Coping Strategies in a Wealthy City of Northern Italy (original) (raw)

Youth Long-Term Unemployment and Its Social Consequences in Italy: 'In a World That Does Not Belong to Me'

This chapter explores the extent to which long-term unemployment can lead to social exclusion, paying particular attention to the role of material deprivation. Drawing on qualitative semistructured interviews conducted with 19 young unemployed men and women living in the Italian city of Turin, the authors develop a ‘multilayered’ model that sheds light on the different consequences that the deprivation of basic or leisure goods can have on social isolation, coping strategies and psychological wellbeing. In this case study, the findings suggest that the lack of work and the inability to enter the labor market are responsible for a delayed transition to adulthood and, ultimately, for the reproduction of social inequalities.

Gender, Poverty and Social Exclusion This article is closely based on a paper first given at the conference, Beyond the feminisation of poverty (University of Padua, November 1999) and published in Italian as J. Millar (2000) Genere, povert e esclusione sociale, in F. Bimbi, E. Ruspini (eds.), Po...

Social Policy and Society, 2003

This article discusses some of the problems involved in trying to develop gender-sensitive ways of measuring poverty. It argues that what is needed is a way of placing individuals within households and measuring both their contribution to the resources of that household and the extent of their dependence on the resources of others within the household. It is argued that this should involve examining sources as well as levels of income, and by adopting an approach that is dynamic, rather than static. The concept of social exclusion – multi-dimensional, dynamic, local and relational – could provide a way to explore these issues of autonomy and dependency, and their gender dimensions.

Italian Young People Coping with the Consequences of Economic Crisis: an Intersectional Analysis

The aim of this article is to investigate how the current economic crisis is affecting the daily lives and social positions of young people in Italy. On the one hand, starting from analysis of more general statistical evidence on the worsening situation in the labour market, we conduct an intersectional analysis – both intercategorical and intracategorical – of some indicators in order to shed light on educational and gender differences. On the other hand, we present the results of qualitative research conducted on the experiences and representations of the economic crisis among young people with low or high cultural capital in the city of Milan. The central hypothesis of our work is that 'the crisis' is not just a temporary economic conjuncture; it is also a social phenomenon reshaping the social positions of individuals in both structural and subjective terms. Showing how the crisis is affecting different young people in very different ways, the article investigates both structural evidence and subjective interpretations of the crisis.

Vulnerability and Inner Areas in Italy - "Should Young Stay or Should Young Go"? A Survey in the Molise Region

Sustainability , 2024

This article explores the depopulation phenomenon in the context of the Molise region, an Inner Area in the south of Italy, considering it as an indicator of emerging social vulnerability. In particular, this paper presents the results of a quantitative study conducted in Molise on a non-probabilistic sample composed of 89 respondents through an online self-administered semi-structured questionnaire. This research may contribute to stimulating reflection on social vulnerability studies by explaining that, in the age of complexity, societies, although simple, are not builders of social capital capable of protecting against social vulnerability. In particular, the data reveal that more than 2/3 of the sample (+75%) do not participate in community activities (events at volunteer centers; civic and political activities; and events youth aggregation centers). For this reason, it is important to improve solidarity, which is the core of new strategies of proximity welfare that help to reduce depopulation.

Poverty between exclusion processes and widespread precariousness

The term social exclusion does not seem to express fully the extension of the privations present in our societies, it can only be referred to well-defined areas of the population. The attention moves from processes of exclusion to processes of social integration and their more or less foreseeable effects. The article explores the international debates about poverty and social exclusion, comparing concerns about more or less permanent poverty with the increasing evidence of the precariousness of the position of most of the poor. Poverty appears an extended concept that includes stable privation in time and more unsettled conditions. Next to long-term poverty are short spells of poverty as an experience of life, which involve families only in limited periods of time, an occasional economic condition or swinging between hardship and an average income shared by the community they belong to. The new forms of poverty are characterised starting from the social dynamics that contribute to build them: stable poverty fully expresses the results of a process of social exclusion, considered as a fracture between the individual and the community, a fracture of the social link, isolation that tends to reproduce itself also without the manifestation of further accumulations of negative events; occasional poverties on the other hand are the expression of a more general way of life, of a widespread precariousness, of prevalent ways through which the individuals are integrated, not of specific processes but of a critical gathering, for a certain amount of time, of processes substantially common to all individuals The article locates Italian social research and policy development in this context and summarises some of the recent research on social exclusion and inclusion in Italy

The Social Representation of Poverty: A Naples P Ilot

2015

Abstract:. In our opinion the study of poverty has to be considered essential for social psychologists today; their efforts should be devoted to obtain fast and direct social benefits. We think that the main theoretical problem is represented by the "re-definition " of the object "poverty". The pilot phase of this research is based on three separate studies carried out with different samples. The aim of the research is to get acquainted with attitudes, perceptions and the social representation of poverty. In order to get data as "pure " as possible, only children entered the study. So the obtained results will set up the basis for a wider research project. Social psychologists must face strongly the problem of poverty. Their aim has to be devoted to obtain results characterized by an immediate heuristic value and quick social effects. Nevertheless, social studies on poverty have not yet reached a realistic phase in Italy. The European Community approach...

Between persistent poverty and the upper middle class: a new social condition for social policies in Italy

In recent years, social policies in Italy have changed profoundly. It is not merely a matter of funding and resources, reform projects and stances aimed at reducing the legitimacy of the majority of applications for public social benefits and services are emerging. New configurations of social policy focus exclusively on severe conditions and reduce access to social benefits for the families of the middle and new working classes. Close to public welfare, reduced and simplified in its programmes, a " second welfare " has been proposed by scholars and political parties in recent months, financed by private companies, trade unions, insurance companies, foundations, grant-making associations, professional associations and local governments and public institutions that build partnerships together with these private actors. This paper carries out an analysis of the Italian situation that highlights some of emerging issues. More fundamentally, I argue that these projects do not appear to possess a solid social base and do not appear to be able to tackle the challenges posed by the emergence of new social needs. A severe gap between these news paradigms of social policy and the need for intervention manifested by a growing proportion of the population is emerging. In Italy, the number of households living in poverty has not risen in recent years, but the impoverishment of the majority of Italian households has increased. No marked polarization with the subsequent disappearance of the middle classes has been manifested, but a " poor Italy " composed of the households in an intermediate position between the upper middle class and persistent poverty is emerging. The distances between these social positions and other social conditions is increasing. This paper highlights this new social condition characterized by severe impoverishment and a high risk of poverty, whose access to suitable public welfare programmes and private social services is rapidly decreasing .