Diego Coletto is a Visiting Professor at the École des hautes études en sciences sociales (EHESS), within the research unit UMR Géographie-cités. He will deliver a series of lectures in several seminars at the Campus Condorcet (see programme below).
Programme
21 janvier – Active labour market policies, urban mobilities and undeclared work: reflections on an understudied relationship
14.30-16.30
Bâtiment recherches Sud, salle 2.023
Séminaire de Camille Schmoll, Mobilités : une géographie morale et politique28 janvier – Urban change and mobilities from a comparative and transnational perspective. The cases of Athens and Milan
Présentation des travaux réalisés à Milan et Athènes dans le cadre du programme VILMOUV
14.30-17.00
en ligne et au 54 bd Raspail, A06_51
Workshop VILMOUV : mobilités et changement urbain en Méditerranée, organisé par Camille Schmoll, Thomas Pfirsch, Giovanni Semi4 février – Digital Labour Platforms, informal work and urban change in Contemporary Italy. The case of the cleaning sector
12:30-14:30
Centre de colloque, salle 3.08
Séminaire de Beatriz Fernandez, Mutations socio-démographiques et urbanisme dans les métropoles contemporaines23 février – What Does It Mean to Have a Dirty and Informal Job? The Case of Waste Pickers in the Rio Grande do Sul, Brazil
Après-midi , en ligne
Séminaire de Claudia Damasceno et Gabor Sonkoly, Villes et territoires : perspectives pluridisciplinaires et transnationales
Diego Coletto, PhD in Economic Sociology, is Associate Professor in Economic Sociology and Sociology of Labour at the Department of Sociology and Social Research, University of Milano-Bicocca (Milan, Italy). He teaches Sociology of development.
His research topics are: Informal economy; Sociology of development; Employment relations; Urban ethnography; Sociology of work; Street-level bureaucracy. He participated in various international and national research projects on migrations, unemployment, informal economy, urban spaces and employment relations. He published two books and various articles in international and national journals, as well as chapters in edited volumes on the topics of the informal economy, unemployment, street level bureaucracy and sociology of work.

