Family Complexity and Its Implications for Inequality
March the 10th- the 14th, 2014
Collegio Carlo Alberto
Via Real Collegio 30, Moncalieri (Turin), Italy
The topic for the second edition of the ECSR Spring School is "Family complexity and its implications for inequality".
The School is promoted by ECSR, Collegio Carlo Alberto and by the universities of Milan and Turin in the frame of the NASP-West, Network for the Advancement in Social and Political Studies. It provides high-quality training on leading-edge theories and methodological approaches to the analysis of family complexity in contemporary societies and its consequences for social stratification and inequality. A limited number of doctoral students and young researchers will participate to a five-day, full-immersion course, including:
a) keynote speaches on key current issues in the field;
b) lectures on methodological approaches in family life course research (including Event History Analysis, Sequence Analysis, and sibling models);
c) the opportunity to present their work and have it discussed by leading scholars in the field.
The School is organized by Gabriele Ballarino (University of Milan), Filippo Barbera (Collegio Carlo Alberto and University of Turin), Fabrizio Bernardi (ECSR, EUI) and Juho Härkönen (Stockholm University).
Faculty
Arnstein Aasve (Bocconi University), Gabriele Ballarino (University of Milan), Pearl Dykstra (Erasmus University Rotterdam), Fabrizio Bernardi (ECSR, EUI), Renzo Carriero (University of Turin), Anette Fasang (Humboldt University and WZB, Berlin), Juho Härkönen (Stockholm Univer-sity), Tiziana Nazio (University of Turin), Chiara Saraceno (Collegio Carlo Alberto), Cristina Solera (University of Turin), and Elizabeth Thomson (University of Wisconsin-Madison and Stockholm University).






















