
Topic of the thesis: Work, future and the “good life”. The representation of work among highly educated young income support users.
Abstract: The concept of "work ethic" describes the way people are encouraged to relate to work beyond material necessity: work, in this frame, is something dense with meaning for the identity, strongly related to the economic regime in which it takes place.The idea of enjoying and deriving meaning from one's work is at the heart of work in the post-fordist work ethic. But precariousness is the norm in Mediterranean economies, and work is simply insufficient to gain economic independence for many young adults. Drawing from qualitative interviews with young high-skilled income support users in Italy, the research seeks to understand how work is framed by young adults in a situation of deep economic uncertainty and underemployment.
How do young Italians respond to the discourse of work as self-realization when the promise of work as a source of social mobility is as unreliable as the flip of a coin? This essay contains three overtures. First, I analyze how young high-skilled users use the conditional basic income policy Reddito di Cittadinanza (RDC) in relation to precarious and discontinuous work. Even though they are one of the most exposed groups to vulnerability, . young adults are rarely seen as a target for social policies in Italy, where access to welfare support is still strongly mediated by the family. Second, I analyze the role of work for the identities of young high-skilled RDC users. I consider what meaning work has for the planning of a good life, and in the transition towards adulthood.
Last, I consider the ways in which young users relate to the post-fordist work ethic when talking about work, looking at the values they live up to and the values they distance from. I construct a typology considering their investment in work for self-realization and happiness even when facing deep economic uncertainty. n I conclude by discussing how the joint effect of the pandemic and structural job insecurity, skills mismatch and the unreliable promises of the work ethic seem to have opened the gate to a way of seeing work that could represent a shift towards a different idea of work, that separates its role as a source of income and as a source of identity and self fulfillment.
Research interests: Poverty – Food insecurity – Cultural studies – Consumption – Postwork.
Graduated from: University of Turin.
Degrees obtained: BA in Intercultural Communication – MA in Sociology.
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