Common Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe

Recent news often compares current Italian policy to that of Central Europe – especially Hungary. The latest elections brought victory to right-wing populism in Italy and the Visegrad countries – especially in Hungary and Poland – with the key points of their discourse concentrated on similar topics...

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Autor principal: Hamerli Petra
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Publicado: Sciendo 2020
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spelling oai:doaj.org-article:c5dec39610d841b0b60ca33f45cd9d522021-12-02T16:39:06ZCommon Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe1801-342210.2478/pce-2020-0003https://doaj.org/article/c5dec39610d841b0b60ca33f45cd9d522020-02-01T00:00:00Zhttps://doi.org/10.2478/pce-2020-0003https://doaj.org/toc/1801-3422Recent news often compares current Italian policy to that of Central Europe – especially Hungary. The latest elections brought victory to right-wing populism in Italy and the Visegrad countries – especially in Hungary and Poland – with the key points of their discourse concentrated on similar topics such as Euroscepticism, migration and security, which are tightly connected to the refugee question. Right-wing theories have historical traditions both in Italy (Fascism) and Central Europe (rightist and extreme rightist parties) that I think important to summarise, as some of their elements can also be found in the political thinking of nowadays. The paper presents the main parties of Italy and those of the Visegrad countries and compares their common elements to see whether Italy can politically belong to Central Europe.Hamerli PetraSciendoarticlepopulismitaly and the visegrad groupeuroscepticismmigrationPolitical scienceJCSENSKPolitics in Central Europe, Vol 16, Iss s1, Pp 47-63 (2020)
institution DOAJ
collection DOAJ
language CS
EN
SK
topic populism
italy and the visegrad group
euroscepticism
migration
Political science
J
spellingShingle populism
italy and the visegrad group
euroscepticism
migration
Political science
J
Hamerli Petra
Common Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe
description Recent news often compares current Italian policy to that of Central Europe – especially Hungary. The latest elections brought victory to right-wing populism in Italy and the Visegrad countries – especially in Hungary and Poland – with the key points of their discourse concentrated on similar topics such as Euroscepticism, migration and security, which are tightly connected to the refugee question. Right-wing theories have historical traditions both in Italy (Fascism) and Central Europe (rightist and extreme rightist parties) that I think important to summarise, as some of their elements can also be found in the political thinking of nowadays. The paper presents the main parties of Italy and those of the Visegrad countries and compares their common elements to see whether Italy can politically belong to Central Europe.
format article
author Hamerli Petra
author_facet Hamerli Petra
author_sort Hamerli Petra
title Common Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe
title_short Common Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe
title_full Common Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe
title_fullStr Common Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe
title_full_unstemmed Common Points in the Policy of Italy and Central Europe
title_sort common points in the policy of italy and central europe
publisher Sciendo
publishDate 2020
url https://doaj.org/article/c5dec39610d841b0b60ca33f45cd9d52
work_keys_str_mv AT hamerlipetra commonpointsinthepolicyofitalyandcentraleurope
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