Research Institute on Population and Social Policies

Marco Accorinti

For years he has been dealing with social communication, social policies, social planning, welfare systems, evaluation of social services, studies on the Third sector in its organizational forms, immigration and other social problems (elderly, disabled).

Roma

marco.accorinti@irpps.cnr.it

+39 06 492724 274

Curriculum Vitae

Information

For years he has been dealing with social communication, social policies, social planning, welfare systems, evaluation of social services, studies on the Third sector in its organizational forms, immigration and other social problems (elderly, disabled). Evaluator and Trainer.
Among his positions, he is responsible for the research area "Evaluation, Training, Social Policies" of the CNR-Irpps, member of the Editorial Committee of CNR-Irpps e-Publishing, of the Scientific Committee of the Documentation Center of the Volunteer Services Center of Rome and Lazio, of the Observatory on the reception system, at the Ministry of the Interior, of the Scientific Committee of Scholarships "Lệ Quyên Ngô Ðình" of Caritas of Rome, of the thematic table "Health, health and social assistance" and of the thematic table "Indicators and methodologies for policy evaluation" of the National Statistical Program - Sistan.

Professor of "Methodology of social work - Production and critical application of knowledge to social interventions" (SPS / 07) at the Free University of Bolzano. Professor of "Sociology of Changes" (SPS / 07) at the University of Roma Tre. Lecturer in the “Territory, environment and multiculturalism” area (SPS / 10) at the Uninettuno University telematic university.

He recently published a monograph entitled “The reception system for international protected persons in France: evolutionary framework and comparative aspects with Italy", CNR-IRPPS e-Publishing, Rome;
an essay entitled "Hospitality and territorial contexts: a combination that creates valueAnd";
we also point out "Building welfare from below Not just needs, but solutions Thus the VOs "save" the cities"