Silvio Berlusconi turned Italy’s government into a medieval court and its people into servants, argues Maurizio Viroli. His latest book details the anti-democratic effects of the now ex-Prime Minister’s regime, and makes a passionate call for a civic rebirth in his homeland. Kate Saffin feels that Viroli’s ideas about what went so wrong in Italy need to be heeded if the country is to succeed in its present struggle and fulfil its potential
Barone proposes a theory of war influenced by marginalist theory and Prussian military thought which...
Review Article of the following books: Quale Presidente? La scelta del Presidente della Repubblic...
Book review of Berardi Franco ‘Bifo’ , AND: Phenomenology of the End, MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, 2015...
Europe has paid close attention to Italy in recent months, in the wake of an inconclusive election t...
Bill Emmott sidesteps the clichés of Italian life to assess both Italy’s political problems, and how...
In The Fascist Party and Popular Opinion in Mussolini’s Italy, Paul Corner reexamines the experience...
Book review: A lesson in Italian democracy from the Maestro Italian democracy. How it works, by G...
In Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement: Organisation, Communication and Ideology the contributors cast...
In Economic Governance in Europe: Comparative Paradoxes and Constitutional Challenges, Federico Fabb...
In How Europeans View and Evaluate Democracy, editors Mónica Ferrín and Hanspeter Kriesi offer insig...
The current debate around the eurocrisis and European integration often centres on the role of Europ...
Matthew Partridge reviews a book on the corruption and corporatism at work in Tunisia, and how the r...
Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement. Organisation, Communication and Ideology Filippo Tronconi, (ed), ...
Any book written by Iulia Motoc is an intellectual challenge and, after careful consideration, any r...
The present French translation, edited by Andr\ue9 Tiran and his collaborators, is published by Garn...
Barone proposes a theory of war influenced by marginalist theory and Prussian military thought which...
Review Article of the following books: Quale Presidente? La scelta del Presidente della Repubblic...
Book review of Berardi Franco ‘Bifo’ , AND: Phenomenology of the End, MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, 2015...
Europe has paid close attention to Italy in recent months, in the wake of an inconclusive election t...
Bill Emmott sidesteps the clichés of Italian life to assess both Italy’s political problems, and how...
In The Fascist Party and Popular Opinion in Mussolini’s Italy, Paul Corner reexamines the experience...
Book review: A lesson in Italian democracy from the Maestro Italian democracy. How it works, by G...
In Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement: Organisation, Communication and Ideology the contributors cast...
In Economic Governance in Europe: Comparative Paradoxes and Constitutional Challenges, Federico Fabb...
In How Europeans View and Evaluate Democracy, editors Mónica Ferrín and Hanspeter Kriesi offer insig...
The current debate around the eurocrisis and European integration often centres on the role of Europ...
Matthew Partridge reviews a book on the corruption and corporatism at work in Tunisia, and how the r...
Beppe Grillo’s Five Star Movement. Organisation, Communication and Ideology Filippo Tronconi, (ed), ...
Any book written by Iulia Motoc is an intellectual challenge and, after careful consideration, any r...
The present French translation, edited by Andr\ue9 Tiran and his collaborators, is published by Garn...
Barone proposes a theory of war influenced by marginalist theory and Prussian military thought which...
Review Article of the following books: Quale Presidente? La scelta del Presidente della Repubblic...
Book review of Berardi Franco ‘Bifo’ , AND: Phenomenology of the End, MIT Press: Cambridge, MA, 2015...