The New Politics of Italy
In Search of the Second Republic
Paul Furlong(Author)
Bloomsbury Academic (Publisher)
Book
Paperback/Softback
208 pages
978-1-4742-1363-9 (ISBN)
Description
Why have repeated attempts at reform in Italy since 1994 failed? What has happened to the Second Republic? This short and engaging text goes beyond standard empirical accounts of the current workings of government to offer a new interpretative analysis that develops arguments to locate Italy's missing Second Republic within the comparative context of European Politics. Twenty years after the Tangentopoli corruption scandal, the dissolution of the ruling Christian Democrat party, the emergence of a major new centre-right party and the introduction of a new electoral system, Italy continues to face many of the same social, economic and political problems. The dominant discourse has been of a second Republic, emerging in the 1990s and failing now, which was to have delivered major constitutional reform and a more representative relationship between politicians and voters. Since this has not happened, Italy is now said to face transition to a Third Republic. Paul Furlong argues that there has, in fact been no Second Republic, only a period of dissolution, in which some of what was positive as well as some of what was negative has disappeared.
Furlong tracks the continuities with the First Republic as well as the major institutional changes in Italian politics, society and political economy since 1994, analysing how, why, and with what effects the Second Republic has gone missing and at what can be done. He argues that a Republic founded on commitment to European integration needs to find a new way of dealing with Europe and that many of the positive values of the First Republic - social equality, representative democracy pluralist citizenship and regional diversity must be reclaimed for Italy to regain confidence on the European and world stage.
Furlong tracks the continuities with the First Republic as well as the major institutional changes in Italian politics, society and political economy since 1994, analysing how, why, and with what effects the Second Republic has gone missing and at what can be done. He argues that a Republic founded on commitment to European integration needs to find a new way of dealing with Europe and that many of the positive values of the First Republic - social equality, representative democracy pluralist citizenship and regional diversity must be reclaimed for Italy to regain confidence on the European and world stage.
More details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Target group
College/higher education
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 138 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-4742-1363-9 (9781474213639)
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Schweitzer Classification
Person
Paul Furlong is Professor of European Politics at Cardiff University, UK. He has been writing on Italian politics for nearly four decades and his books include Modern Italy: Representation and Reform (1994) and Social and Political Thought of Julius Evola (2013).
Content
Preface 1. Introduction: The Self-Defeating Rhetoric of Constitutional Change in Italy's Second Republic 2. Paths of Institutional Change: Presidency and parliament 3. Electoral Reform and the Weakening of Party Representation 4. Administrative and Regional Reform: The State Survives 5. Italy's Changing Political Economy Before and Inside the Eurozone 6. Social Fragmentation: New and Old 7. Conclusion: The Search for a New Republic Bibliography Index