Academic literature on the topic 'Women employees – Italy'
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Journal articles on the topic "Women employees – Italy"
Giglio, Ferdinando. "Women Entrepreneurs and Bankruptcy: An Empirical Analysis in Italy." International Journal of Economics and Finance 13, no. 12 (October 28, 2021): 24. http://dx.doi.org/10.5539/ijef.v13n12p24.
Full textBurrell, Jean, Simonetta Manfredi, Hilary Rollin, Liz Price, and Lindsay Stead. "Equal opportunities for women employees in the hospitality industry: a comparison between France, Italy, Spain and the UK." International Journal of Hospitality Management 16, no. 2 (June 1997): 161–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0278-4319(97)00003-0.
Full textLamiani, Giulia, Lidia Borghi, Silvia Poli, Katia Razzini, Claudio Colosio, and Elena Vegni. "Hospital Employees’ Well-Being Six Months after the COVID-19 Outbreak: Results from a Psychological Screening Program in Italy." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 18, no. 11 (May 25, 2021): 5649. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph18115649.
Full textDal Mas, Francesca, and Paola Paoloni. "A relational capital perspective on social sustainability; the case of female entrepreneurship in Italy." Measuring Business Excellence 24, no. 1 (November 17, 2019): 114–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/mbe-08-2019-0086.
Full textDragano, Nico, Claudio Barbaranelli, Marvin Reuter, Morten Wahrendorf, Brad Wright, Matteo Ronchetti, Giuliana Buresti, Cristina Di Tecco, and Sergio Iavicoli. "Young Workers’ Access to and Awareness of Occupational Safety and Health Services: Age-Differences and Possible Drivers in a Large Survey of Employees in Italy." International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 15, no. 7 (July 17, 2018): 1511. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijerph15071511.
Full textLombardi, Andrea, Davide Mangioni, Dario Consonni, Lisa Cariani, Patrizia Bono, Anna Paola Cantù, Basilio Tiso, et al. "Seroprevalence of anti-SARS-CoV-2 IgG among healthcare workers of a large university hospital in Milan, Lombardy, Italy: a cross-sectional study." BMJ Open 11, no. 2 (February 2021): e047216. http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2020-047216.
Full textAcquadro Maran, Daniela, Antonella Varetto, and Cristina Civilotti. "Sexual Harassment in the Workplace: Consequences and Perceived Self-Efficacy in Women and Men Witnesses and Non-Witnesses." Behavioral Sciences 12, no. 9 (September 8, 2022): 326. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/bs12090326.
Full textFalco, Alessandra, Damiano Girardi, Alessandro De Carlo, Cecilie Schou Andreassen, and Laura Dal Corso. "Work Addiction among Bank Employees in Italy: A Contribution to Validation of the Bergen Work Addiction Scale with a Focus on Measurement Invariance across Gender and Managerial Status." Sustainability 14, no. 21 (October 22, 2022): 13714. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su142113714.
Full textGianelle, Carlo, and Giuseppe Tattara. "Vacancy chains and the business cycle. Stringing together job-to-job transitions in micro data." International Journal of Manpower 35, no. 8 (October 28, 2014): 1212–35. http://dx.doi.org/10.1108/ijm-07-2012-0106.
Full textVenediktov, S. "TOWARDS THE ISSUE ON THE DENUNCIATION OF THE CONVENTIONS OF THE INTERNATIONAL LABOUR ORGANIZATION." Bulletin of Taras Shevchenko National University of Kyiv. Legal Studies, no. 117 (2021): 15–18. http://dx.doi.org/10.17721/1728-2195/2021/2.117-3.
Full textDissertations / Theses on the topic "Women employees – Italy"
Piredda, Angela. "Regroupées mais employées : L'accès au travail des femmes marocaines en Sardaigne et en Toscane." Thesis, Nice, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015NICE2005/document.
Full textThis work aims to get deeper into a topic not so well known in the Italian Sociology, in other words it aims to get an insight into the Moroccan Women's Job market strictly related to both Sardinia and Tuscany regions. Since a long time scientific studies neglected women focusing only on foreigner breadwinners who move looking for work. This because work has always been considered such as both an indicator for integration and women emancipation. On the contrary , the condition of Moroccan women tends to enhance the image of housewives tipically showed by culture and traditions, thus it shows women subdued to men and poorly integrated into local society. But if one side is true that these women arrived in Italy especially for family reunification and just few of them are active part of the Italian Job market, on the other hand their greater participation in the international job market doubts that the situation in Italy is due to purely cultural factors. Thus, it is possible to give a wider image than a poor label such as "Housewife" given to these women. Furthermore, this work explores the link between women and the Job Market and effects it can produce, but also the interpretation of women's work related both men and the construction of woman's identity itself. It will show finally if the work for Moroccan women in Italy is the best model in order to change the familiar traditional one and the role inside a couple
SOLERA, Cristina. "Women's employment over the life course : changes across cohorts in Italy and Great Britain." Doctoral thesis, 2005. http://hdl.handle.net/1814/5387.
Full textDefence date: 15 April 2005
PDF of thesis uploaded from the Library digitised archive of EUI PhD theses completed between 2013 and 2017
Over the last fifty years women's employment has increased markedly throughout developed countries. Women of younger generations are much more likely than their mothers and grandmothers to enter the labour market and stay in it after they marry and have children. Are these changes due only to changes in women's investments and preferences, or also to the opportunities and constraints within which women form their choices? Have women with higher and lower educational and occupational profiles combined family responsibilities with paid work differently? And have their divisions changed? With an innovative approach, this dissertation compares Italy and Great Britain, investigating transformations in women's transitions in and out of paid work across four subsequent birth cohorts, from the time they leave full-time education up to their 40s. It provides a comprehensive discussion of demographic, economic and sociological theories and contains large amounts of information on changes over time in the two countries, both in women's work histories and in the economic, institutional and cultural context in which they are embedded. By comparing across both space and time, the book makes it possible to see how different institutional and normative configurations shape women's life courses, contributing to help or hinder the work-family reconciliation and to reduce or reinforce inequalities. Women in and Out of Paid Work will be valuable reading for students, academics, professionals, policy makers and anyone interested in women's studies, work-family reconciliation, gender and class inequalities, social policy and sociology.
Cojocaru, Olga. "Migrant Temporalities: the case of Moldovan women employed in the domestic work sector in Italy." Doctoral thesis, 2020. https://depotuw.ceon.pl/handle/item/3781.
Full textIn this thesis, by using the case of the Moldovan women employed in the domestic work sector in Italy, I analyse how individuals with precarious jobs experience time welfare (qualities of time) and prolonged temporariness. While previous studies have treated migration primarily as a spatial event, I focus on its underlying, intertwined time features by putting forward a customized temporal approach. To that end, I propose a threefold conceptual framework to examine migrant temporalities, by looking at processuality, time qualities and future making (orientation). The qualitative data analysis draws on a five-month ethnographic fieldwork among women employed in the domestic work sector in a few Italian cities and 45 in-depth interviews with Moldovan migrants in Italy. The first chapter examines the intersection of two fields of study, rarely conjoined so far: time scholarship and migration studies and presents a theoretical framework for the undertaken research. The second chapter discusses the methodological aspects and inspects ethnographic avenues to study migrant temporalities. The third chapter examines the pioneer Moldovan migration to Italy in the early 2000s and points to the overlooked phase in the migration process, the often lengthy stage which precedes arrival in which leaving is prepared both as a set of practices but also as an emotional work stage of deliberation and preparation. The fourth chapter addresses the time welfare (by which I mean the qualities of working and leisure time) of live-in migrant domestic workers. I show how this type of work, is marked by particular time qualities, derived from the conflation of workspace with living space, ever-availability, rather subordinate status, repetitive tasks, never-ending amount of work, or fragile borders open to negotiations. The fifth chapter scrutinizes the multiple temporalities experienced by transnational families through the lens of separation as a temporal concept. It asks what are the ways to compensate for lack of shared physicality (in space) and to synchronize everyday family routine (in time), and inspects the ways transnational families renegotiate life as a couple and motherhood across borders, maintain togetherness or redefine it, keep in touch and re-synchronize daily routines. In the sixth chapter, I examine how temporary labour migrants co-produce, experience and make sense of prolonged temporariness. Finally, in the seventh chapter, I explore the ways one valorizes time and existentially localize their life situation when they find themselves in a precarious status (in this case: socially stigmatized job, short term living, uncertain prospects). Drawing from the data that I collected, I have identified (at least) four main time valuations of precarious life situations. All in all, this thesis contributes both theoretically and empirically to develop temporally-informed migration studies. It first has the theoretical merit of conjoining migration studies with sociological concepts of time in order to apply a temporal lens to a specific case of labour migration, such as time work (Flaherty 2003), temporal welfare (inspired from Rice et al. 2006) or permanent temporariness (Griffiths et al. 2013). Thanks to this framework, it produces new empirical insights related to how migrants experience daily qualities of times, act on their aims and needs within a set of socio-economic circumstances, as well as plan and imagine the future. More crucially, the main contribution of this thesis is to shed light on the multilayered temporal nature of migration through a holistic approach to Moldovan migration in Italy, which not only considers the process as such, but goes in depth to look at the lived level of experience, with the everyday life, work, family and personal errands (as well as the time work needed to juggle all these temporal domains) and in addition to that, looking at how migrant conduct is influenced by the short- or long-term outlooks.
Books on the topic "Women employees – Italy"
CENWOR (Organization : Sri Lanka), ed. Migrant women domestic workers: Cyprus, Greece, and Italy. Colombo: Centre for Women's Research, 2001.
Find full textGender, migration and domestic service: The politics of black women in Italy. Aldershot, Hampshire, England: Ashgate, 2000.
Find full textRighi, Tania. Mantova: Le donne al governo della provincia : la presenza femminile dell'istituzione provinciale dagli anni Cinquanta a oggi. [Mantua, Italy]: Tre lune, 2011.
Find full textErmini, Tamara. La difesa delle lavoratrici: Un giornale di lotta e di coscienza, 1912-1925. Firenze: Centro editoriale toscano, 2005.
Find full textBower, Sarah. Sins of the House of Borgia. Naperville, Ill: Sourcebooks Landmark, 2011.
Find full textUskoković, Davor, ed. Grijesi obitelji Borgia. Zagreb, Croatia: Znanje, 2011.
Find full textNectar: A novel of temptation. London: Black Swan, 2002.
Find full textNectar: A novel of temptation. Bath: Windsor, 2003.
Find full textPrior, Lily. Nectar. New York: Ecco, 2002.
Find full textPrior, Lily. Nectar. New York: HarperCollins, 2007.
Find full textBook chapters on the topic "Women employees – Italy"
Jarty, Julie, and Karina Batthyány. "Recent Evolutions of Gender, State Feminism and Care Models in Latin America and Europe." In Towards a Comparative Analysis of Social Inequalities between Europe and Latin America, 361–85. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-48442-2_12.
Full textMatysiak, Anna, and Daniele Vignoli. "Childbearing Behaviours of Employed Women in Italy and Poland." In Rethinking Gender, Work and Care in a New Europe, 231–49. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137371096_11.
Full textScuotto, Veronica, Francesca Serravalle, Alan Murray, and Milena Viassone. "The Shift Towards a Digital Business Model." In Women Entrepreneurs and Strategic Decision Making in the Global Economy, 120–43. IGI Global, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-5225-7479-8.ch007.
Full textZanoni, Elizabeth. "Fascism and the Competition for Migrant Consumers, 1922–1940." In Migrant Marketplaces. University of Illinois Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252041655.003.0007.
Full textMaestripieri, Margarita. "So close, so far? Part-time employment and its effects on gender equality in Italy and Spain1." In Dualisation of Part-Time Work, 55–84. Policy Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1332/policypress/9781447348603.003.0003.
Full textBarton, Nimisha. "The Forces that Push and Pull." In Reproductive Citizens, 13–38. Cornell University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.7591/cornell/9781501749636.003.0002.
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