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journal contribution
posted on 2016-12-31, 00:00authored byRiccardo Armillei
For many years Italy has been described as a country of emigration. Only since the 1970s Italy has moved from being a net exporter of migrants to a net importer. Despite growing cultural and religious diversity, the implications of the pluralisation of the Italian society on national identity have been largely ignored. Italy has been recently described as a country without an established model of integration or pluralism. The so called ‘Italian way’ towards cultural diversity remained predominantly theoretical in character and not supported officially, in the sense of being incorporated into the nation’s history (as it is in Canada or Australia). The rise of ‘ethnonationalism’ and legacies of past colonialism contributed to create an institutional notion of supposed ‘Italianness’, which is based on the exclusion of the ‘Other’. During the Liberal and Fascist periods, colonialism was used to create and re-produce a strong sense of nationhood, re-composing the many internal divisions by racialising ‘otherness’ outside rather than inside the nation’s borders. This
study suggests that, due to historical amnesia and a weak national identity, a similar logic is now informing the implementation of anti-immigration policies in Italy.
History
Journal
Australian and New Zealand journal of European studies
Volume
8
Issue
2
Pagination
34 - 48
Publisher
Contemporary European Studies Association of Australia
Location
Melbourne, Vic.
ISSN
1837-2147
eISSN
1836-1803
Language
eng
Publication classification
C Journal article; C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2016, Australian and New Zealand Journal of European Studies