Fr. 178.00

Moving Right: The Changing Role of the Left in Neoliberal Europe - The Case of Italy

English · Hardback

Will be released 21.08.2025

Description

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This book explores neoliberalism s emergence as a global ideology, contextualizing its rise within the broader capitalist restructuring that followed the decline of the Keynesian state. Understanding the ideological dimension is challenging due to the difficulties in defining it and tracing its connections across domestic, European, and global contexts. The book aims to address this complexity by examining a case of the Italian left, analyzing the labor and education policies of the Prodi (1996) and Renzi (2013) governments. This is made possible through interviews with politicians, journalists, and trade unionists. Within this transformation, Renzi s era symbolized the final victory of neoliberal culture over the political culture(s) that had animated the left until that point. The future of the left will depend on its ability to reckon with this legacy and to recover an independent vision capable of countering the growth of nationalist right-wing movements in Europe and globally. 

List of contents

Chapter 1. Introduction.- Chapter 2. The historical and ideological premises of the emergence of neoliberalism: A neo-Gramscian Analysis.- Chapter 3. Between International and European Pressures: The Global Market of Education and Labour.- Chapter 4. Neoliberal education? The path towards marketisation. From the Berlinguer reform to the Good School.- Chapter 5. Between Disintermediation and Flexibility: The Transformation of Labour and Industrial Relations in Italy.- Chapter 6. From Gramsci to Renzi, from the Italian Communist Party to the Democratic Party: Exploring the Subjective and Objective dimensions of Transformation Processes.- Chapter 7. Conclusions and final remarks.

Summary

This book explores neoliberalism’s emergence as a global ideology, contextualizing its rise within the broader capitalist restructuring that followed the decline of the Keynesian state. Understanding the ideological dimension is challenging due to the difficulties in defining it and tracing its connections across domestic, European, and global contexts. The book aims to address this complexity by examining a case of the Italian left, analyzing the labor and education policies of the Prodi (1996) and Renzi (2013) governments. This is made possible through interviews with politicians, journalists, and trade unionists. Within this transformation, Renzi’s era symbolized the final victory of neoliberal culture over the political culture(s) that had animated the left until that point. The future of the left will depend on its ability to reckon with this legacy and to recover an independent vision capable of countering the growth of nationalist right-wing movements in Europe and globally. 

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