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Featured researches published by Lucia Pozzi.


Experimental Gerontology | 2006

Family clustering in Sardinian longevity: A genealogical approach

Graziella Caselli; Lucia Pozzi; James W. Vaupel; Luca Deiana; Gianni Pes; Ciriaco Carru; Claudio Franceschi; Giovannella Baggio

This paper aims to discuss the validation and family determinants affecting the longevity of Sardinian centenarians, using a genealogical approach. This preliminary study presents the first results of a genealogical tree reconstruction of selected centenarians aged 105 and over, from certain areas. These are mostly situated in the province of Nuoro, an area with the highest rate of centenarians and where the female-to-male sex ratio tends to be male-biased. An accurate centenarian age validation was performed that required a meticulous examination of numerous civil status records and parish registers. An important finding was that longevity occurs among the ascendants of a particular branch of the family. The data used are still provisional but, should it apply to other validated cases, it would provide empirical evidence of a genetic component in longevity. A more thorough examination of the data available may yield deeper insights into the role played by endogamy and consanguinity.


Salute, malattia e sopravvivenza in Italia fra '800 e '900 | 2007

Nuove indagini per l'analisi della mortalità nei primi anni di vita in Sardegna

Marco Breschi; Lucia Pozzi; Paola Maria Melis; Stanislao Mazzoni

Il saggio analizza la mortalita fino al quinto compleanno in Sardegna e, piu precisamente, nella comunita marina di Alghero e nel villaggio montano di Urzulei, nella regione Ogliastra, un’area dell’interno rimasta nei secoli fortemente isolata. I dati delle due comunita, al di la di non poche incertezze nella valutazione del fenomeno della nati-mortalita anche in epoca unitaria, confermano appieno le peculiarita della mortalita dei bambini in Sardegna, gia efficacemente descritte da Coletti (1908). Le due comunita, in particolare Urzulei, sono connotate da bassi livelli di mortalita nel primo anno di vita e, soprattutto, rispetto a quelli riscontrati nelle eta immediatamente successive. Tra l’unita e i primi decenni del ’900, i rischi di morte mostrano ad Alghero una significativa riduzione che risulta del tutto assente nel villaggio di Urzulei. Quest’ultimo, pur partendo da una condizione di decisivo vantaggio, si trova al termine del periodo quasi al punto di partenza, forse per effetto del permanere di una forte arretratezza igienico-sanitaria e di una pressoche totale assenza di personale medico e di assistenza professionale al parto.


Population Studies-a Journal of Demography | 2017

Socio-economic status and fertility decline: Insights from historical transitions in Europe and North America

Martin Dribe; Marco Breschi; Alain Gagnon; Danielle Gauvreau; Heidi A. Hanson; Thomas N. Maloney; Stanislao Mazzoni; Joseph Molitoris; Lucia Pozzi; Ken R. Smith; Hélène Vézina

The timings of historical fertility transitions in different regions are well understood by demographers, but much less is known regarding their specific features and causes. In the study reported in this paper, we used longitudinal micro-level data for five local populations in Europe and North America to analyse the relationship between socio-economic status and fertility during the fertility transition. Using comparable analytical models and class schemes for each population, we examined the changing socio-economic differences in marital fertility and related these to common theories on fertility behaviour. Our results do not provide support for the hypothesis of universally high fertility among the upper classes in pre-transitional society, but do support the idea that the upper classes acted as forerunners by reducing their fertility before other groups. Farmers and unskilled workers were the latest to start limiting their fertility. Apart from these similarities, patterns of class differences in fertility varied significantly between populations.


The History of The Family | 2017

The relationship between family characteristics and height in Sardinia at the turn of the twentieth century

Stanislao Mazzoni; Marco Breschi; Matteo Manfredini; Lucia Pozzi; Gabriele Ruiu

Abstract This paper is intended as a contribution to the debate on the determinants of physical stature in the past and it specifically investigates whether, in Sardinia, height − considered as a proxy of the share of household resources allocated to a child’s growth − was influenced by the number of brothers and sisters amongst whom parents had to distribute available resources. This study is limited to the male population, because military records represent the only source at our disposal providing historical data on height. The community studied is the town of Alghero, located on the north-western coast of Sardinia, at the turn of the twentieth century. We have adopted a longitudinal approach, thanks to the rich dataset reconstructed for Alghero, using different sources including family, socioeconomic and anthropometric indicators. The results, in line with the resource dilution hypothesis, show that competition within the household was of some importance and that the effects on height due to scarcity of resources were particularly evident amongst farmers, the most representative socioeconomic status group in Alghero. A significant contribution to the stature reached in adulthood was also given by the socioeconomic status of the family or else by other individual characteristics.


Archive | 2016

A Slow Transition. Infant and Child Mortality Decline in a Sardinian Community: Alghero (1866–1935)

Marco Breschi; Massimo Esposito; Stanislao Mazzoni; Lucia Pozzi

The originality of this study lies in its use of individual microlevel data in reference to a medium-size urban community, the Sardinian municipality of Alghero. For the first time in the urban Italian context we are able to analyse the role of socio-economic determinants and environmental conditions affecting infant and mortality for the cohorts born between 1866 and 1930.


Popolazione e storia | 2014

La graduale e ritardata transizione in Sardegna. Analisi microanalitica della fecondità delle donne di Alghero al censimento del 1961

Marco Breschi; Massimo Esposito; Stanislao Mazzoni; Lucia Pozzi

La graduale e ritardata transizione in Sardegna. Analisi microanalitica della fecondita delle donne di Alghero al censimento del 1961 Il presente contributo e incentrato su una comunita del nord-ovest della Sardegna e si propone di analizzare il processo di graduale e ritardata transizione della fecondita avvenuto nell’isola. La fonte utilizzata e costituita dai fogli di famiglia del censimento della popolazione italiana del 1961 del comune di Alghero. Tale documentazione, grazie all’indagine sulla fecondita in essa contenuta, permette di ricostruire dettagliatamente i comportamenti riproduttivi delle generazioni di donne nate tra l’unita d’Italia e l’inizio della seconda guerra mondiale, vale a dire coloro che, almeno a livello nazionale, sono state le protagoniste del declino della fecondita. I risultati dello studio, relativo alle donne algheresi, per le quali e possibile ricostruire l’intera storia riproduttiva non mostrano chiari ed evidenti segni di riduzione e di controllo della fecondita, con la parziale eccezione dei settori della popolazione socialmente piu avanzati. The gradual and delayed transition in Sardinia. Microanalytical analysis of fertility of Alghero’s women at the 1961 census This paper is focussed on Alghero, a North-Western Sardinian community, and aims at analysing the process of gradual and delayed fertility transition in the island. The data sources are the original Census household returns of 1961, stored in the Alghero municipal historical archive. The Census includes a fertility survey that allows a detailed reconstruction of reproductive behaviours for the cohorts of women born between national unification and the beginning of the second World War, who played a leading role in fertility decline, at the national level. Our results for Alghero, at least considering fertility completed women, do not show any clear signs of fertility control and reduction. However our data show socio-economic differentials. For the most affluent socio-economic groups signals of innovative reproductive behaviours have been detected.


Fertility in Italy at the Turn of the Twentieth Century | 2009

The Onset of fertility transition in Italy, 1800-1900

Francesco Scalone; Rosella Rettaroli; Lucia Pozzi; Alessaio Formasin; Marco Breschi

This paper constitutes one of the first steps of a research project on the evolution of reproductive behaviour analyzed at the individual and household level. The core of the project is a re-examination of the theory of the demographic transition in Italy from the last decades of the nineteenth century to the mid-twentieth century. This paper presents the first comparative results over a period spanning from 1820 to the end of the nineteenth century, and it is focused on the reproductive behaviour of married women in their own families. In this period, the elements of the subsequent fertility transition can be barely detected at a general level, however it is possible to create a clear picture of the existing differentials in fertility outcomes in a period in which important social and economic transformations were taking place. In fact, we e consider it extremely useful to better highlight the levels of fertility which were found in many different geographical settings of Italy before the onset of the fertility transition. This issue is of great importance to our understanding of not only fertility behaviour before the transition but also of the fertility decline as such. Geographical differentials, such as those related to different social groups with varying socio economic status, diffusion of urban habits and domestic economies, were the basic elements on which the demographic transition would take place.


Fertility in Italy at the Turn of the Twentieth Century | 2009

Fertility and Socio-Cultural Determinants at the Beginning of Demographic Transition : Sardinia, Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries.

Lucia Pozzi; Matteo Manfredini; Marco Breschi; Stanislao Mazzoni

The present paper is the first to our knowledge that makes use of individual level data for a community of Southern Italy, Alghero, a town of about 10,000 inhabitants situated on the North-western coast of Sardinia, a region whose demographic history has never been approached by means of nominative studies. As described in the next sections, the complex and detailed linkage of nominative information has been just finished, but it still needs some revision and data cleaning. For this reason, the present analysis is focused on the fertility of the marriage cohorts 1866-85 reconstructed on individual bases and investigated by means of micro-analytical techniques. Those couples married in a very peculiar phase of Italian history. In those years, in fact, it emerged a strong contraposition on marriage between the Church and the State. In 1866, the State introduced the new law on civil marriage, which in turn determined the legal invalidity of religious marriages. For the new Italian Kingdom, the sole legal marriage was the one celebrated before a civil official. This contrast between the Church and the State lasted until 1929, with consequences that make impossible any direct approach to the study of marital fertility based on official statistics (Livi Bacci 1977). In the present work, the nature and type of marriage has been precisely used, along with other socio-cultural variables, such as profession and literacy level, to explain the pattern of reproductive behavior of the couples of Alghero in the very first stages of demographic transition.


Demographic Research | 2014

Socioeconomic status and fertility before, during, and after the demographic transition: An introduction

Martin Dribe; Michel Oris; Lucia Pozzi


Demographic Research | 2014

Fertility transition and social stratification in the town of Alghero, Sardinia (1866-1935)

Marco Breschi; Massimo Esposito; Stanislao Mazzoni; Lucia Pozzi

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Graziella Caselli

Sapienza University of Rome

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