (Sweden)
4. Looking for the Sources of Social
Resistance to Cancer: Anti-Cancer Aspects of Self-Preservation Behavior among
Russians
Elena
Berdysheva, Higher School
of Economics, Moscow (Russia)
5. Caregivers of project “Home Care Premium”
in a social District in central Italy. Findings from the final evaluation
design
Maurizio Esposito, University of
Cassino and Lazio Meridionale (Italy)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session
B6 - Listening to the voices of children: how to bring them into the
sociology of health and illness
Organiser: Ana Patrícia
Hilário (Portugal)
Chair:
Ana Patricia Hilário
1.
Reaching consent/assent in various
research situations with children. Reflections from three qualitative
research projects conducted in Poland
Magdalena
Radkowska-Walkowicz, Maria Reimann and Anna Witeska-Młynarczyk, University of
Warsaw/Adam Mickiewicz University (Poland)
2.
‘tell me, what do you think?’: empowerment of child participants through use of
creative visual methods when generating qualitative data
Gillian Martin, University
of Malta (Malta)
3. “It’s all about me, isn’t it?”: Childhood Epilepsy Experiences
and Involvement in Healthcare
R.E. Black, J. Harden,
M. Pickersgill and R. Chi, University of Edinburgh (UK)
4. Exploring children’s understanding of body weight, health
and well-being through hospital ethnography
Andrea Lutz, University
of Geneva (Switzerland)
5.
Children's competencies in the process of normalization of chronic illness
Anna Rosa Favretto,
Stefania Fucci and Francesca Zaltron, University of Eastern Piedmont (Italy)
6. Sociological portraits of children: Childhood obesity in
the first person
Sílvia Maria Clemente da
Silva, ISCTE-IUL; Torres Vedras Municipality (Portugal)
3.30am - Coffee Break
Parallel Sessions A and B
4.00pm-5.30pm
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session
A7 - New directions in health care work and organisations (Session 4)
Organisers: Helena Serra and Tiago Correia (Portugal)
Chair: Tiago Correia
1. Health Promotion Programs
and Health Identities in Schools – Towards a Comprehensive Theoretical
Framework
Mathilde Cecchini, University of Aarhus
(Denmark)
2. Promoting health, reducing
gender inequalities, improving intercultural communications. Prevention of
female cancer and sexually transmitted diseases in Milan and Beirut
Lia Lombardi, University of Milan; ISMU
Fondation (Italy) and Mara Tognetti Bordogna, University of Milano-Bicocca
(Italy)
3. ALL4ALL, a public-private
pilot project in Piedmont, Northern Italy
Arianna Radin, University of Turin (Italy)
4. Medicalization of binge
eating disorder from the perspective of health professionals
Vytautas Magnus, University Jonavos (Lithuania)
5. Exploring surrogacy issue
in India through the difficulties to set-up a field study
Virginie Rozée Gomez, French Institute for
Demographics Studies (France)
6.
Early exit of human resources from the NHS: the interface between health reform
and human resources
Marianela Ferreira,
Institute of Public Health of University of Oporto (Portugal)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session
B7 - Emotions and the Qualitative Health Researcher
Organisers: Ana Patricia
Hilário (Portugal), Ema Hresanova (Czeck Republic) and Kàtia Lurbe I Puerto
(France)
Chair: Ema Hresanova
1.
A Social Scientist in the Operating Theatre
Gülşah Başkavak, Middle
East Technical University(Turkey)
2.
An anthropologist among clinicians: a possible social-scientist-medical doctor
alliance between different paradigms and positive expectations
Fausto Barlocco, Università
degli Studi di Firenze (Italy)
3.
Emotional aspects of a biographical narrative research on living with HIV in
Turkey
Pinar Öktem, Independent Researcher (Turkey)
4.
Stories of hell and healing on the Internet: Existential distress of
benzodiazipine withdrawal
Alison Fixsen, University
of Westminster (UK)
5.
9 cancers on paper: stories and objects of illness among women, spoken words,
art and written science
Susana de Noronha, CES,
University of Coimbra (Portugal)
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
5.30pm-7.00pm
– RN16 Business Meeting –
Everybody Welcome
Conference dinner 8.00pm
Restaurant: still lack complete
SATURDAY, 21 May 2016
Parallel Sessions A and B
9.00am-10.30am
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session A8 - Patient-centered care and public involvement
in health technologies
(Session 2: Patient-centred care)
Organisers: Cláudia de
Freitas (Portugal), Alicia Renedo (UK) and Susana Silva (Portugal)
Chair:
Alicia Renedo
1.
Patient-centred care in embryo donation for research
Catarina Samorinha, EPIUnit,
University of Porto Medical School (Portugal), Cláudia Freitas, CIES-IUL;
EPIUnit, University of Porto (Portugal), Helena Machado, CES, University of
Coimbra (Portugal) and Susana Silva, EPIUnit, University of Porto (Portugal).
2.
The role of distributed health literacy in patient-centred care
Liliana Abreu, EPIUnit,
University of Porto Medical School (Portugal), João Arriscado Nunes, CES, University
of Coimbra (Portugal) and Susana Silva, EPIUnit, University of Porto
(Portugal).
3.
Bodily boundaries and clinical identities: reconfiguring bodies and
subjectivities in the clinic
Karolina Kazimierczak,
University of Aberdeen (UK)
4.
The MHealth Checklist: A quality assurance tool to enhance person-centred care
Ann Sezier, Gareth
Terry, Claire Hempel and Nicola Kayes, AUT University, Auckland (New Zealand)
5.
Digital Health Communication in the assessing of performance of health
organizations: transparency and accountability for the empowered patient
Gea Ducci, University
of Urbino Carlo Bo (Italy)
6.
Socioeconomic differences in the use and forgoing of health-care and prescribed
medication among older people
Vânia Rocha, Henrique
Barros and Sílvia Fraga, EPIUnit,
University of Porto Medical School (Portugal)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session B8 – Labor of management in case of management of
labor: changing policies of maternity care in post-socialist societies
Organisers: Anna
Temkina (Russia) and Anastasija Novkunskaya (Russia)
Chair:
Tiago Correia
1.
Commercialization of maternity care in Russia hospitals “for the mutual
benefits”
Anna Temkina, European
University at Saint-Petersburg (Russia)
2.
Russian midwives as agents of institutional work
Ekaterina Borozdina,
European University at St. Petersburg (Russia)
3.
The first level. The second case. The third logic: A case study of health
professionals in Russian maternity wards’
Anastasija
Novkunskaya, European University at Saint-Petersburg (Russia)
4.
The “Presence-Absence Experience”: Antenatal Losses in Social Practices of
Post-Soviet Health Care System
Yuliia Isaeva, Nizhny
Novgorod State Medical Academy (Russia)
5.
The feminist anthropology of “maternal capital” and increase of birth rate:
perception of state pronatalism in Kazakhstan,
Kongyrbay Adilet
Rashiduly, Al-Farabi Kazakh National University (Kazakhstan); Spankulova Lazat
Seitkazyevna, Al-Farabi Kazakh National University (Kazakhstan) and Turar
Ryskulov, New Economic University (Kazakhstan)
10.30am - Coffee Break
Parallel Sessions A and B
11.00am-12.30am
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
Session
A9 - Maternity care in Europe: social changes and institutional challenges
(Session 3)
Organisers: Ekaterina
Borozdina (Russia), Mário Santos (Portugal) and Ema Hrešanová (Czech
Republic)
Chair:
Ekaterina Borozdina
1.
‘Maternal Diabesity’: the Disconnect between Policy/Practice and the Material
Realities of Women’s Lives
Rachel Jarvie,
Plymouth University (UK)
2.
A holistic model of childbirth in Russia: between medicalization and tradition.
Natalia Mitsyuk,
Smolensk state medical University (Russia)
3.
The narrative of premature neonates given- names as a reflection of the parental
experience and well-being
May Marcovitz, M.A,
University of Haifa (Israel)
4.
Natural childbirth or a window display obstetrics market in France
Arnal Maud, CERMES3 /
IRIS- EHESS (France)
Room Multiusos
3 (Floor 4)
Session
B9 - The Challenges of the Assisted Reproductive Technologies: Gender,
Medicalization, Inequalities (Session 3)
Organisers: Lia
Lombardi (Italy) and Alice Sophie Sarcinelli (France)
Chair:
Lia Lombardi
1.
Conceiving parents. Same-sex couples’ motherhood between gaps and continuity
Federica de Cordova,
University of Verona (Italy)
2.
Sterility of the Couple, Individual Fecundity: The Medicalization of Fertile
Bodies
Corinna Sabrina
Guerzoni, University of Milano-Bicocca (Italy)
3.
Producing Reproduction: Knots of Power between Technologies, Nature,
Biopolitics and Gender
Carlotta Cossutta,
Università di Verona (Italy)
Room Multiusos
2 (Floor 4)
12.30pm
Closing
of the Conference by Helena Serra and Tiago Correia