Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives?

In Italy, migration is a new phenomenon, with non-native women and men constituting roughly equal shares of the workforce. However, their employment sectors differ significantly: non-native women often work in the same sectors as native women, while non-native men are employed in distinct secto...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Barbara Martini
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Romanian Regional Science Association 2024-12-01
Series:Romanian Journal of Regional Science
Online Access:https://rjrs.ase.ro/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/3-BMartini.pdf
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1846118540582584320
author Barbara Martini
author_facet Barbara Martini
author_sort Barbara Martini
collection DOAJ
description In Italy, migration is a new phenomenon, with non-native women and men constituting roughly equal shares of the workforce. However, their employment sectors differ significantly: non-native women often work in the same sectors as native women, while non-native men are employed in distinct sectors compared to their native counterparts. This paper examines gender segregation by analysing individuals’ backgrounds—distinguishing between native and non-native workers—and the impact of contract types, specifically fixed-term versus open-ended contracts. The study aims to determine whether the prevalence of these contract types influences the level of gender segregation across sectors. Findings indicate that the type of employment contract significantly affects gender segregation. Increased use of fixed-term contracts is associated with a reduction in sectoral segregation, suggesting that women are increasingly willing to enter male-dominated fields, while men tend to gravitate towards female-dominated sectors. This dynamic underscores the complexities of gender roles within the context of migration and employment.
format Article
id doaj-art-f66fb755efa940ea93ff31e5667c72c6
institution Kabale University
issn 1843-8520
language English
publishDate 2024-12-01
publisher Romanian Regional Science Association
record_format Article
series Romanian Journal of Regional Science
spelling doaj-art-f66fb755efa940ea93ff31e5667c72c62024-12-17T16:56:35ZengRomanian Regional Science AssociationRomanian Journal of Regional Science1843-85202024-12-01182456010.61225/rjrs.2024.09Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives? Barbara Martini In Italy, migration is a new phenomenon, with non-native women and men constituting roughly equal shares of the workforce. However, their employment sectors differ significantly: non-native women often work in the same sectors as native women, while non-native men are employed in distinct sectors compared to their native counterparts. This paper examines gender segregation by analysing individuals’ backgrounds—distinguishing between native and non-native workers—and the impact of contract types, specifically fixed-term versus open-ended contracts. The study aims to determine whether the prevalence of these contract types influences the level of gender segregation across sectors. Findings indicate that the type of employment contract significantly affects gender segregation. Increased use of fixed-term contracts is associated with a reduction in sectoral segregation, suggesting that women are increasingly willing to enter male-dominated fields, while men tend to gravitate towards female-dominated sectors. This dynamic underscores the complexities of gender roles within the context of migration and employment.https://rjrs.ase.ro/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/3-BMartini.pdf
spellingShingle Barbara Martini
Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives?
Romanian Journal of Regional Science
title Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives?
title_full Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives?
title_fullStr Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives?
title_full_unstemmed Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives?
title_short Examining gender and ethnic segregation in Italy’s labour market: Are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives?
title_sort examining gender and ethnic segregation in italy s labour market are women and migrants more segregated than men and natives
url https://rjrs.ase.ro/wp-content/uploads/2024/12/3-BMartini.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT barbaramartini examininggenderandethnicsegregationinitalyslabourmarketarewomenandmigrantsmoresegregatedthanmenandnatives