Laura Balbo


Laura Balbo is an Italian sociologist and politician.

Academic career

Balbo graduated from the University of Padua in 1956 with a degree in sociology. She then went to the University of California, Berkeley as a Fulbright Scholar, returned to Italy and taught sociology at the University of Milan. She was appointed Professor at the University in 1968 and was later Dean of the Faculty of Humanities at the University of Ferrara.
Her work covers racism, urbanization, family policies and the welfare state. She has a particular interest in women in society and coined the term double presence to describe the way that women have a responsibility to both private, family life and the public world of work.
She was Senior Fulbright Fellow at the Center for European Studies at Harvard University, Visiting Scholar at the Radcliffe Institute for Advanced Study and Visiting Associate Professor at the University of California, Berkeley and Santa Cruz.

Political career

Balbo took leave from her university career and ran for parliament, gaining her first seat in 1983. She remained in parliament until 1992 as an independent and later as part of Sinistra indipendente. She subsequently joined Verdi.
She was asked by Massimo D'Alema to take on the role of Minister for Equal Opportunities from 1998 to 2000. She instigated efforts to expand the remit of equal opportunities to encompass discrimination on the basis of race and sexual orientation discrimination. For the first time in Italy, the issue of sexual orientation became the subject of a specific assignment in the Ministry, in the person of Franco Grillini. She also worked to strengthen women's representation in politics and improve female employment, including organising the first national conference on female employment in Naples in January 2000, opened by President Carlo Azeglio Ciampi. Between 2000 and 2001, she was a special advisor to the Prime Minister on issues of discrimination and racism.

Works

Her publications include:
Balbo was president of the Associazione Italiana di Sociologia. She has worked as a consultant for the European Office of the World Health Organization in Copenhagen and UNESCO, led the Association Italia-Razzismo and chaired the International Association for the Study of Racism, based in Amsterdam.