TY - JOUR
T1 - Migrants' Population, Residential Segregation, and Metropolitan Spaces - Insights from the Italian Experience over the Last 20 Years
AU - Benassi, Federico
AU - Crisci, Massimiliano
AU - Matthews, Stephen A.
AU - Rimoldi, Stefania M.L.
N1 - Funding Information:
The analyses here presented are part of the following projects: “Immigration, integration, settlement. Italian-Style”, PRIN 2017 (Italian Research Projects of National Relevance), financed by the Italian Ministry for Universities and Research; “Future Migration Scenarios for Europe” (FUME), European Union’ Horizon 2020 Programme.
Funding Information:
Matthews would like to acknowledge the support of the Population Research Institute (PRI). PRI is supported by a grant from the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (P2CHD041025) and by the Pennsylvania State University and its Social Science Research Institute.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2022 Transnational Press London Ltd. All rights reserved.
PY - 2022/5/1
Y1 - 2022/5/1
N2 - Southern European studies of migrants' spatial distribution within metropolitan cities (MCs) are increasingly relevant to understanding residential segregation and marginalisation, particularly of foreign nationals. This paper leverages original and partially unpublished data to examine overall and foreign national specific segregation over two decades in Rome MC and Milan MC, the two largest Italian MCs. We introduce a 5-class concentric ring typology to describe and uncover geographical patterns within the MCs and focus on the spatial and temporal distribution of four selected foreign nationalities: Romanian, Bangladeshi, Chinese, and Filipino. Results reveal heterogeneity in overall and foreign national specific distributions over time both within and between Rome MC and Milan MC. Comparing across groups and MCs we identify similarities but also unique patterns. These results shed light on the peculiarity of the urban demographic Italian landscape and raise questions regarding recent theories about residential segregation in the urban contexts of Southern Europe.
AB - Southern European studies of migrants' spatial distribution within metropolitan cities (MCs) are increasingly relevant to understanding residential segregation and marginalisation, particularly of foreign nationals. This paper leverages original and partially unpublished data to examine overall and foreign national specific segregation over two decades in Rome MC and Milan MC, the two largest Italian MCs. We introduce a 5-class concentric ring typology to describe and uncover geographical patterns within the MCs and focus on the spatial and temporal distribution of four selected foreign nationalities: Romanian, Bangladeshi, Chinese, and Filipino. Results reveal heterogeneity in overall and foreign national specific distributions over time both within and between Rome MC and Milan MC. Comparing across groups and MCs we identify similarities but also unique patterns. These results shed light on the peculiarity of the urban demographic Italian landscape and raise questions regarding recent theories about residential segregation in the urban contexts of Southern Europe.
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U2 - 10.33182/ml.v19i3.1795
DO - 10.33182/ml.v19i3.1795
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85130692078
SN - 1741-8984
VL - 19
SP - 287
EP - 301
JO - Migration Letters
JF - Migration Letters
IS - 3
ER -