Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita

The aim of this article is to offer a contribution to a theoretically-oriented poverty investigation, starting from the idea that it is necessary to give a greater impulse to the definition of a theoretical reference-frame. Therefore, we first propose a brief discussion of the main approaches, based...

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Main Authors: Ferruccio Biolcati-Rinaldi, Giuseppe Giampaglia
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Rosenberg & Sellier 2011-12-01
Series:Quaderni di Sociologia
Online Access:http://journals.openedition.org/qds/631
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spelling doaj-ae1fdf89ab234be194f9aa9a7e46f4a52020-11-24T20:41:25ZengRosenberg & SellierQuaderni di Sociologia0033-49522421-58482011-12-015615117910.4000/qds.631Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vitaFerruccio Biolcati-RinaldiGiuseppe GiampagliaThe aim of this article is to offer a contribution to a theoretically-oriented poverty investigation, starting from the idea that it is necessary to give a greater impulse to the definition of a theoretical reference-frame. Therefore, we first propose a brief discussion of the main approaches, based respectively on poverty persistence hypothesis, life course hypothesis, individualization thesis, and social stratification theory. After defining poverty as the lack of balance between resources and needs (both translated into monetary terms), we have then explored the impact of education and geographical area on conditions of poverty, in the light of the contributions of the above four approaches. The methodological strategy is founded on the Event History Analysis, while the data set comes from the European Community Household Panel (ECHP) and covers the 1994-2001 period. The results show, among other things, that: 1) high/medium education exerts a strong impact (on poverty reduction) only in the first year, while in the successive years the negative effects of low education prevail; 2) in the same way as for education, living in the North/Center of Italy strongly contributes to getting out of poverty soon (in the first year), while in the Mezzogiorno the reaction is weak even in the first year and diminishes more and more. On the whole, the analysis indicates that in the next future investigations based on specific social groups will be more fruitful.http://journals.openedition.org/qds/631
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ferruccio Biolcati-Rinaldi
Giuseppe Giampaglia
spellingShingle Ferruccio Biolcati-Rinaldi
Giuseppe Giampaglia
Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita
Quaderni di Sociologia
author_facet Ferruccio Biolcati-Rinaldi
Giuseppe Giampaglia
author_sort Ferruccio Biolcati-Rinaldi
title Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita
title_short Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita
title_full Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita
title_fullStr Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita
title_full_unstemmed Dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita
title_sort dinamiche della povertà, persistenze e corsi di vita
publisher Rosenberg & Sellier
series Quaderni di Sociologia
issn 0033-4952
2421-5848
publishDate 2011-12-01
description The aim of this article is to offer a contribution to a theoretically-oriented poverty investigation, starting from the idea that it is necessary to give a greater impulse to the definition of a theoretical reference-frame. Therefore, we first propose a brief discussion of the main approaches, based respectively on poverty persistence hypothesis, life course hypothesis, individualization thesis, and social stratification theory. After defining poverty as the lack of balance between resources and needs (both translated into monetary terms), we have then explored the impact of education and geographical area on conditions of poverty, in the light of the contributions of the above four approaches. The methodological strategy is founded on the Event History Analysis, while the data set comes from the European Community Household Panel (ECHP) and covers the 1994-2001 period. The results show, among other things, that: 1) high/medium education exerts a strong impact (on poverty reduction) only in the first year, while in the successive years the negative effects of low education prevail; 2) in the same way as for education, living in the North/Center of Italy strongly contributes to getting out of poverty soon (in the first year), while in the Mezzogiorno the reaction is weak even in the first year and diminishes more and more. On the whole, the analysis indicates that in the next future investigations based on specific social groups will be more fruitful.
url http://journals.openedition.org/qds/631
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