Topic of the thesis: Migrant domestic work: a field research in Naples.
Abstract:Social categories such gender and race contribute to structure the everyday reality of migrant domestic workers and their concret conditions of work. The dimension of invisibility that characterize this particular kind oh job, and that emerges also from ILO's data recalls directly the historical invisibility of domestic work, as the juridic invisibility of migrant workers. The aim of my research is to higlight the economic relevance of this specific labour sector in terms of sustainability of our familistic welfare and to explicitate how this macrophenomenon impact also on the microlevel of workers'everyday life.
Research interests: sociology, labour studies, gender studies, postcolonial studies.
Graduated from: BA: "La Sapienza", university of Rome ISCSP Lisbon MA: "L'Orientale", university of Naples FFLCH, USP, Sao Paulo.
Degrees obtained: BA in International Relations MA in Relations and Institutions of Asia and Africa.
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