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DESCRIPTION:Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs&nbsp\;Center for European 
 Studies presentsItalian Politics from Draghi\n[2012] to Draghi [2020]With 
 Mario Draghi\, Italy has a freshly unelected Prime Minister.&nbsp\;Previou
 sly\,&nbsp\;economists such as Carlo Azeglio Ciampi (1993)\, Lamberto Dini
  (1995) and Mario Monti (2011)&nbsp\;were&nbsp\;asked to lead the governme
 nt.&nbsp\;Three&nbsp\;out of&nbsp\;these&nbsp\;four&nbsp\;economists&nbsp\
 ;came from the Bank of Italy. They&nbsp\;had to carry out unpopular measur
 es: cutting&nbsp\;government expenditure and raising&nbsp\;taxes to square
  the devastated public budget. Draghi is luckier: he has 210 Billion Euros
 &nbsp\;from the EU Recovery Fund to spend.How come the Italian Parliament\
 , elected in 2018&nbsp\;with&nbsp\;populist political parties acquiring&nb
 sp\;the majority of the seats\, appointed a technocrat? What are the polic
 ies that Draghi is expected to implement? Will Italy continue to be manage
 d by unelected statesmen?Daniele Archibugi\n\nResearch Director at the Ita
 lian\nNational Research Council (CNR-IRPPS) Professor of Innovation\, Gove
 rnance\nand Public Policy at Birkbeck\, University of London&nbsp\;Daniele
  Archibugi is a Research Director at the&nbsp\;Italian National Research C
 ouncil (CNR-IRPPS)&nbsp\;in Rome\, and Professor of Innovation\, Governanc
 e and Public Policy at the&nbsp\;University of London\, Birkbeck College. 
 He works on the economics and policy of science\, technology and innovatio
 n and on the political theory of international relations. He has worked at
  the Universities of Sussex\, Cambridge\, London School of Economics\, Har
 vard and Rome LUISS and gave courses at the SWEFE University of Chengdu an
 d at the Ritsumeikan University of Kyoto.&nbsp\;In the field of internatio
 nal political theory\, with David Held he has advocated a cosmopolitan dem
 ocracy (co-editing&nbsp\;Cosmopolitan Democracy. An Agenda for a New World
  Order\, Polity Press\, 1995\; and&nbsp\;Re-imagining Political Community.
  Studies in Cosmopolitan Democracy\, Polity\, 1998\; and authoring&nbsp\;T
 he Global Commonwealth of Citizens\, Princeton UP\, 2008). He has also wor
 ked on a greater involvement of transnational citizens to counter-balance 
 the power of governments in world politics (editing&nbsp\;Debating Cosmopo
 litics\, Verso\, 2003). His latest books are a critical assessment of inte
 rnational criminal justice (with Alice Pease\,&nbsp\;Crime and Global Just
 ice. The Dynamics of International Punishment\, Polity\, 2018) and a plea 
 to shape the European citizenship strategy (with Ali Emre Benli\,&nbsp\;Cl
 aiming Citizenship Rights in Europe. Emerging Challenges and Political Age
 nts\, Routledge\, 2017).Co-sponsored by the Italian Program&nbsp\;Click he
 re to registerFor more information\, please contact Havva Karakas Keles\, 
 hkarakas@syr.edu or to request accommodation arrangements\, please contact
  Morgan Bicknell\, mebickne@syr.edu.
DTEND:20210319T173000Z
DTSTAMP:20260511T205744Z
DTSTART:20210319T160000Z
LOCATION:
SEQUENCE:0
SUMMARY:Italian Politics from Draghi [2012] to Draghi [2020]
UID:RFCALITEM639141154649155719
X-ALT-DESC;FMTTYPE=text/html:<p>Moynihan Institute of Global Affairs&nbsp\;
 </p><p>Center for European Studies presents</p><p><br></p><p><strong>Itali
 an Politics from Draghi\n[2012] to Draghi [2020]</strong></p>With Mario Dr
 aghi\, Italy has a freshly unelected Prime Minister.&nbsp\;Previously\,&nb
 sp\;economists such as Carlo Azeglio Ciampi (1993)\, Lamberto Dini (1995) 
 and Mario Monti (2011)&nbsp\;were&nbsp\;asked to lead the government.&nbsp
 \;Three&nbsp\;out of&nbsp\;these&nbsp\;four&nbsp\;economists&nbsp\;came fr
 om the Bank of Italy. They&nbsp\;had to carry out unpopular measures: cutt
 ing&nbsp\;government expenditure and raising&nbsp\;taxes to square the dev
 astated public budget. Draghi is luckier: he has 210 Billion Euros&nbsp\;f
 rom the EU Recovery Fund to spend.<span></span><p>How come the Italian Par
 liament\, elected in 2018&nbsp\;with&nbsp\;populist political parties acqu
 iring&nbsp\;the majority of the seats\, appointed a technocrat? What are t
 he policies that Draghi is expected to implement? Will Italy continue to b
 e managed by unelected statesmen?</p><p><br></p><strong>Daniele Archibugi<
 /strong><p>\n\n</p><p>Research Director at the Italian\nNational Research 
 Council (CNR-IRPPS) </p><p>Professor of Innovation\, Governance\nand Publi
 c Policy at Birkbeck\, University of London&nbsp\;</p><p><br></p>Daniele A
 rchibugi is a Research Director at the&nbsp\;<a href="http://www.cnr.it/si
 tocnr/Englishversion/Englishversion.html" target="_blank">Italian National
  Research Council (CNR-IRPPS)</a>&nbsp\;in Rome\, and Professor of Innovat
 ion\, Governance and Public Policy at the&nbsp\;<a href="http://www.bbk.ac
 .uk/main">University of London\, Birkbeck College</a>. He works on the eco
 nomics and policy of science\, technology and innovation and on the politi
 cal theory of international relations. He has worked at the Universities o
 f Sussex\, Cambridge\, London School of Economics\, Harvard and Rome LUISS
  and gave courses at the SWEFE University of Chengdu and at the Ritsumeika
 n University of Kyoto.<span></span>&nbsp\;In the field of international po
 litical theory\, with David Held he has advocated a cosmopolitan democracy
  (co-editing&nbsp\;<i>Cosmopolitan Democracy. An Agenda for a New World Or
 der</i>\, Polity Press\, 1995\; and&nbsp\;<i>Re-imagining Political Commun
 ity. Studies in Cosmopolitan Democracy</i>\, Polity\, 1998\; and authoring
 &nbsp\;<i>The Global Commonwealth of Citizens</i>\, Princeton UP\, 2008). 
 He has also worked on a greater involvement of transnational citizens to c
 ounter-balance the power of governments in world politics (editing&nbsp\;<
 i>Debating Cosmopolitics</i>\, Verso\, 2003). His latest books are a criti
 cal assessment of international criminal justice (with Alice Pease\,&nbsp\
 ;<i>Crime and Global Justice. The Dynamics of International Punishment</i>
 \, Polity\, 2018) and a plea to shape the European citizenship strategy (w
 ith Ali Emre Benli\,&nbsp\;<i>Claiming Citizenship Rights in Europe. Emerg
 ing Challenges and Political Agents</i>\, Routledge\, 2017).<p><br></p><p>
 Co-sponsored by the<b> </b>Italian Program&nbsp\;</p><p><br></p><p><a href
 ="https://syracuseuniversity.zoom.us/meeting/register/tJErc-ihrjwiGdwyzG02
 -E1sD7i60Walw_mI " title="Click here to register">Click here to register</
 a></p><p><br></p><p>For more information\, please contact Havva Karakas Ke
 les\, hkarakas@syr.edu or to request accommodation arrangements\, please c
 ontact Morgan Bicknell\, mebickne@syr.edu.</p>
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