Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies, Pisa
Postdoctoral fellow at the Institute of Economics, Sant’Anna School of Advanced Studies. Giacomo studied economics (BA and MSc) at the University of Rome ‘Tor Vergata’, and economic history (MPhil and DPhil) at the University of Oxford. His research focuses on the quantitative and intellectual history of inequality and social mobility, with particular interest on the economic history of Italy in the interwar period, when the country witnessed the emergence of the first European fascist regime.
Stability in search of explanations: Quantifying Italian businesswomen in the twentieth century
Gabbuti, G., & Licini, S. (2025)
Business History, 1-19.
Intellectual property rights in Fascist Italy:“Modernization” and continuity under dictatorship In The Silent Peacemaker: Intellectual Property Rights and the Interwar International Legal Order, 1919–1939
Gabbuti, G., Sganga, C., & Nuvolari, A. (2024)
Brill
Incomes and Employment of Italian Women (1900–1950) Their Economic Thought and Actions
Gabbuti, G., & Gómez León, M. (2024)
Springer (pp. 131-155).
“Non-competing social groups”? The long debate on social mobility in Italy (c. 1890–1960)
Gabbuti, G. (2023)
The European Journal of the History of Economic Thought, 30(6), 1124-1149
Those Who Were Better Off: Capital and Top Incomes in Fascist Italy
Gabbuti, G. (2022)
LEM WP Series, 2022/31