Janni, Fauda e Associati.
Established in 1999 by Marco Janni and Giulio Fauda to creating
a suitably dimensioned law firm which combined a traditional Milan
practice assisting italian clients in both judicial and extra judicial
procedures in the civil, commercial and company law fields with
a team of younger lawyers with a strong foreign-oriented experience.
The firm's structure has since strengthened by patiently recruiting
experienced professionals willing to share its project. Gian Carlo
Ciaccia and Francesca Bonino, both with a multi-year experience
as counsels of one of Italy's foremost industrial groups, have thus
joined the firm. The firm has got its roman offices. Giuliano Lemme,
university professor and an expert in banking law, and Aulo Cossu,
formerly head of Rome's litigation department of one of Italy's
major firms, had recently joined Fabrizio Pavarotti, the head of
the firm's labour law team. The firm has developed relationships
with top foreign firms, expecially in France, in the UK and in the
US, and has alliances with italian firms specialising in other branches
of law.
Studio Legale Lemme.
Established
in 1927 by Antonio Lemme, its tradition can be considered one of
the most relevant in Rome.
Today the Firm, without neglecting its significant historical roots,
is a modern and eclectic reality, able to offer a wide range of
legal services and conferring upon any professional performance
a unique, personalised and trustful connotation. A special attention
is reserved to its associates professional growth, in order to guarantee
a future of cooperation, quality and continuity to the Firm activity,
always focusing on the contents of the ethical code for the legal
profession. The Firm’s legal practice provides a multi-scope
assistance to both Italian and international clients, its partners’
areas of interest ranging from Criminal and Civil Law to Economic
and Commercial, Administrative, Local Communities and Heritage Law.
Istituto Italiano di Cultura di Tokyo.
It was started in 1939, thanks to a property bestowed by
Sir Takaharu Mitsui, who intended to found by that mean a House
of Italian Culture. The Institute was officially opened in March
1941, inaugurated by a ceremony attended by the Imperial Sovereigns.
Unfortunately, nevertheless, the House life would soon come to an
end: in 1945, indeed, an air bombing attack destroyed the edifice.
The institute would anyway been restored in 1959. So far, thanks
to its several directors’ intensive and attentive activity,
it keeps living a vivacious life. As an official body of the Italian
Nation, the Italian Institute of Culture in Tokyo aims to enhance
interchanges between Japan and Italy. A relevant part of the Institute
is a library, containing - in addition to a large assortment of
videos and magazines - 3500 books in Japanese and 12000 volumes
in Italian language, thus being the most complete Italian language
and culture issues collection existing in Tokyo. |
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