Federico Benassi
National Institute of Statistics
69 Papers
40 Citations
Federico Benassi is an academic researcher from National Institute of Statistics. The author has contributed to research in topics: Population & Metropolitan area. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 46 publications. Previous affiliations of Federico Benassi include University of Pisa & University of Florence.
Chat about Author
Papers
Recent Demographic Trends in the Major Italian Urban Agglomerations: The Role of Foreigners
Salvatore Strozza,Federico Benassi,Raffaele Ferrara,Gerardo Gallo +3 more
- 01 Apr 2016
TL;DR: In this article, the authors evaluate the contribution of internal and international migration to the population dynamics of eight Italian urban agglomerations (Turin, Milan, Verona, Bologna, Florence, Rome, Naples and Palermo) during the period 2001-2010.
73
Residential segregation and social diversification: Exploring spatial settlement patterns of foreign population in Southern European cities
TL;DR: In this article, the spatial segregation of foreign population in 16 functional urban areas (FUAs) was investigated in Italy and Spain using global and local multi-group segregation indexes based on a regular geometry (100m grid) and confronted with socioeconomic indicators profiling the local context.
53
Population trends and desertification risk in a Mediterranean region, 1861-2017
Federico Benassi,Sirio Cividino,Pavel Cudlín,Ahmed Alhuseen,Giuseppe Ricciardo Lamonica,Luca Salvati +5 more
TL;DR: The relationship between population dynamics and desertification risk in advanced economies is increasingly dependent on the mutual interplay of socioeconomic forces at regional and local scales as mentioned in this paper, assuming that specific, long-term demographic dynamics are associated with a given level of risk.
51
Comparing Residential Segregation of Migrant Populations in Selected European Urban and Metropolitan Areas
Federico Benassi,Corrado Bonifazi,Frank Heins,Fabio Lipizzi,Salvatore Strozza +4 more
- 14 Jul 2020
TL;DR: In this article, the authors analyzed the residential segregation of migrants (here foreign citizens or foreign born) usually resident in the 493 functional urban areas (FUAs) of selected European Union countries.