Note – This press release was published in full as an external contribution. This content is therefore not an article produced by the Triesteprima editorial staff
An important opportunity for reflection on the issues of parental equality and the recognition of family relationships will take place on June 26, 2025 at the Senate of the Republic, at Palazzo Madama. The book “The other violence – if this is (still) a man” by Angelo Pisani, lawyer and author engaged on the civil rights front, will be presented at this institutional seat. Davide Vinciprova will participate in the event, ambassador of parental equality and the protection of family relationships, for years promoting a constructive dialogue and a concrete commitment for the reform of family law in Italy and above all in the city of Trieste with various initiatives.
The event
The presentation is part of the national project “parental equality and protection of family relations”, an initiative that aims to raise public awareness and institutions on the need to guarantee equal dignity and parental responsibility, even in cases of family separation or conflict and this project represents the prelude of the national event scheduled for July 5, 2025 at the suggestive Castello Vinciprova, in the Municipality of Pollica (SA), where the paper will be officially presented at national level. of the right to parental equality and the protection of family relationships. A symbolic and at the same time operational document, intended to become a point of reference for future family and social policies. “The other violence”, strong title, gives voice to a often silent pain: that of the separated men and fathers, excluded or marginalized in the path of foster care of the children. A theme that, despite respecting any form of protection against violence, invites us to reflect on a fairer and more inclusive family model. The meeting in the Senate promises to be a moment of transversal confrontation between politics, jurisprudence, civil society and academic world, aimed at overcoming stereotypes and discrimination through the recognition of the full centrality of shared parenting.