Coalitional behaviour is central to the Italian system of
government but has been largely neglected by research. As a result,
coalitions in post-war Italy have been viewed as simply unstable,
short-lived and incohesive. In this book, the author corrects this
one-sidedness by analysing Italian coalition politics as a
continuous and dynamic process. His comprehensive, interpretative
approach takes account of other new developments in coalition
studies and relates his subject both to the literature on Italian
politics and to the comparative study of party systems in liberal
democracies. An introductory section places Italian coalitional
behaviour in a theoretical and comparative context. This inductive
framework is then used as a reference for examining the historical,
institutional, motivational, internal, socio-political
andenvironmental dimensions of the phenomenon.
General
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