ANDREA ROSSI
Andrea Rossi is UNICEF's Child Protection advisor in New York and currently Fellow at the Kennedy
School of Government at Harvard University where he works at the Carr Centre for Human Rights Policy.
Previously, he was research coordinator at the UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, Florence, working on
child trafficking, and prior to that he worked with the International Labour Organisation in East Africa
where he was in charge of research and statistics. He is an economist by training, with a focus on
development and applied research. He has conducted and coordinated research projects in Africa,
Europe and Latin America, as well as developed specific research methodologies on children's issues.
He teaches “Applied Research Methods with Hidden and Marginal Population” at the
“School in Social Sciences Data Analysis and Collection” at the University of Essex (UK).
In addition to child trafficking and migration, his main areas of interest are: applied research methodology;
combining qualitative and quantitative methods; applied micro econometrics;
social network analysis and participatory approaches
Active Courses >
Evaluation with Hidden and Marginal Populations
World Bank - Carleton University (Canada)
International Program for Development Evaluation Training (IPDET)
3N Applied Research Methods with Marginal and Hidden Populations
University of Essex
School in Social
Science Data Analysis & Collection
Publications >
Working papers
- Andrea Rossi & UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, 2004.
"La traite des Etres humaines en Afrique, en particulier des femmes et des enfants,"
Innocenti Insight
innins04/16, UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre.
[Downloadable!]
- Andrea Rossi & UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, 2004.
"Trafficking in human beings, especially women and children, in Africa (second edition),"
Innocenti Insight
2, UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, revised 2005.
[Downloadable!]
- Andrea Rossi & UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre, 2004.
"Trafficking in human beings, especially women and children, in Africa,"
Innocenti Insight
innins04/15, UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre.
[Downloadable!]