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Italian Populism and Constitutional Law, 1st ed. 2020 Strategies, Conflicts and Dilemmas Challenges to Democracy in the 21st Century Series

Langue : Anglais
Couverture de l’ouvrage Italian Populism and Constitutional Law
This edited volume explores the relationship between constitutionalism and populism in the Italian context. Italian populism is of interest to comparative lawyers for many reasons. Firstly, the country has a long-lasting tradition of anti-parliamentarism over the course of its history as a unitary state. After the 2018 general election, it has turned into the first European country in which two self-styled populist parties formed a coalition government. Although it collapsed in August 2019, many issues that it had raised remain. Secondly, as Italy is a founding member of the European Communities, the constitutional implications of populist politics have to be considered not only within the national framework but also in a wider context. This book argues that the relationship between populism and constitutionalism should not be seen in terms of mutual exclusion and perfect opposition. Indeed, populism frequently relies on concepts and categories belonging to the language of constitutionalism (majority, democracy, people), offering a kind of constitutional counter-narrative.
Chapter 1. Introduction: A Constitutional Viewpoint on Italian Populism
by Giacomo Delledonne, Giuseppe Martinico, Matteo Monti and Fabio Pacini

Chapter 2. Populism and Constitutional Reform. The Case of Italy
by Paul Blokker

Part I
Chapter 3. Is there a populist turn in the Italian Parliament? Continuity and discontinuity in the non-legislative procedures
by Cristina Fasone

Chapter 4. Populism and Referendum: The Italian Debate from a Comparative Perspective
by Giuseppe Martinico

Chapter 5. Populism and Constitutional Amendment
by Pietro Faraguna 

Chapter 6. Populism and Law-making Process
by Fabio Pacini 

Chapter 7. Populism and Government: Continuity and Paradoxes in the Yellow-Green Experiment
by Giacomo Delledonne

Chapter 8. “Kicking the Can down the Road”. Deferring Fiscal Adjustment as a Premise for Italian Budgetary Populism
by Giovanni Boggero

Part II
Chapter 9. Italian Populism and Fake News on the Internet: A New Political Weapon in the Public Discourse
by Matteo Monti

Chapter 10. Rise of Populism and the Five Star Movement model: An Italian Case Study
by Marco Bassini

Chapter 11. Populism, Science and the Italian Democracy
by Marta Tomasi 

Chapter 12. “Le cose sono un po’ più complesse”. Constitutional Law and Religion in Italy and the populist challenge
by Pasquale Annicchino 

Chapter 13. The Italian Way to Migration: Was It “True” Populism? Populist Policies As Constitutional Antigens
by Simone Penasa 

Chapter 14. Does a sub-state dimension of populism exist?
by Alessandro Sterpa 

Chapter 15. Populism and Criminal Justice in Italy
by Nicola Selvaggi
Giacomo Delledonne is Research Fellow in Comparative Public Law at the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy. He is co-convenor of the research group on Subnational Constitutions of the International Association of Constitutional Law. He has written extensively in four languages (Italian, English, French, and Spanish). His first monograph, L'omogeneità costituzionale negli ordinamenti composti (2017), was awarded with the 10th Opera Prima-Sergio P. Panunzio Prize, organized by the Italian Association of Constitutional Law Scholars.

Giuseppe Martinico is Associate Professor of Comparative Public law at the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy. Previously he was García Pelayo Fellow at the Centro de Estudios Politicos y Constitucionales (CEPC), Madrid, and Max Weber Fellow at the European University Institute, Florence. He is also Honorary Professor at the University of Henan, China, and Research Fellow at the Centre for Studies on Federalism, Turin.

Matteo Monti is a researcher in the Faculty of Law at the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, Italy.

Fabio Pacini is Research Fellow in Constitutional Law at the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna, Pisa, and Adjunct Professor of Comparative Law at the Tuscia University, Italy. He coordinates a research group on parliamentary law at the Scuola Superiore Sant'Anna.

Provides a comprehensive analysis of constitutional issues related to the rise of Italian populism

Questions whether Lega and the Five Star Movement can be defined as populist movements

Analyses the Italian case to understand the relationship between populism and constitutionalism

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Date de parution :

Ouvrage de 314 p.

14.8x21 cm

Disponible chez l'éditeur (délai d'approvisionnement : 15 jours).

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