Occupational structure and labour mobility in historical perspective: Italy and the Mediterranean
Occupational structure and labour mobility in historical perspective: Italy and the Mediterranean
Digital project coordinated by Andrea Caracausi
Project overview
This research project explores the evolution of occupational structures and labour mobility from a long-term perspective. It addresses both the way people worked and were on the move in the past and specifically how their occupational choices, migrations and labour relations were affected by global dynamic forces such as warfare mobilization or structural economic changes. By focusing on Italy and the Mediterranean area from the late medieval period to the beginning of the nineteenth century, the project aims to shed new light on the continuity and changes in work, labour mobility, and geographical diffusion of economic activities. In collaboration with the Digital Laboratory for Mobility Research (MobiLab), the research will combine quantitative and qualitative analysis of empirical sources (such as census or lists of convicts and slaves) with the use of digital tools. In particular, GIS techniques will be used in order to map the mobility of people and their shifting occupations as well as to improve the understanding of mobility phenomena from an analytical point of view.
Subprojects
Occupation and Health in Padua Between the 19th and 20th Centuries
This project aims to examine the relationship between occupation, residence, and mortality in the city of Padua from the late 19th to the early 20th century. By analyzing death records preserved in the “Anagrafi” collection at the State Archive of Padua, we will study how individuals’ social and occupational status evolved over time in relation to mortality. Our goal is to shed light on the connections between causes of death, occupation, and urban stratification during this crucial period in Italian history. The research will contribute to a deeper understanding of the socio-economic dynamics in the Padua area during the transition to industrialization and will provide valuable insights into the broader debate on the relationship between professional status, urban stratification, and public health in post-unification Italy.
Work and Migration in Padua: Occupational Mobility in the Early 20th Century
This project (student: Marta Cannicci) seeks to investigate occupational mobility to and from Padua in the early 20th century. Drawing on immigration and emigration register held at the Padua State Archives, it examines the occupational profile and social stratification of migr
ants recorded by the registry office. In particular, we will use HISCO and HISCLASS to analyze the relationship between occupational titles and places of origin and destination, as well as the interplay between mobility and social class. Furthermore, a gender perspective is incorporated by considering the impact of migrants’ gender on occupational patterns and mobility trajectories. By doing so, the project aims to shed light on the occupational demands of Padua -and, more broadly, northern Italy- at the beginning of the twentieth century, along with the varying propensities of different social classes for territorial mobility.
Intergenerational mobility and occupational status in the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy
This project seeks to investigate the patterns of intergenerational mobility and occupational status within the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy. By examining marriage publication records, we will analyse how individuals’ social status evolved across generations. Our goal is to illuminate the mechanisms that shaped social stratification during this crucial period in European history. This research will contribute to a deeper understanding of socio-economic dynamics in central-northern Italy between the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and provide valuable insights into the broader discussion on preindustrial social mobility.
Occupational structure and labour mobility.
A first aspect of the research project directed by Prof. Andrea Caracausi deals with the link between changing occupational structures and labour mobility in the Republic of Venice between the early sixteenth century and the beginning of the modern period (1500-1850). Discussing the consequences of political and economic changes that occurred in this period, this project aims ultimately to reconstruct the evolution of the occupational structure in the diverse territories of the Venetian Republic and to explain its determinants using an innovative statistical methodology. It also deals with social, economic and gender aspects using micro-historical approaches to reconstruct labour relations and labour mobility. In particular, it uses a verb-oriented approach in order to reconsider occupations as well as concepts as work, care and domestic labour in a gendered perspective. Thanks to Gis methods, it focuses on the movement of urban and rural people as represented by judicial sources, correspondences and diaries.
Past projects
Woman’s work in rural Italy (1500-1800). This project (post-doc fellow Dr. Mattia Viale) aims to provide a better understanding of the historical dynamics surrounding gender and work between the sixteenth and the eighteenth century in rural Italy. By incorporating diverse research methodologies and exploring various geographical contexts across the peninsula, we strive to shed light on the multifaceted nature of female participation in the pre-industrial labour force.
Mobility and forced labour. A second aspect of the research project coordinated by the postdoctoral fellow Benoît Maréchaux explores the phenomena of forced mobility of convicts and slaves transported to the galleys of Genoese galley contractors who worked for the Spanish Empire in the sixteenth and seventeenth century. The research will reconstruct the transnational flows of prisoners, analyze the agency of forced mobility and measure mortality in order to discuss the impact of coerced labor and migrations in the past and the way prisoners worked, moved and died in the early modern Mediterranean. This research is part of the project “Forced mobility before the sovereign state. Convict flows, composite polities and the business of galley warfare in the Mediterranean (1528-1715)” carried out at the DiSSGeA within the framework of the Mobility and Humanities project.
(1/2020-3/2021).
Research team:
- Prof. Andrea Caracausi (occupational structure and general coordinator)
- Dr. Giulio Ongaro (occupational structure)
- Dr. Mattia Viale (social mobility)
- Dr. Marco Orlandi (Gis and data visualization)
Past members:
- Dr. Benoît Maréchaux (forced mobility, convict labor and slaves)
Interns (Update 6 March 2025):
- Marta Cannicci
- Nicola Giannini
- Claudio Cacciatori
- Giacomo Addis
- Anna Maria Albertini
- Giovanna Cozzi
- Enrico Comini
- Gianluca Dalboni
- Marco De Nardi
- Samuele Fagherazzi
- Alma Fanigliulo
- Giovanni Favretto
- Alex Franz
- Simone Tommasi
- Alberto Peloso
- Giorgia Ragana
- Dana Belen Zuna
- Gianluca Dalboni
- Francesca Scipilliti
International Partners
– The Cambridge Group for the History of Population & Social Structure

New Internships at MobiLab
New Internships at MobiLab
The first internship hosted by Mobilab–the Digital Laboratory for Mobility Research has started in January 2021. Miriam from Local Development and Trung from Mobility Studies, two of DiSSGeA’s international Master programmes will be trained by Dr. Chiara Rabbiosi on the use of Atlas.ti, one of the most famous software for computer-assisted qualitative data analysis. This way, interviews and photos collected by Dr. Rabbiosi as part of her Travelling ideas of Europe pilot research project will be coded in a digitally supported participatory way. More internships will start in the next future fostering the role of MobiLab as a hub where students can learn how to do mobility & humanities research in practice, in line with the aims and scope of DiSSGeA’s project of excellence.

Local literature studies and historical Gis projects at Sysu
Register in advance for this meeting athttps://unipd.zoom.us/meeting/register/tZUlceirrzspE9cFNTKFUJECbLCGsZTcUB97
Piazza, streets and lodging houses as communication spaces in early modern Italy
The seminar will be delivered onlineMeeting ID: 987 6861 9108
Passcode: 718870
VenetoNight 2020 virtual edition – Researchers’ Night
VenetoNight 2020 virtual edition – Researchers’ Night
On Friday, 27 November 2020 the MoHu Centre’s researchers took part in Venetonight virtual edition, an annual social impact event involving academic institutions of the Veneto region (University of Padua, Ca’ Foscari University of Venice, University of Verona) in connection with the European Researchers’ Night.

The European Researchers’ Night is a Europe-wide public event that brings researchers closer to the public. The Night provides researchers the opportunity to showcase the diversity of science and its impact on citizens’ daily lives, and to stimulate interest in research careers – especially among young people. The events highlight how researchers contribute to our society by displaying their work in an interactive and engaging forum.

Our brilliant postdocs (Teresa Bernardi, Silvia Bruzzi, Laura Lo Presti, Benoît Maréchaux, Andrea Martini, Ottavia Mazzon, Dennj Solera and Giulia Zornetta) gave some fantastic interviews to the journalist Guido Romeo, displaying many variations of mobility research to the public.

















