Berlusconi's Italy: Mapping Contemporary Italian Politics

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Temple University Press, 28 мар. 2008 г. - Всего страниц: 181
Berlusconi's Italy provides a fresh, thoroughly-informed account of how Italy's richest man came to be its political leader. Without dismissing the importance of personalities and political parties, it emphasizes the significance of changes in voting behaviors that led to the rise-and eventual fall-of Silvio Berlusconi, the millionaire media baron who became Prime Minister. Armed with new data and new analytic tools, Michael Shin and John Agnew use recently developed methods of spatial analysis, to offer a compelling new argument about contextual re-creation and mutation. They reveal that regional politics and shifting geographical voting patterns were far more important to Berlusconi's successes than the widely-credited role of the mass media, and conclude that Berlusconi's success (and later defeat) can be best understood in geographic terms.

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Об авторе (2008)

Michael Shin is Associate Professor of Geography at the University of California at Los Angeles.

John Agnew is Professor of Geography at the University of California, Los Angeles. He is the author or co-author of Hegemony: The New Shape of Global Power (Temple), Place and Politics, The United States in the World Economy, The Geography of the World Economy, Geopolitics, and Place and Politics in Modern Italy, among other titles, as well as the co-editor of American Space/American Place.

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