Free admission
Occupational Structures in European History
10:30AM
Welcome Address
Guido Alfani Bocconi University
Introduction
Leigh Shaw-Taylor Cambridge University
Session I
Occupational Structures in Italy
Chair
Luca Mocarelli Bicocca University of Milan
Occupational Structures, Inequality, and Social Mobility. The Experience of the EINITE and SMITE
Projects
Guido Alfani Bocconi University
Occupational Structures in Kingdom of Naples. The Case of Apulia, 16th-18th Centuries
Sergio Sardone Frederick II University of Naples
Occupational Structures in the Republic of Venice During the Early Modern Period. A Research Agenda
Andrea Caracausi University of Padua
Giulio Ongaro Bicocca University of Milan
The Occupational Structure of Piedmont. Sources, Methodologies, Problems (17th-19th Centuries)
Beatrice Zucca Micheletto University of
Cambridge
Population Concentration, Occupational Structures, and Spatial Patterns in the Long Run. Italy, 1861-1991
Andrea Ramazzotti The London School
of Economics and Political Science
(LSE)
1:00PM
Lunch
2:30PM
Session II
Occupational Structures in Europe and the ENCHOS Project
Chair
Cormac Ó Gráda University College
Dublin
Occupational Structure, Economic Growth, and Industrialization in a Global Perspective
Leigh Shaw-Taylor University of
Cambridge
Women's Occupations in 18th and 19th Centuries' Southern Europe. What Could Be Done?
Carmen Sarasua Universitat Autònoma de
Barcelona
Beatrice Zucca Micheletto University of
Cambridge
Filipa De Silva International Institute of
Social History
Patterns of Female Employment in the Pays the Caux and the Perche, 1792-1901 (France)
Auriane Terki-Mignot University of
Cambridge
4:15PM
Coffee Break
4:30PM
Machinery and Labor Absorption in the Comparative History of Industrialization. England and Wales, Belgium, Japan, and Italy compared
Osamu Saito Hitotsubashi University
Classifying Occupations in PSTI and
ISIC. Evidence from the Netherlands and Belgium, 1820-2010
Robin Philips International Institute of Social
History
Jobhoard. Sharing Coded Occupations Across the Web Using Linked Data
Richard Zijdeman International Institute of
Social History
Towards an Ontology of German Occupational Titles. Modern Concepts, Historical Knowledge and Changing Meanings
Georg Fertig Martin-Luther University
Halle-Wittenberg
Conclusion and General Discussion
Chair
Cormac Ó Gráda University College
Dublin
For Information
Carlo F. Dondena Center for
Research on Social Dynamics
and Public Policy
tel +39 025836.5384
dondenaresearch@unibocconi.it
www.dondena.unibocconi.it
With the support of ENCHOS International Network