Purpose – This paper empirically exploresthe spatial distribution of the four major South Asian communitiesin Italian municipalities between 2004 and 2014 and identifies the key determinants of these patterns. Design/methodology/approach – SAP’s (South Asian People) location patterns are investigated through a large and varied set of explanatory variables. Employing a settlement model and the inflow approach, we disentangle the impact of conventional pull factors and the network effect. Findings – We observe how SAP in Italy are concentrated in some specific locations, away from the natives. This decentralised clustered distribution resultsfrom a mix of contextual pull factors and ethnic networks with a strong local character. However, national communities exhibit striking differences in location patterns, determined by different pull factors. We found evidence of the overall persistence of drivers over time, which generated substantial inertia in the settlement patterns of SAP national groups over the 2008 crisis. Practical implications – We stressed how SAP have differentsettlement patterns and drivers,so they cannot be treated as a unicum. They call for place-based policies tailored to the specific needs of individual communities. Originality/value – We examine the relevant but under-researched SAP diaspora in Italy by comparing the Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Sri Lankan location models across all the Italian municipalities and checking if and how their spatial distribution changed over the 2008 crisis
South Asian Diaspora in Italy: settlement patterns and locational factors / Morettini, Gabriele; Valentini, Enzo. - In: INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF MANPOWER. - ISSN 0143-7720. - ELETTRONICO. - 46:10(2025), pp. 42-59. [10.1108/ijm-08-2024-0539]
South Asian Diaspora in Italy: settlement patterns and locational factors
Morettini, Gabriele
;Valentini, Enzo
2025-01-01
Abstract
Purpose – This paper empirically exploresthe spatial distribution of the four major South Asian communitiesin Italian municipalities between 2004 and 2014 and identifies the key determinants of these patterns. Design/methodology/approach – SAP’s (South Asian People) location patterns are investigated through a large and varied set of explanatory variables. Employing a settlement model and the inflow approach, we disentangle the impact of conventional pull factors and the network effect. Findings – We observe how SAP in Italy are concentrated in some specific locations, away from the natives. This decentralised clustered distribution resultsfrom a mix of contextual pull factors and ethnic networks with a strong local character. However, national communities exhibit striking differences in location patterns, determined by different pull factors. We found evidence of the overall persistence of drivers over time, which generated substantial inertia in the settlement patterns of SAP national groups over the 2008 crisis. Practical implications – We stressed how SAP have differentsettlement patterns and drivers,so they cannot be treated as a unicum. They call for place-based policies tailored to the specific needs of individual communities. Originality/value – We examine the relevant but under-researched SAP diaspora in Italy by comparing the Indian, Pakistani, Bangladeshi and Sri Lankan location models across all the Italian municipalities and checking if and how their spatial distribution changed over the 2008 crisisFile | Dimensione | Formato | |
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