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Session Submission Type: Full Panel
2017 will mark nearly a decade since the unleashing of the biggest economic crisis the western world has experienced since the 1930s. No country has been immune from this crisis, and Italy in particular has found itself, for lengthy periods, at the forefront of one important regional reflection of that worldwide recession, the Eurozone crisis. Unlike the previous decade, since 2008 the economic recession has provided not just an essential backdrop or context to the changes that have occurred in the Italian polity but the prime motivating factor. The economic downturn in 2008 brought to the fore – although not immediately – the deep-rooted structural problems in the Italian polity and exposed them in a dramatic manner, visibly placing a country which had long aspired to be seen alongside its more modern northern counterparts as clearly part of ‘southern’ Europe. The impact on Italian politics and the political economy, the challenges to the legitimacy of the established political parties and elites as well as the responses of those elites, has been nothing short of dramatic. Nearly a decade on, it is clear that the crisis has left a lasting impact on the Italian polity, despite the persistence of many features. This panel hosts papers by Italian specialists who analyse different aspects of the Italian polity (politics, policy, society, transition) in this decade of economic recession, assessing and explaining the degree of change that has been experienced, as well as future likely directions.
Why the ‘Fertility Campaign’ Failed: Fertility Choices in Italy After the Crisis - Adele Lebano, University of Edinburgh
Crisis and Regional Policy: Copernican Revolution or Nothing New under the Sun? - Laura Polverari, University of Strathclyde
Party Realignment, Economic Crisis, and Varieties of Populism in Europe - manuela caiani, SNS florence (italy); paolo roberto graziano
The Italian Economy and the Eurozone Crisis - Martin J Bull, University of Salford