Article contents
Introduction: Italy in the EU—pigmy or giant?1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 January 2016
Summary
This introductory article discusses the circumstances under which Italy manages to forge ‘national preferences’ and push them through the European policy-making process. Drawing from the analysis of several policy areas, it concludes that Italy plays a major policy-making role, particularly when it acts as mediator between large countries and small- and medium-sized ones, and when it argues its case according to policy- and EU-appropriate logics. While Italy may not have it ‘its way’ all the time (as no member-state does), it still manages to influence the EU policy-making process more frequently and more significantly than the literature has so far conceded.
- Type
- Introduction
- Information
- Modern Italy , Volume 9 , Issue 2: Special Issue: Italy in the EU: pigmy or giant? The role of Italian actors in EU policy-making , November 2004 , pp. 149 - 157
- Copyright
- Copyright © Association for the study of Modern Italy
References
Notes
2. As Alberta Sbragia argues convincingly, in ‘Italy Pays for Europe: Political Leadership, Political Choice, and Institutional Adaptation’, in Cowles, Maria Green, Caporaso, James and Risse, Thomas (eds), Transforming Europe: Europeanization and Domestic Change , Cornell University Press, Ithaca, 2001, pp. 79–96.Google Scholar
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