Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary Italy

Abstract This paper studies the effect in the Italian case of geographical mobility on employment and occupational attainment, defined as access to the upper class, avoidance of the working class, and avoidance of agricultural jobs. It observes the distribution of its effect over the life course. Gi...

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Main Authors: Gabriele Ballarino, Nazareno Panichella
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2021-01-01
Series:Genus
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s41118-020-00112-4
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spelling doaj-c351d3e10b4c4064888acf083a92657c2021-01-24T12:21:02ZengSpringerOpenGenus2035-55562021-01-0177112410.1186/s41118-020-00112-4Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary ItalyGabriele Ballarino0Nazareno Panichella1Department of Social and Political Sciences, University of MilanDepartment of Social and Political Sciences, University of MilanAbstract This paper studies the effect in the Italian case of geographical mobility on employment and occupational attainment, defined as access to the upper class, avoidance of the working class, and avoidance of agricultural jobs. It observes the distribution of its effect over the life course. Given that migration is a gendered phenomenon, we perform separate analyses by gender. Our data set, moreover, includes residential information at the municipality level, making it possible to specify geographical mobility in different ways, according to the distance, the characteristics of origin, and destination and the frequency of individual movements. Third, it studies whether the effects of geographical mobility change according to social class of origin and geographical area of origin. Our analyses, based on linear probability panel models with fixed effects, show a strong gender divide concerning the probability of employment and avoidance of the working class. A positive effect of geographical mobility on occupational outcomes appears to exist only as regards men, because for women the divergence between movers and stayers appears well before geographical mobility. Finally, the effects of geographical mobility are generally stronger for individuals originating from the middle and lower classes and from rural areas, but they are not so strong as to enable those individuals to substantially change their position in the occupational hierarchy.https://doi.org/10.1186/s41118-020-00112-4Geographical mobilityInequality/Social StratificationItalyLife course
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Gabriele Ballarino
Nazareno Panichella
spellingShingle Gabriele Ballarino
Nazareno Panichella
Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary Italy
Genus
Geographical mobility
Inequality/Social Stratification
Italy
Life course
author_facet Gabriele Ballarino
Nazareno Panichella
author_sort Gabriele Ballarino
title Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary Italy
title_short Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary Italy
title_full Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary Italy
title_fullStr Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary Italy
title_full_unstemmed Social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary Italy
title_sort social origins, geographical mobility and occupational attainment in contemporary italy
publisher SpringerOpen
series Genus
issn 2035-5556
publishDate 2021-01-01
description Abstract This paper studies the effect in the Italian case of geographical mobility on employment and occupational attainment, defined as access to the upper class, avoidance of the working class, and avoidance of agricultural jobs. It observes the distribution of its effect over the life course. Given that migration is a gendered phenomenon, we perform separate analyses by gender. Our data set, moreover, includes residential information at the municipality level, making it possible to specify geographical mobility in different ways, according to the distance, the characteristics of origin, and destination and the frequency of individual movements. Third, it studies whether the effects of geographical mobility change according to social class of origin and geographical area of origin. Our analyses, based on linear probability panel models with fixed effects, show a strong gender divide concerning the probability of employment and avoidance of the working class. A positive effect of geographical mobility on occupational outcomes appears to exist only as regards men, because for women the divergence between movers and stayers appears well before geographical mobility. Finally, the effects of geographical mobility are generally stronger for individuals originating from the middle and lower classes and from rural areas, but they are not so strong as to enable those individuals to substantially change their position in the occupational hierarchy.
topic Geographical mobility
Inequality/Social Stratification
Italy
Life course
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s41118-020-00112-4
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