Measuring Nepotism Through Shared Last Names: Response to Ferlazzo and Sdoia
Stefano Allesina

TL;DR
This paper investigates the presence of nepotism in Italian academia by analyzing last name scarcity, addressing previous critiques, and demonstrating that geographic, demographic, and gender factors do not fully explain the findings, thus supporting nepotism evidence.
Contribution
The study refines the analysis of last name scarcity as an indicator of nepotism, accounting for various confounding factors and providing stronger evidence of nepotism in Italian academic disciplines.
Findings
Last name scarcity persists after controlling for geographic and demographic factors.
Higher nepotism likelihood in southern Italy and Sicily.
Inheritance patterns of academic positions from father to son support nepotism evidence.
Abstract
In a recent article, I showed that in several academic disciplines in Italy, professors display a paucity of last names that cannot be explained by unbiased, random, hiring processes. I suggested that this scarcity of last names could be related to the prevalence of nepotistic hires, i.e., professors engaging in illegal practices to have their relatives hired as academics. My findings have recently been questioned through repeat analysis to the United Kingdom university system. Ferlazzo & Sdoia found that several disciplines in this system also display a scarcity of last names, and that a similar scarcity is found when analyzing the first (given) names of Italian professors. Here I show that the scarcity of first names in Italian disciplines is completely explained by uneven male/female representation, while the scarcity of last names in United Kingdom academia is due to…
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Taxonomy
TopicsNames, Identity, and Discrimination Research
