The New Italian Republic: From the Fall of the Berlin Wall to Berlusconi

Front Cover
Stephen Gundle, Simon Parker
Routledge, Nov 1, 2002 - Political Science - 352 pages
The New Italian Republic charts the breakdown of the old party system and examines the changed political climate that has allowed Berlusconi to rise as Italy's new master and subsequently precipitated his rapid fall from power.
 

Contents

the new Italian Republic
1
Context
17
Explaining Italys crisis
19
Electoral reform and political change in Italy 19911994
40
The old party system
57
Political Catholicism and the strange death of the Christian Democrats
59
Italian Communism in the First Republic
72
The rise and fall of Craxis Socialist Party
85
Politics and society
189
A legal revolution? The judges and Tangentopoli David Nelken
191
The mass media and the political crisis
206
The system of corrupt exchange in local government
221
The resistible rise of the new Neapolitan Camorra
234
The changing Mezzogiorno Between representations and reality
247
Economic aspects of the crisis
261
The economic elites and the political system
263

The fate of the secular Centre The Liberals Republicans and Social Democrats
99
The new parties
111
The Northern League From regional party to party of government
113
Forza Italia The new politics and old values of a changing Italy
130
Towards a modern Right Alleanza Nazionale and the Italian Revolution
147
The great failure? The Democratic Party of the Left in Italys transition
159
The Left Opposition and the crisis Rifondazione Comunista and La Rete
173
Excesses and limits of the public sector in the Italian economy The ongoing reform
273
Industrial relations and the labour movement
294
Conclusion
309
Italian political reform in comparative perspective
311
Index
326
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Stephen Gundle, Simon Parker

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